How is OP unattractive inside for simply noticing a marked difference between her children? |
You know what I've always thought about her? That the ugliness lay solely with her insecure mother, and that constantly being called "homely" and "ugly" made her so. But with your blackened heart, your outsides probably reflect your insides. OP, quit being shallow. Is one's appearance the sole measure of their worth? Because I have a beautiful kid and a comparatively ugly kid, and it's pretty obvious that the "ugly" kid is going to have a much easier life because she's so much happier and more secure. |
So much this. William looks more an more like a middle-aged Brit every day, while Harry looks more and more like a grizzled action star. Yum! I would also worry that your "classically beautiful" daughter will put way too much time and effort into maintaining her appearance, especially as she learns what it can get her. As a woman, there is a short shelf life on beauty which can wreck women as it starts to fade. It might help you to see it as a curse as much as it is an advantage. |
| Looks change. Growing up, I was the classic beauty while my sister was the ugly duckling. She grew up to be really hot. I was still the more attractive one through college and young adulthood, but as we're getting older she is aging much better and is now much more attractive than me. |
| Sorry OP for all the rude comments posted here. That's the way DCUM works sometimes. Keep an ear open for anyone making even off-handed comments. No one ever told me I was unattractive but very often told my sister, in front of me, that she was just beautiful (she was). It is a legitimate concern and your a good mom to see this and want to be prepared just in case. I once heard a boy in high school describe me to a friend as the "not cute" sister. Comparison are inevitable and there's always that one jerk out there. Hang in there and sorry again about the nastiness you experienced here. |
Develop their personalities...especially the younger one. I see this all the time and the personality is really what will make or break their futures. I had friends whose parents told them early on that if they are not classically attractive that they have to develop something else - a winning smile, a sense of humor, something that will "make people like you." |
It is the bad haircuts, lol. Give those kids some straight, not jagged bangs and do something about that fake frizzy curl action and they improve immensely
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| It only matters if they're both girls. |
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It's very very likely that the adorable, beautiful child will become an average adult and the unattractive child will be come a gorgeous.
It's up for debate, but plenty of child actors were adorable but amounted to nothing. Then you have unattractive child actors who are downright gorgeous now. Like, Marcus from About a Boy. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0396558/?ref_=tt_cl_t2 |
Of course it's not the sole measure of their worth. But OP does no one any favors by ignoring the obvious. If and when her children raise this issue, or outsiders raise it for them, she needs to be there with some wisdom and support and ways to deal with it, not empty platitudes about everyone else "blackened hearts"
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| I was a gorgeous child by all accounts, but puberty hit me hard, and I was a mess. It destroyed my self esteem because my childhood was filled with compliments about my looks, which suddenly stopped during puberty. I became depressed and it just took a huge toll on me. Especially because my youngest sister had the same gorgeous looks as me as a child and kept them throughout puberty. In my early / mid 20's though, I decided to seek help and once I had my self esteem back on track, it was like my looks began to change with it. I am now considered hot but I still remember those days where the compliments suddenly dried up. I have a very great personality that probably resulted from being the ugly duckling for a long while, but I really wish my parents and relatives hadn't been so focused on my looks so early on because I felt that was all there was to me and I was heartbroken when I realized I didn't have those anymore and felt as though I was unlovable as a result. |
| I think that planning how to address this is the thoughtful, caring way to parent, OP. I was the unattractive one in my family. Although I did often hear my sisters complimented in front of me, I found that the bigger issue was the more subtle bias that most people have toward more attractive people. I was often confused and did not understand why everyone was kinder to my sisters than they were to me. I assumed that there was something wrong with my personality, and that if I were nicer, smarter, funnier, or more interesting that people would like me more. It seems like a winning strategy, but nothing was ever enough and my childhood and adolescence was a sad time for me, characterized by anxiety, perfectionism, and a pretty nasty eating disorder. Only after I internalized the fact that we live in a superficial world and that how people treat you isn't necessarily a reflection of your worth as a person did things turn around for me. Ultimately, I wish my mother had just told me, "look, people ignore you and are nice to them because they are prettier, but not because they are better people than you are. We love you all no matter what other yardsticks other people might be applying." But, perhaps that is a very difficult thing to acknowledge to a kid... |
| Life is a bitch! So my guess is 20 years down the line the you ger kid will be beautiful and successful and the older one will end up divorced with a sugar daddy |
| What about the saying Beauty is as beauty does. |
| Kids grow up and blossom differently. My friend had a sister who was much more prettier and smarter than she was. Dad always told my friend she was fat and ugly and her sister was beautiful and smart. The sister ended up becoming an exotic dancer and dropped out of college. My friend is far more accomplished. |