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Conference turris::womannotes-v2

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 2 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V2 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1105
Total number of notes:36379

326.0. "Are you a good girl, take the test!!" by AZUR::HACHE () Mon Dec 05 1988 07:42

    


I am currently reading a book called "The Good Girl Syndrom" which I would
highly recommend.  I bought my copy in England but I believe it is also
available from MacMillan Publishing co, 866 Third Avenue, New York, NY.
10022.

In this book there is a test to indicate if you are suffering from the 
"Good Girl Syndrom",  here goes:

Answer 	0 - almost never applies
	1 - occurs sometimes
        2 - almost always applies


1)   	You believe there might be something basically wrong with you
	that's making you unhappy.

2)	You're afraid to ask a man for a date or initiate a phone call -
	he'll think you're too aggressive.

3)	You feel better about yourself when you don't have sex.

4)	You feel guilty whenever you have your own way, even if it's for
	something simple.

5)	You think that you are "BAD" because you think about sex too often.

6)	The thought of having to support yourself fills you with terror.

7)	You don't like to rock the boat, even if something doesn't seem 
	right.

8)	Ideally, you would like your man to be better than you are - taller,
	smarter, older, more experienced.

9)	You feel guilty if you shirk a domestic duty - neglect to clean up 
	the house or make your man cook for himself for a change.

10)	You constantly seek the approval of men, whether at work or at home.
	
11)	You would feel uncomfortable discussing sex with your children
	even in a positive way.

12)	In your heart of hearts you believe "a woman cannot have both love
	and career success."

13)	You believe that in a worldly, important topics, such as business,
	politics and science, men are inherently smarter.

14)	It is more difficult for you to say no to a man than to a woman
	when he asks you to do somehting you'd prefer not to do, such
	as running an errand or doing a favor.

15)	An inner voice tells you that it is the goal of a good woman to 
	help her man succeed, even if he doesn't help her.

16)	You truly believe that sacrificing for others, even if it means
	ignoring your wants, makes you a better person.

17)	You give up men friends when you enter into an intimate relationship
	with a man.

18)	Deep down, you worry that you are selfish for wanting independence.

19)	You still seek the approval, not just the advice, of your parents
	for major decisions in your life.

20)	You would be afraid to stimulate or bring yourself to orgasm during
	lovemaking.

21)	You find yourelf attending more meetings, weddings, funerals because
	you should, not because you want to.

22)	You believe you aren't allowed to show anger.

23)	You respect what is old, such as work schedules, mealtimes, opening
	a dorry for a lady, and are suspicious of change.

24)	You feel guilty over spending your "husband's [or lover's] money"

25)	You eat like a bird when you go with a man to an expensive 
	restaurant; even if you're hungry if wouldn't be right to eat too
	much.

26)	You believe that the most important place for a woman to be is in the
	home.

27)	You mother or father comes to mind whenever you go against a rule
	they taught you when you were a child.

28)	You make plans with friends and family, even if you don't want to 
	see them, and consequently resent them for causing you to have a 
	bad time.

29)	It's hard for you to accept compliments; often you think they
	come from only ingenuine politeness.

30)	You wear fitted business clothes to work even though you hate them
	and would rather wear a more comfortable dress or slacks.

31)	You haven't done anything really new in more than a month.

32)	You use sulking or silence to get what you want and show your
	displeasure.

33)	You are terrified at the thought of a parent or child accidently
	"catching" you in the sex act.

34)	You feel that rules should be followed because they are made
	by people who's judgement is better than yours.

35)	When you break a rule you feel bad and thin you should be punished.

36)	You assume traditionally "feminine" roles.  You do dishes, iron
	clean even if you might prefer to trade off with your husband
	for some of his chores.

37)	You feel you're not complete without a man who loves you.

38)	You would do almost anything to avoid a fight or confrontation.

39)	You find yourself making statemnts such as "Things have always been
	this way," "You can't beat the system", "You can't fight city hall"
	"That's only natural".

40)	You eel uneasy at work because you fear the supervisor or colleges
	will uncover the "real" you.


Now tally your numbers.  The following guide will show the degree to which you are a victim
of the Good Girl Syndrome.


0 to 20		You are already an independent woman.  You set your own rules for 
		personal fulfillment.  Read this book to validate your approach
		to total living or to help someone else.

21 to 50	The Good Girl Syndrome is looming on the horizon.  Read the 
		instructions outlined in the next section to determine where
		you need to focus your energy.  There may be only a few areas
		that need work.

51 to 80	The Good Girl Syndrome is in full operation.  You need to
		give your complete attention to the steps necessary for 
		clearing each program.  If you find that this book simply does
		not offer enough, you may want to speak with a therapist.


    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
326.1I'm so good, I'm bad!WOODRO::FAHELAmalthea, the Silver UnicornMon Dec 05 1988 09:065
    And what is wrong with being a "Good Girl"?
    
    (I ranked 23)
    
    K.C.
326.2COGMK::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Mon Dec 05 1988 12:265
    Re: .1
    
    Judging from what I saw in the survey, a "Good Girl" allows others
    to think for her and dictate her actions, possibly because she has
    low self-esteem and seeks approval/affirmation/acceptance.
326.3ULTRA::ZURKOUI:Where the rubber meets the roadMon Dec 05 1988 12:437
... which is why I'm surprised I only got a 20.

I do have a lot of issues around anger, parents, and approval from authority
figures. But a lot of my authority figures these days are women! So, I think
the survey is _very_ skewed towards overcoming male dominance. Which I have
:-).
	Mez
326.4no good girl hereAPEHUB::STHILAIREa simple twist of fateMon Dec 05 1988 12:474
    I got a 13.
    
    Lorna
    
326.5SLSTRN::DONAHUEthe ImpMon Dec 05 1988 13:028
    No flames, just my humble opinion.
    
    When I first read the survey, I was a little set off.
    If I'm assertive and my own person, that's not "GOOD"?
    
    Anyway, I got a 26.  I'm not too good, either.
    
    Susan
326.6What is "good" you ask?ELESYS::JASNIEWSKIAh, the road within withoutMon Dec 05 1988 15:2219
    
    	The test reflects the results of a parenting style that tends to 
    "invalidate" a young person's actual perceptions and feelings, for the 
    sake of teaching what is supposedly "good". This is embodied in the 
    following example statement:
    
    "You dont want those shoes, you want these ones here. Good people wont 
    like you if you wore those shoes"
    
    	In this example, the freedom to choose what one *really* wants
    goes out the window in favor of what one is *supposed* to want. Note
    how it is supported by a follow-up statement that is utter ca-ca, in
    regards to what is "good".
    
    	The ramifications of this parenting style are manifold, effecting
    adult self-esteem and behaviors.
    
    	Joe Jas
              
326.7I didn't do so goodAZUR::HACHETue Dec 06 1988 04:5018
    
    
    I'm not sure the answer to the test would always be the same either,
    when I was single and living alone I would have been somewhere in the
    20 range also,  but with many changes in my life and lifestyle
    (i.e. move to a new country, marriage to a European, etc) my rating
    was in the high 40's.  That probably explains why I'm frustrated
    and angry most of the time,  I need to do some heavy attitude
    adjustment.  I find that being uprooted from what was my comfort zone
    has lowered my self-confidence a great deal.  Moving to a new culture
    causes you to have a lot more doubt about yourself, you constantly
    think it is them or is it me...
    
    Anyway,  I thought the test was interesting even if I was devestated
    by the results.
    
    				Cheers..
    					
326.8CSC32::SPARROWMYTHing, once againTue Dec 06 1988 12:065
    I just took the test, got a score of 3. 
    according to the test, I'm not doing so bad, but then I didn't think
    I had a problem before the test.  
    
    vivian
326.9:-}WMOIS::B_REINKEMirabile dictuTue Dec 06 1988 12:126
    Vivian,
    
    I got a 6....my husband commented that he'd always known I was
    an independant person.
    
    Bonnie
326.11hmmmmLEZAH::BOBBITTrecursive finger-pointing ensuedTue Dec 06 1988 13:446
    26
    
    guess I'll have to work on it...
    
    -Jody
    
326.12a PERFECT *10*RAVEN1::AAGESENstrugglin' for the legal tender . . .Tue Dec 06 1988 14:327
    
    
    Guess I must be part of some minority.  I had to default better
    than 25% of these questions with "not applicable". (n/a's = 0,
    right?:-}) 
    
    
326.13An 8!!!BSS::VANFLEET6 Impossible Things Before BreakfastTue Dec 06 1988 15:494
    What a shock...I'm doing better than I thought!
    
    Nanci
    
326.14APEHUB::STHILAIREa simple twist of fateTue Dec 06 1988 15:519
    Re .12, how could that many be "not applicable"?  The only one that was
    "not applicable" for me was the one about needing parents advice
    or approvable all the time or whatever, so I put 0.  (If parents
    are not living or elderly and senile it wouldn't apply.)

    Just wondering.
    
    Lorna
    
326.15USMFG::PJEFFRIESthe best is betterTue Dec 06 1988 16:274
    
    I'm a 6, but I'm not suprised.
    
    +pat+
326.16these seemed non-applicableRAVEN1::AAGESENstrugglin' for the legal tender . . .Tue Dec 06 1988 16:468
    re .14, lorna
    
    I wrote off as n/a  8,9,11,15,17,24,25,36,37 . . . . .that's 9/40
    
    (well, almost 25%)
    
    
    robin
326.17could it be...?CIVIC::JOHNSTONa pole in my right half-plane? pfthhhh!Tue Dec 06 1988 16:558
    When I first tallied the 8, I thought that it might mean I'm <*gasp!*>
    ...well...strident.
    
    But then I realised that I just don't care.
    
      Ann
    
    p.s. glad, but not surprised, to see all the low scores.
326.18could it be age, er um, or experience :-) ?WMOIS::B_REINKEMirabile dictuTue Dec 06 1988 17:038
    Ann, 
    
    I've met both Pat Jeffres and Marge Davis, and I don't think either
    of them are strident, and I don't think I am (tho others will have
    to attest to that). One thing that the three of us have in common
    is that we are all over 40. That may have an effect on our scores.
    
    Bonnie
326.19BANZAI::M_DAVISBeyond the ridiculous to the sublime...Tue Dec 06 1988 17:306
    Bonnie, I don't consider you strident either, but then again, it
    may be a case of "Marge you're so strident, you wouldn't know one
    if it bit you!"  Over 40 does count in my book.  If I'd taken this
    test in my early 20's, the number would be MUCH higher... 
    
    Marge
326.20SSDEVO::GALLUPArizona 68 Temple 50!!!!!Tue Dec 06 1988 19:0917
	 sure is nice to have a workstation with a calculator on it!
	 :-)

	 I ranked a 15....but there were 3 or 4 questions that I
	 REALLY didn't want to answer 1 or 2 to because I don't want
	 to do things like that or feel that way , but I end up do
	 it/feeling it anyway....

	 room for improvement, I guess...those 3 or 4 questions really
	 made me think, though!

	 (i'm only 23, I've got plenty of time to "change my ways" on
	 those 3 or 4, right?)  8^)  


	 kath
326.21WMOIS::B_REINKEMirabile dictuTue Dec 06 1988 19:245
    Marge,
    
    It would have been MUCH higher for me also 20 years ago!
    
    Bonnie
326.22VLNVAX::OSTIGUYWed Dec 07 1988 07:411
    I scored an 8.  I'm not surprised.  
326.23I wonder????USMFG::PJEFFRIESthe best is betterWed Dec 07 1988 08:435
    
    
    It would have been much higher for me 20 years ago also. BTW I've
    been divorced 20 years, (I wonder if that has anything to do with
    it?)
326.2413 at age 32VAXRT::CANNOYConvictions cause convicts.Wed Dec 07 1988 09:037
    Well, I came in at 13. Not too bad. I did have 3 questions that
    were 2, all of which are problems which I have known about for
    a long time and am continuing to work on. A couple of the questions
    that I had to answer as 1 surprised me a little bit. Always room
    for improvement, I guess.
    
    Tamzen
326.25but 20 yrs. ago I was a _very_ good girlCIVIC::JOHNSTONa pole in my right half-plane? pfthhhh!Wed Dec 07 1988 09:4712
    Bonnie, et al.
    
    I thought my phrasing made it _abundantly_ clear, that I was being
    silly. So I left off the smiley face. I don't think that I'm strident
    in the least [all ranting from my brother-in-law to the contrary]
    
    For the record, I am 33.  I've been away from my parents for 17
    years, and married for 15 to a man whose dust I wold be eating if
    I showed that kind of deferential attitude -- supportive, but not
    supporting of dependency.
    
      Ann
326.26I got a "7"!PARITY::DDAVISTHINK SUNSHINEWed Dec 07 1988 10:007
    I wasn't going to do this because I KNEW I wasn't a "good girl"
    but after reading all the replies I just had to find out how "bad"
    I really was.  It was not a surprise!
   
    Thanks for posting this.
    
    -Dotti.
326.27I got a 34DMGDTA::WASKOMWed Dec 07 1988 11:3311
    
    
    So ok, I'm the quintessential 'dutiful daughter'.  I'm 36 and divorced.
    
    But a lot of these I answered with a "1" 'cause sometimes it matters
    and sometimes it doesn't what the other folks in my life think -
    but I'M the one to decide when it matters. :-)
    
    			Alison
    
    
326.28I like meWOODRO::FAHELAmalthea, the Silver UnicornWed Dec 07 1988 12:244
    I am perfectly happy just the way I am.  I feel no need for
    "improvement". 
    
    K.C.
326.29AQUA::WALKERWed Dec 07 1988 13:393
    I'm bad!
    
    m
326.30COGMK::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Wed Dec 07 1988 14:3113
    I work out to an 11, though it's iffy in some places.  For instance,
    I don't exactly "respect what is old" so much as appreciate it and
    my attitudes about expressing anger are more because of what I *don't*
    want to be (like my father) than what I feel is 'good.'  I'm well
    aware that I'm very selfish, so sacrificing for others would indeed
    make me a better person; on the other hand, I'm fully aware of the
    need for selfishness.
    
    My mother's approval was a lot more important to me in high school.
    Then I went halfway across the country (from Texas to New Hampshire)
    to go to college.  Independence was something I learned fast and
    thoroughly enjoyed.  Handling things on my own was something I took
    pride in.  Nowadays it's more a matter of course.
326.31Anything but that!SLOVAX::HASLAMCreativity UnlimitedWed Dec 07 1988 15:554
    Oh-my-gawd!  I'm NOT a good girl.  *Whew!*  I wasn't even close--a
    perfect 0.  What if my husband finds out???;)
    
    Barb
326.32PACKER::WHARTONYah, Karen for President!Wed Dec 07 1988 16:155
    re .31
    
    Naughty naughty!  
    
    I am not a good girl either. Please don't tell my mother.
326.338RAINBO::TARBETThu Dec 08 1988 11:454
    *woosh* I was gettin' worried there for a minute, but then everything
    stabilised.
    
    						=maggie
326.34all this in 25 yearsIAMOK::KOSKIIf I ever get out of here...Thu Dec 08 1988 12:236
    A grand total of 0, I was begining to think I was the only one,
    when I started reading the replys I was quite suprised to see the
    high scores. I guess the 0's are the independent type, I always
    have been.
    
    Gail
326.36SEDJAR::THIBAULTIt doesn&#039;t make sense. Isn&#039;t itThu Dec 08 1988 22:135
Well, I pulled a 3. My father says I've been pretty much independant since
the age of 3. But I think I'm mellowing in my old age...a few years ago I
would've come up with a negative number...

Jenna
326.37Speaking from personal experience...SSGBPM::KENAHLifeblood, weeping from my eyesFri Dec 09 1988 09:575
    "Good Girl?"  A person (male or female) who gets a high score
    on this test isn't "Good" - she/he is a codependent, and that
    is *not* good.
    
    					andrew
326.38Would that it were never true ...SQM::MAURERRest you merryFri Dec 09 1988 12:175
    Ah, but frequently in our society (in the past, sometimes today) a
    co-dependent woman is a "good girl".  All those independent women can
    be perceived as disturbing the status quo. 
                       
                       
326.40RAINBO::TARBETFri Dec 09 1988 13:389
    <--(.39)
    
    Eagle, "co-dependency" is psychologese for "a relationship in which the
    neurotic needs of the participants hook into one another, reinforcing
    the pathologies and reducing the possibility for anyone's growth"...it
    really has nothing to do with "interdependency", which is what most
    healthy relationships exhibit. 
    
    						=maggie
326.42RAINBO::TARBETFri Dec 09 1988 14:0717
    um, did it sound as though I was trying to clip your wings, Eagle? That
    wasn't my intention, honest, if I sounded frosty please put it down to
    my irritation at the %$@#$% term itself:  "co-dependency" is a terrible
    term because practically everyone interprets it exactly as you did.
    It'd be *much* better to call it something relatively clear like
    "neurotic interdependence"
    
    Sure it tells us something to merely know the numbers:  that the woman
    reporting her score believes that she falls into a certain place on
    that scale, and (typically) that that outcome is/isn't expected. 
    
    As to discussing where we took the hits, I'd be willing to bet lunch
    that most of us took them in much the same places.  I can't recall
    offhand which mine were exactly (I'll look them up if you really want
    to know in detail) but they were all around "generic" self-worth. 
                                                  
                                              	=maggie
326.44STC::HEFFELFINGERAliens made me write this.Sat Dec 10 1988 14:098
    	Well, I guessed that I would score below 10 even before I started
    the test.  So it's no surprise to me that I scored a 4.  
                                             
    	I'm 27.  I got zeros on all questions except 8,9,32,40 on which
    I got 1's.
                                                                  
    tlh
    
326.45I'm so bad, I'm good!BLITZN::LITASITime and TideSat Dec 10 1988 15:1115
    
    	When I saw Vivian took this test and scored a 3, I thought
    	I could not top that.  I don't know anyone more independent
    	than Vivian (a compliment...Vivian!).  But alas, I scored
    	a 3 also.  I scored a 2 on 8 and a 1 on 19 (sometimes).
    
    	Looking back on #8, I think it's still true...I still would
    	like "my man" to be better, ideally, however, so few are
    	as perfect as I am :*)...
    
    	I've never been a "good girl" and never will be...  
    
    	It's not nearly as much fun as being bad :*)
    
    		sherry
326.46SEDJAR::THIBAULTIt doesn&#039;t make sense. Isn&#039;t itMon Dec 12 1988 11:0223
re: < Note 326.39 by AERIE::THOMPSON "tryin' real hard to adjust..." >

>>   The feminist quest for greater independence (from men) is reaction
>>   to years of not having an equal partnership.  To seek total self-
>>   sufficiency is simply to carry the quest to an extreme that may
>>   not be any better than extreme dependency was for women before WWII.

Eagles,

	Dependance for me has absolutely nothing to do with feminism or
independance from men. And it's never actually been my goal, I simply grew 
up that way. Probably because my role models were 3 older brothers. I grew 
up, as they did, knowing that I would have to provide for myself when I grew 
up. It never occured to me that I would *need* a man to support me. It just 
seemed natural that I would have to be self-sufficient. But that doesn't 
mean I don't *want* a man in my life. My SO and I are partners but I don't
depend on him to support me...I do depend on him to be there as we walk thru
life however. But I got by 28 years of life pretty much on my own, and knowing
I could do it again if I had to gives me a sense of security I guess. It also
allows me to worry about other things (like upcoming mortgage payments..e gadz)
So I'm not *UNlearning* anything...I'm simply being me.

Jenna
326.47goody two shoes?APEHUB::STHILAIREGolden days before they endMon Dec 12 1988 12:058
    I guess I'm not really very bad at all.  I got a 13 - a "high" score
    compared with most that have been reported.  It's also high for
    my age (39).  I got 13 1's and no 2's.  I don't necessarily *agree*
    with all of the ones I got a 1 on, but I answered honestly.  I got
    1's on questions, 2, 6, 7, 8, 10, 20, 22, 27, 29, 31, 32, 37 & 38.
    
    Lorna
    
326.48who am I reallyNOETIC::KOLBEThe dilettante debutanteMon Dec 12 1988 15:1221
       I had a real problem when I read the questions here. I didn't
       tally up my score because it  depends on the difference between
       what I do as opposed to what I feel. The person I act like would
       get a low score (I once had a manager laugh at me when I asked to
       go to assertiveness training, he said if I was any more assertive
       my group wouldn't be able to handle it) but the person I FEEL
       like is a totally different animal, she got a really high score.

       I'm on my own, I'm surviving and doing well, I don't let people
       walk all over me. But as it says in the song I "break just like a
       little girl". Internally I can be racked with indecision and
       insecurity while outwardly I charge forward. I want someone who
       is strong and able to "take care of me" while I continue to do it
       on my own. My ex once accused me of wanting a "daddy" and in some
       ways (emotionally) that's true. Yet, at work, everyone sees me as
       a very strong person, I've been know to strike fear into the
       hearts of those I've argued with cause I'll tell what I think no
       holds barred.

       I feel like a spilt personality. liesl
326.49ULTRA::ZURKOUI:Where the rubber meets the roadMon Dec 12 1988 16:475
Liesl,

I think we're meant to answer about how we feel. Most of the questions were
phrased that way. And, of course, that's tougher.
	Mez
326.50Not good vs bad; girl vs woman!DEMING::FOSTERTue Jan 03 1989 13:2815
    I haven't tallied my score yet, but I feel the same way as .48.
    I know that if I went by actions vs feelings, I would get totally
    different scores. I'll tally later.
    
    But I wanted to point out. Everyone has gotten huffy about the word
    "good" in the question 'are you a "good girl"?' and replied with the 
    antonym of "bad".
    
    Why not consider that to score low probably means that you are a "good
    woman"? I think the kind of independence and development of personal
    values represented by a low score is far more a sign of maturity,
    especially in our society, than it is a measure of "goodness". 
                                                      
    'ren with her 2 cents...