‘You Should Be Yourself’—Secondary Students’ Descriptions of Social Gender Demands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Theoretical Framework
1.2. Aim
2. Material and Methods
2.1. Participants and Group Interviews
2.2. The Interviews and the Interviewer
2.3. The Empirical Material and the Analysis
2.4. Ethical Considerations
2.5. Validity and Reliability
3. Results
3.1. Social Cohesion or Risk Exclusion
G9a: “Not many people want to be with me, and that’s because they push me away. I don’t have that big social circle like everyone else. I don’t know why that is. It’s spread that I’m not like everyone else and I’m wrong according to everyone else.”
G9b: “I really don’t understand why it would be wrong to not be like everyone else; you should be yourself.”(Girl Interview 9)
“Being frozen out and not having anyone to be with or sit with means that you don’t want to go to school and that you feel extra pressure for how the school day should develop. Learning things under too much pressure and stress doesn’t work at all.”(Girl Interview 12)
“It’s friends—if you become popular, if you make a lot of friends—then you’ll feel fine every day in school. Then you know you have friends who want to be with you at lunch breaks and stuff, whereas if you don’t have any friends, then you just feel bad about coming here and watching everyone else having fun and having people to be with.”(Boy Interview 2)
G11b: “You have to have much better grades than the boys, anyway!”
G11a: “Lots of people assume that girls have better grades than boys, and if you don’t, you’ll be snubbed too. It creates stress if you’re not part of that big social circle, and then you become ostracized, and you start to feel bad about… that.”(Girl Interview 11)
“That’s what it is. I think like this: In working life, craftsman professions and so on, then it’s very harsh language, and girls shouldn’t, girls don’t belong there. Of course, it should decrease, I think it should decrease, but as it is now, you need to show that you come from such an upbringing to be accepted. You can’t act like an office rat. You should show, it’s a lot like this, you should show that you’re from the countryside. […] Well, it’s like this: a girl and a guy in the class, and I’m telling them both the same joke, and I know that both might not, let’s say they don’t appreciate the joke, but the guy just ignores it, and maybe he worries more about the girl, how she feels after having heard that joke.”(Boy Interview 1)
“I have a pretty strange relationship because, in my friend group, we all bully each other, which is kind of strange and, like, I would prefer it if it wasn’t like that, although that’s how it is.
Interviewer: But can’t you talk about it?
No. Everyone in my group is really ridiculous like that. It’s a little childish, and it’s kind of hard, but you have to live with it, so I don’t really care anymore about that or about their childishness, although I wish they would be a little more mature. […] It’s kind of common to be called gay [for example]. It’s like walking around and being called by your name.”(Boy Interview 8)
“I’ve seen a lot of girls who bully others too. I’ve seen a girl who wasn’t wearing makeup, and a lot of girls walked past her and had makeup on and said, ‘Look, look, you’re so disgusting, you don’t have any makeup on, you’re not pretty, you’re not, you don’t smell of perfume, you don’t have nice clothes.’ And for girls, uh, it’s like when girls are bullied, it’s worse than a guy being bullied; girls are more sensitive than guys.”(Boy Interview 5)
“I’ve had a fight with a girl here at school before, and it was like this: […] that if boys fight, all the teachers go in and separate them, but there were teachers standing and listening to what she said to me, but no one went in […] because there were so many bad things and she lied so I would look bad, but none of the teachers went in anyway because it wasn’t considered as bad as boys fighting.”(Girl Interview 14)
3.2. Social Facades—Happy Face and Stoneface
“I think it’s harder to tell guys how you feel than girls because you might not even notice that the person’s feeling bad since they’re good at hiding it. Then it all depends, […] even if you’re good enough friends with certain people, they […] may seem completely normal the whole time you’ve known them. But they might trust you enough to tell you, and you still don’t notice a difference at school because they’re kind of so good at hiding it.”(Boy Interview 3)
“As a guy, you’ve been taught that you should kind of stand up and be a man and not show so many emotions, although I think it’s important, of course, that you should. It’s always good to say how you feel and to show emotions; it’s important—I think so. But you usually don’t notice it [feelings]. You might recognize that the person is down since he walks alone a lot or kind of looks down and has this kind of sad face; then it’s clear that this person’s very sad.”(Boy Interview 8)
B6: “But it’s wrong, the wrong idea [not showing emotions]; everyone has feelings, so sometimes you might feel like crying. You’re allowed to cry, but a lot of people see guys as emotionless and more, like, angry.”(Boy Interview 6)
“You can sit and hide so much behind the screen. You can sit and cry and feel so bad, but you can post a picture on Instagram and say you’re feeling great; you might take a picture when you’re really happy, or you look happy. Although you’re actually broken—that is, broken inside—you can sit and sort of hold the phone, sit and cry and be completely destroyed. […]. So, you can hide a lot behind social media.”(Girl Interview 3)
“I also believe that maybe they [people who self-harm] post [pictures] because they want help, but they don’t get it because some people may think like ‘you’re just an attention seeker’. And I can also agree that it’s kind of annoying because they want attention. You just [want to say] go and talk to someone so you can get out of this [negative situation], but it could also be that they post it because they need help!”(Girl Interview 13)
“Because boys want […] boys want to be boys and girls shouldn’t be like that [like them]. Girls have to look nice, and boys have to behave in a certain way, and girls […] are less worthy and have to [look nice]; otherwise, they get comments and things like that from the boys.”(Girl Interview 3)
“Being unsure about your own body, not wanting to show it because you might get bullied, like getting picked on and stuff. And then it gets so overwhelming that it just makes you feel bad, so you don’t want to; you just lose all your self-confidence. That might be why you want to fit in with your body, fit in with things like eye color, fit in with clothing style, and all that.”(Boy Interview 2)
“Like, I was bullied; there are some students who say to each other, ‘Look, you don’t have Adidas pants, those aren’t Adidas, you’re not rich, you’re poor.’ […] And then you don’t dare wear those clothes like you’re going to feel ashamed, uh, you’re just going to feel bad, I can’t afford to buy as much as he can […] so you feel like you don’t have the same value. […] A friend of mine got a sweater as a gift, and people at school said it was fake, and then he went home and threw that sweater away.”(Boy Interview 5)
4. Discussion
4.1. Keep Up the Facade
4.2. What Does the Adult World Need to See, Understand, and Reflect On?
4.3. Future Studies
4.4. Methodological Considerations
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Bergman Rimbe, K.; Blomberg, H.; Elfström, M.L.; Olsson, S.; Östlund, G. ‘You Should Be Yourself’—Secondary Students’ Descriptions of Social Gender Demands. Children 2025, 12, 502. https://doi.org/10.3390/children12040502
Bergman Rimbe K, Blomberg H, Elfström ML, Olsson S, Östlund G. ‘You Should Be Yourself’—Secondary Students’ Descriptions of Social Gender Demands. Children. 2025; 12(4):502. https://doi.org/10.3390/children12040502
Chicago/Turabian StyleBergman Rimbe, Karin, Helena Blomberg, Magnus L. Elfström, Sylvia Olsson, and Gunnel Östlund. 2025. "‘You Should Be Yourself’—Secondary Students’ Descriptions of Social Gender Demands" Children 12, no. 4: 502. https://doi.org/10.3390/children12040502
APA StyleBergman Rimbe, K., Blomberg, H., Elfström, M. L., Olsson, S., & Östlund, G. (2025). ‘You Should Be Yourself’—Secondary Students’ Descriptions of Social Gender Demands. Children, 12(4), 502. https://doi.org/10.3390/children12040502