Every child dreads this day: sooner or later, your parents will come to
you, innocently wide-eyed, to ask you about twerking. How you handle
this difficult conversation is extremely important and could have a
significant impact on the way your parents think about twerking for
years to come. You may prefer to put off the big “twerk talk,” but
remember that it’s far better for you to be the one to explain than for
them to learn on their own by searching YouTube.
A critical first step is to acknowledge that twerking is a normal part
of life and that there is nothing shameful in their questions. They’re
parents, after all, and this is the sort of thing they hear about on
NPR, and, well, they’re curious.
Explain that twerking is a dance move typically associated with
lower-income African-American women that involves the rapid gyration of
the hips in a fashion that prominently exhibits the elasticity of the
gluteal musculature.
They will reasonably wonder why Miley Cyrus, who is white and wealthy,
does it at every opportunity. Patiently respond that, for Ms. Cyrus,
twerking is a brazenly cynical act of cultural appropriation being
passed off as a rebellious reclamation of her sexuality after a
childhood in the Disneyfied spotlight, but, in the end, who are we
really to judge? I mean, it can’t be a picnic being Billy Ray’s
daughter, and remember that Vanity Fair picture of them? That was just
...weird.
Though they won’t comprehend the Billy Ray references, they will nod,
understanding that Ms. Cyrus’s motivations to twerk are complicated by a
raft of personal, socioeconomic and third-wave-feminist issues.
Upon hearing what twerking is, it is natural for your parents to want to
experiment with it. They may even proudly announce, “Look at us, we’re
twerking!” not recognizing the inappropriateness of their actions and
words. Try to resist the urge to chastise them; doing so will only
increase their desire to twerk in defiance, perhaps in private.
It is also possible that your parents may suggest twerking at their next
dinner party, after the radicchio salad with caramelized pears. Adopt a
strict no-tolerance policy for group twerking unless you are there to
supervise, other parents’ children are informed beforehand and have
given permission, and everyone in attendance is invited to participate,
including the Pearlsteins.
There’s a chance some of their peers are already twerking — most likely
the younger parents. If they feel pressure to twerk to feel accepted,
point out that anyone who forces you to twerk when you’re not ready for
it isn’t a real friend, and that you think it’s just as “cool” not to
twerk but instead to do, say, the jitterbug.
They may ask if you twerk with your significant other. Tell them that
when a young man and young woman love each other very much and are in a
packed, sweaty nightclub playing commercial hip-hop, yes, they sometimes
twerk to express their affections. Assure them that just because you
twerk with someone else and not with them doesn’t mean you love them any
less — just that you show your love for them in a different way; for
instance, by having strained three-day visits over Christmas.
Credit : NY Times
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