Alright, here it is: I’m a bad girl.
Wow, it feels so good to say that. The truth is, it took me a long time to come to terms with that statement. Don’t get me wrong, I suspected I was one for many years, but it wasn’t until I was unsympathetically identified as one by an ex-lover that incited a new level of personal and social reflection.
Actually, he didn’t call me a bad girl. What he said was, “You’re not a good girl,” which was far more offensive. He reasoned the notches on my bedpost were too plentiful, I’d experimented with too many drugs, and my preference for certain sexual practices placed me outside the good girl box.
I counter-argued that, while those ticks do exist on my invisible bad girl report card, they were voided by and replaced with my good girl deeds: I am a good friend and daughter (even if I can be flakey), I am not a criminal (even if I was arrested for a DUI), and I practice safe sex (even if my mouth doesn’t).
As I found out, from him and social conversations and observations, is that, when it comes to good girls versus bad girls, a woman’s label derives from the one-drop rule. Here, the one-drop rule does not apply in terms of race or color, but social good girl versus bad girl practices. Even if a girl is more good than bad, the bad is more likely to outweigh the good, thus leaving a stain that permeates.
Take into consideration pop-culture bad girl icons, such as Bettie Page, Angelina Jolie and Lady Gaga.
Despite a longer career as a born-again Christian and missionary, pin-up model Bettie Page remains a fixture of rebellion and sex as one of the first fetish models back in the 1950s.
Similarly, Angelina Jolie, an Academy Award winner and Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, is overshadowed by her reputation as a former heroin user who is thought to have participated in an extramarital affair with actor Brad Pitt, then married to “America’s Sweetheart,” actress Jennifer Aniston.
And singer Lady Gaga, who, not only is a Grammy Award winner and Billboard chart-topper, has received backlash from media outlets such as Fox News, who said one of her music videos was her “pushing twisted sexual fantasies to young children,” a music video she considered liberating for youth in that it attempted to redefine gender roles and boundaries.
The definition of a good girl, of course, is a difficult question to answer. A definition, which, on one hand cannot be defined, but on a large scale is molded on the ideals and characteristics of the parents, church and peers that reside in the community a female lives in.
So what is a good girl? It depends on a person’s perception of the big picture. The mother of a former friend of mine, for example, did not let her daughter hang out with me because I smoked cigarettes. Meanwhile, my friend did cocaine with her boyfriend… a man who had recently been released from jail.
But good girls aren’t always judged based on extreme actions relating to sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll. According to a group of teenage girls polled by author Rachel Simmons, society expects good girls to honor certain characteristics, such as: people pleaser, no opinions on things, generous, kind, follows the rules, natural hair, good grades, enthusiastic, well rounded, flirtatious, follower, perfect, Barbie.
Conversely, their description of bad girls was described as: piercings, dark hair, rule breaker, foul mouth, loud music, fights, cheats, lies, punk, selfish, dramatic dress, speaks her mind, artistic, rebel, slut.
In real life, however, things aren’t always as cut and dry as a list. What happens when you mix traits from both sides? What if you have a “kind” (1), “dark-haired” (2), “well rounded” (1), “artistic” (2) woman who has a “foul mouth” (2), gets “good grades” (1), listens to “loud music” (2), is “kind” (1) and loves herself a “dramatic dress” (2)? That makes four ticks for the good girl side, and five for the bad girl side. It’s like a really complicated math equation. After all, what does it all mean? Does this mean Katy Perry is really a good girl after all? Or is it, bad girl?
Bad boy John Mayer caused some commotion in the kingdom of celebrity when he described his ex-girlfriend Jessica Simpson as “sexual napalm,” a pop figure who was synonymous with good girl ethics having been a virgin when she wed and commonly sold to the public as a Christian girl. In the case of someone like Jessica Simpson, who knew the former Christian singer and good girl had a wild side? Had Mayer not highlighted that aspect of her, the public would not know.
Which raises another point about good girls: discretion. Unless people find out about certain bad girl characteristics, she might be perceived as a good girl, but discretion does not mean non-existence. After all, good girls are really bad girls in sheep’s clothing. Did Mayer really have to tell us about his girlfriend’s wild side, or do we not have enough life experience and imagination to know that sometimes it’s the good girl that is baddest?
That’s because the good girl is dead. She does not exist. The one-drop rule has killed her. It is a label based on certain things we see and know, but for all we understand about people, there’s always much more that we know not of. It’s not that bad girl characteristics don’t exist, so much as part of being a good girl is having that bad side, even if no one knows it. Like it has been said by countless men time and time again, a good girl is being good in public, but wild bad closed doors.
We asked some of Atlanta’s brightest singles and wild ones to weigh in on what they think is the definition of a good girl. Check out there videos here!
What’s your definition? Submit your video at ays.com/goodgirl.