By KATE HUNTER
I love the opening credits of Puberty Blues – that perfect, glassy wave. It reminds me of the ads for ‘Crystal Cylinders’ the surf brand that preceded Billabong, even Rip Curl. ‘Now you’re feelin’ free,’ went the jingle, ‘In your Crystal Cylinders …’
It was too perfect, of course – the waves, the sun. It was only a matter of time before pollution and skin cancer spoiled the party.
Puberty Blues became even darker last night. And it made me ask whether, in 30 years, has anything besides music, haircuts and seat belt laws changed at all? Are the challenges of growing up any easier, particularly for teenage girls?
Sex. I hope and pray (as the mother of two girls) that my daughters are a bit savvier than Debbie and Sue by the time they start ‘goin’ round’ with boys. I want them to be (as well as older) a bit gutsier, able to say, ‘No,’ or, ‘That hurts,’ or, ‘For god’s sake have a shower.’ I don’t want them to have sex in a panel van (actually, the make of the car is irrelevant), or imagine whether there’s something wrong with them if it doesn’t ‘fit’.
I hope my girls will ask me, not the Cheryl equivalent (and there will be one) when is the right time to have sex. I’ll suggest a window of possibly longer than a week.
Similarly, I hope my son realises girls are people and not, as Kathy Lette once wrote, ‘Sperm Spittoons’.
For all the parents’ looseness and Strip Jack naked playing, they were rubbish at communicating with their kids. Would it have made any difference if they had? Have kids ever really listened to their parents? They certainly watched. Poor, tortured Gary doesn’t have much of a role model in his dad does he? The invisible father-son arm wrestle is torturous. As soon as Ferris offers Gary a glimmer of approval, he turns around and smashes it like a surfboard under a Stag. I wonder what Dr Phil would have to stay about that piece of parenting.
Top Comments
Blow jobs are the new pashing. By 15 brazilians, hooker heels and MDMA are de rigeur.
I'm just loving this show! My husband & I are both 70's teenagers from the Northern Beaches so we can relate to heaps from Puberty Blues. We have children aged the same now & they're enjoying watching this series. We still live in the same area & my eldest reckons it looks fun back then.