What Being A Tomboy Taught Lizzy Caplan About Gender Equality

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“Growing up, I always thought it would be better to be a boy.” That’s how actress Lizzy Caplan begins her recent essay ;featured in Cosmopolitan.com. The 33-year-old describes how she always thought it would be more fun to be a boy when she was young. Caplan was quite the tomboy as a young girl, with interests including her lizard collection, ;sports and washing the car with her dad “like a couple of bros.” ; “I was less a little princess and more an awkward collection of elbows,” Caplan writes. ; As she grew up, however, Caplan realized she didn’t want to be a boy — she just wanted to be treated ;the same way. “These days, I celebrate my femininity, the way my body looks…

“Growing up, I always thought it would be better to be a boy.”

That’s how actress Lizzy Caplan begins her recent essay ;featured in Cosmopolitan.com. The 33-year-old describes how she always thought it would be more fun to be a boy when she was young. Caplan was quite the tomboy as a young girl, with interests including her lizard collection, ;sports and washing the car with her dad “like a couple of bros.” ;

“I was less a little princess and more an awkward collection of elbows,” Caplan writes. ;

As she grew up, however, Caplan realized she didn’t want to be a boy — she just wanted to be treated ;the same way. “These days, I celebrate my femininity, the way my body looks and feels, the way my brain works,” Caplan writes. “I still want all the same opportunities that are afforded to the boys. I want to be paid as much as the boys. I want to vote for a presidential candidate who shares my gender. I want to continue my career after having children without even a trace of side-eyed judgment.”

She explains that she wants to live in a world where “being a girl doesn’t limit one’s access to education, reproductive rights, opportunity, or success. Where regardless of which city, town, or third-world village you come from ;being a girl with big ideas, lofty goals, and a (gasp!) healthy sexual appetite is not considered a punishable crime.” ;

Caplan concludes her essay, writing, “I don’t want to be a boy, but I sure as hell want to be equal to them. Perhaps that’s what I’ve been striving for all along.”

Hell yes. Well said, Lizzy. ;

Head over to Cosmopolitan.com ;to read the rest of Caplan’s essay. ;

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What Being A Tomboy Taught Lizzy Caplan About Gender Equality