Anonymous wrote:Getting back to the point...
I truly wish people would stop telling my daughter how beautiful she is. She is seven years old now and is more than her looks. While DH and I always try to steer the conversations to how strong or hard working DD is, the effect of the praise for her looks has damaged her. When she was four she told me that she only wanted to be friends with pretty girls like her. Yes, it was then that I realized that I was raising a "Mean Girl"! What people say -- even when they are trying to be nice and polite -- can be damaging to children! I do not want my daughter growing up with the depth of a mirror or thinking that she is nothing more than her appearance.
but she still get it and she knows it now. I try hard to point out her ohter attriburtes and wish others did as wellAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tell my daughter she is beautiful every day (among other praises). She is beautiful no matter what she looks like. You can tell all your children they are beautiful. You think that, it's true.
Ugh. I hate this notion that everyone is beautiful. We don't tell our children that everyone is athletic, everyone is good at art, everyone is good at math, or everyone is kind. So why the insistence that everyone is beautiful?
Anonymous wrote:Ditto you can tell all of your children they are beautiful. Most beauty as an adult comes from confidence...give them that, make them feel beautiful even if cruel kids say otherwise. But most of your compliments to all of them should not be about beauty. You don't need to change your wording, but your entire message. "I'm proud of you" and "you are working really hard" will take them further than "you are beautiful".
I remember overhearing my mother as I was working on something ( a puzzle or something maybe) say "she is so determined - she's been at that for hours but won't give up". I remember thinking "really?? ME?!! Determined??" - and it has affected me ever since. I now get told that by people over and over again - my mother believed I was determined, and so I believed I was, and became even more so. It was a simple, powerful moment, and affects how I parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tell my daughter she is beautiful every day (among other praises). She is beautiful no matter what she looks like. You can tell all your children they are beautiful. You think that, it's true.
Ugh. I hate this notion that everyone is beautiful. We don't tell our children that everyone is athletic, everyone is good at art, everyone is good at math, or everyone is kind. So why the insistence that everyone is beautiful?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tell my daughter she is beautiful every day (among other praises). She is beautiful no matter what she looks like. You can tell all your children they are beautiful. You think that, it's true.
Ugh. I hate this notion that everyone is beautiful. We don't tell our children that everyone is athletic, everyone is good at art, everyone is good at math, or everyone is kind. So why the insistence that everyone is beautiful?
Anonymous wrote:I tell my daughter she is beautiful every day (among other praises). She is beautiful no matter what she looks like. You can tell all your children they are beautiful. You think that, it's true.