There is nothing wrong with how OP feels. OP, google Anne Barone Chic and Slim on amazon. Not always the best writer but distilla the French approach to all of this. They pass this stuff mother to daughter. Everyone starts somewhere. You don’t need a shrink, to be scolded by people here etc. Claim your beauty and be your wise, kind and loving self. Both things are possible. |
The most important thing I hope to teach my daughters is that being beautiful is not the price of being a woman in public.
They don't owe anything to anyone, let alone whatever pain/starvation OP is hoping her daughter adopts. |
God Bless America. |
You don't have to be perfect in order to have wise and loving conversations with your daughter.
Please don't pass on perfectionism. There is no more burdensome legacy than that. And please don't "check out" of mothering her and having close guiding conversations because you feel depressed about yourself. That's another burden she doesn't need. |
OP, how do you know you were ever beautiful to begin with?
Also, I was raised by a mother who is very concerned with looking nice and won't leave the house without makeup. Her indoctrination didn't take and I have never, ever worn makeup on a regular basis and although I am thin and stay in shape (good genes, plus I enjoy working out for health/stress relieving benefits) over all i don't put much effort in. I am far more concerned about demonstrating things like kindness and intellectual curiosity for my child and in fact I consider my mother kind of shallow. So. |
I think outer beauty has no bearing. If you are a crappy parent nothing else matters. Better to be a good parent and ugly, than a crappy parent and Angelina Jolie. |
I haven’t read the thread, but I think there’s a difference between teaching your daughters about beauty and teaching them the importance of self confidence and self care. |
Thank you for saying this to Op. dcum is such no place for a woman to be true to herself. Sad truth. |
Op, I feel you. In other words, I wish I had placed enough attention on me to leave a better example for my daughter. I, like you, am going to change this. Good luck Op. |
Even the character got fat. |
And she was stifled. And miserable. And had a shitty relationship with her kids. And got cancer. |
Betty Draper was a totally sh*tty mom, and I think you really misinterpreted that scene. |
I don't think so. Pretty people get more advantages in life. It sucks, but it's true. I'm still jealous that I got my dad's genes and my sister got my mom's genes. She and my mom are both gorgeous and I've seen how people treat them vs. me. |
So the takeaway is if you are not beautiful you can't be a good parent? |
No, if you're not beautiful you can't be a good MOTHER. Clearly. Seriously, this is such a sad way to think. My mom was not beautiful. She was, however, smart and warm and wise and gave me great advice on dating and life, and it never occurred to me that such advice required that she herself look like a model. She demonstrated being comfortable in your own skin, and valuing yourself based on yourself, not on your looks or any external role. And Betty Draper is the worst model of a good mother. She was unhappy, self-centered, and thought that a woman's only worth was her looks, which she should use to get a man to take care of her. She saw herself as having value only in relation to men. She was distant, critical, and cold to her daughter. She cared only about the appearance of things. |