I just read that I am no longer allowed to call my daughter beautiful,
because it’s forming the opinion in her head that beautiful looking is what
matters. That she has to retain the flawless face of her three year old self, aim
for the figure of Miranda Kerr (which she has never had and never will have, my
yummy little stocky girl), be scarred by terrible eating disorders, failed
romantic encounters, the whole frightening shebang. I'm petrified of all this
stuff for my daughter.
In the same week I've also read I'm not allowed to call her a "good
girl", because it perpetuates the glass ceiling. It stifles her want to be
dominant, a risk taker, and all those other things that being a leader
requires. It says she has to remain bound by 18th century corseted social rules
- sit in the corner and read your Jane Austen you, you, female you!
I understand this theory, I really do, and believe me, I'm the last person
who wants to damage my children's self esteem.
But it is very hard for me not to say these things because, well, my
daughter is beautiful. Stunning. Everyone tells me thus. She has huge,
summer-sky blue eyes, framed by long dark lashes, a button nose, ruby red
cherub lips, and the most amazing curly hair. Me, of the limp, permed-three-times-in-a-week-and-still-poker-straight
variety, has aimed for this kind of hair all my life. And I've made it on my
daughters head. And now - I can't believe it - I'm not allowed to call it
beautiful!
However, physically gorgeous as she looks, when I call her "my
beautiful girl", I am usually referring to her beautiful personality.
Because she has come into the room early morning, with sleepy doe eyes, with
hair to rival Mad Einstein, clearly still waking up but nevertheless sporting a
huge smile on her face (how I wish I could do that), and she bumbles toward me
with one thing on her mind - a big cuddle good morning. That, is beautiful, no
other word for it.
I also can’t help but proclaim "good girl", when her preschool teacher
tells me she's well rounded, friends with everyone, inclusive of all (and not
exclusive, apparently a trait three year old girls display already - eek!). Is
this not a "good" quality that should be encouraged in my
"girl"?
The experts suggest changing the way you express it. So, in this instance, I
need to say "Well done Stable Personality (nothing to do with looks). What
a balanced attitude you are displaying at preschool, not adhering to gender pigeon-holing.
MUMMY WILL GET YOU AN ICECREAM!!!" (Or is that not allowed?)
Show me one parent who has not gazed down at their hairy, peeling-skinned,
purple-pink in colour, nose squashed into chin newborn and fallen into tears at
how "beautiful" they think they are? Even if they do look like an
alien cross ape, a newborn baby is nothing but the word beautiful.
I also call my three boys Beautiful. Or, "Would you mind helping me
with the dishwasher please Gorgeous"
Or, "calm down Blossom, let me
show you how to do it." Rarely do they get their real name when I refer to
any of my children - and if I do try, it’s usually arrived at after tripping
over their brothers’ and sister’s names first.
So if I call my boys Beautiful, Blossum and Gorgeous, am I also setting up
their self image as Boy Barbie? Am I encouraging femininity? But it’s ok to be
male and feminine nowadays, isn't it? Or am I smothering their maleness by
using a feminine term for them? Or is beautiful even a feminine term now? Wow,
I'm really feeling the pressure here.
Is this what we want - to have girls who are not too beautiful, play with
matchbox cars and never wear a skirt, and boys who are not too beautiful,
who'll nurse a doll, and wear pink shorts, so that everyone is, well, the same?
I'm so confused.
And now that I think of it, does this mean I can't read my daughter stories
about fairies anymore? Because Fairy Pengiuns now have to be called Little
Penguins. "And the little gender-non-specific-not-wearing-a-sparkly-dress-or
being-a-good-someone person, hid in the bushes waiting for the family to get
home..." I guess hiding in the bushes when you're not a fairy is taboo
too now.
My life has been full of the "fairies" this change of wording aims
to stop offending. And I couldn't be more thankful - in fact, I feel very
special to have had so many people who are not the standard norm in my young
life growing up - all of them showing me their individual "beauty",
and teaching me lessons on how to be "good" in this life. I think it
has made me a more tolerant and accepting person. Qualities which I really hope
I can help grow in my children. "Good" qualities for a person to
have.
I don't think I can stop myself calling my children beautiful or gorgeous
and blurting out "good boy!" or "good girl!" when they've
exhibited qualities I wish to encourage, or I’m just downright proud of. I
think it tells them I love them - it comes tumbling out of my mouth without
restraint and unconditional love. I'd be no good at a measured, well thought
out statement that by the time I have concocted it in my head the moment has
passed and they've no idea what I'm talking about.
I want to raise children who ARE gorgeous, beautiful, fun, loving, caring,
strong and just plain old wonderful all over.
But, they came out like this anyway. No need to try so hard.
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