Current:Home > Contact'The Care and Keeping of You,' American Girl's guide to puberty, turns 25 -EquityExchange
'The Care and Keeping of You,' American Girl's guide to puberty, turns 25
View
Date:2025-04-16 17:49:41
This month marks the 25th anniversary of The Care and Keeping of You — a book that eased the adolescent anxieties of a generation of girls, including myself. The book, which sought to demystify puberty, sold millions of copies, and was on the New York Times bestseller list as recently as 2016.
For my friend Kaela Seiersen, however, the book was contraband. She says a family friend lent the book to her family when she was kid. Her mom wasn't sure her homeschooled 8 year old was ready to read a book so straightforward about changes to girls' bodies, so she took it away. But not very far away.
"The book appeared on top of my fridge, so I would stand on the chair and try to read it," Seiersen says. "It was really hard because my parents were around all the time, and also the fridge was really tall. So even when I stood in a chair, I couldn't grab it."
Seiersen says at first, she was mostly fascinated by the book's strange new information. She remembers seeing illustrations of the different stages of breast development and thinking "I'm never gonna look like that, I'm never gonna be an adult."
But when she got a bit older, Seiersen started to use the book to answer questions she didn't feel comfortable asking her parents.
The book's author, Valorie Schaefer, worked for American Girl magazine before writing The Care and Keeping of You. She says the magazine got a lot of letters from girls who had plenty of questions they didn't want to ask their parents.
"Just these heartbreaking letters, but also such sweet letters," Schaefer remembers. "When am I gonna get my period, what about these pimples, why do I feel so emotional all the time?"
Schaefer had a lot of empathy for these girls. Growing up in the 1960s, she says she had even fewer resources for figuring things out on her own.
"You would get a box of tampons and it would have this huge fold out set of instructions, like a road map for putting in at tampon," she remembers.
So Schaefer set out to write less intimidating instructions with a nervous young audience in mind. It included another of my friends, Abby Eskinder Hailu, who will never forget the diagram from the book explaining how to put in a tampon.
"It told you to angle the tampon towards your back," she says. "I remember thinking of that when I first started using tampons, like, wow, this is really helpful."
"No matter what stage of life you're in, it's very helpful sometimes just to have a voice somewhere telling you you've got this, you're normal," says Schaefer.
And as the readers of the first generation of The Care and Keeping of You get older, they've got a new request for Schaefer. "Most often the thing people ask for is a book for perimenopause," she says.
It turns out sometimes even the really big kids just want a caring and accurate book that explains their ever changing bodies.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Kansas City mom and prominent Hispanic DJ dies in a mass shooting after Chiefs’ victory parade
- Average long-term US mortgage rate rose this week to 6.77%, highest level in 10 weeks
- Lawsuits ask courts to overturn Virginia’s new policies on the treatment of transgender students
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- The Voice Alum Cassadee Pope Reveals She's Leaving Country Music
- 2023's surprise NBA dunk contest champ reaped many rewards. But not the one he wanted most
- Georgia Senate passes plan meant to slow increases in property tax bills
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Angela Chao, shipping business CEO and Mitch McConnell’s sister-in-law, dies in Texas
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Florida deputy mistakes falling acorn for gunshot, fires into patrol car with Black man inside
- UGG Boots Are on Sale for 53% Off- Platform, Ultra Mini, & More Throughout Presidents’ Day Weekend
- Biden protects Palestinian immigrants in the U.S. from deportation, citing Israel-Hamas war
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- After searing inflation, American workers are getting ahead, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen says
- EA Sports drops teaser for College Football 25 video game, will be released this summer
- A loophole got him a free New York hotel stay for five years. Then he claimed to own the building
Recommendation
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
Prison deaths report finds widespread missteps, failures in latest sign of crisis in federal prisons
2 juveniles detained in deadly Kansas City Chiefs parade shooting, police chief says
Who plays 'Young Sheldon'? See full cast for Season 7 of hit sitcom
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Prabowo Subianto claims victory in Indonesia 2024 election, so who is the former army commander?
Scientists find water on an asteroid for the first time, a hint into how Earth formed
First nitrogen execution was a ‘botched’ human experiment, Alabama lawsuit alleges