Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hi! Mom of 17 and 15 y.o. DDs in LA's westside (the heart of skin-deep).
I think it's hard to diffuse the obsession with their looks that many girls have at this age, especially since the obsession is helped along by the media. So the first thing is, it just may be something your DD has to get through, and while you may not be able to help as much as you like, your job may just be to not make it worse (I'll explain at the end).
So what I've done--and this has worked--is do a substitution. Focus on health instead of beauty. Since we are hardwired to perceive healthy people as more attractive, it is a roundabout way to satisfy the need to be beautiful, and it undercuts the unhealthy ways to attain beauty. It undercuts the "I need to be skinny/lose weight" issue, and any of the eating disorders. The key is to link the health and the beauty, and make the health the condition and standard for beauty; the indirect way to attain beauty.
I now have one girl who is really into makeup and clothes, but also into dance, running and yoga and weights. My other girl is has a natural look and is into hiking/biking/surfing/weights. Both are into eating healthy; one is strict keto+dairy, and the other is more relaxed but still eats very healthy. Both try to get sleep as they understand how that fits into the equation. Also; the health kick has totally overwhelmed any possible interest in drugs or alcohol (one does want coffee; but only takes a sip. I think it's just the idea that she *can* have coffee)
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Ok on a totally separate note, my kids' rooms had full-length mirrored closets. I noticed that they spent a lot of time looking in the mirror. It must have been really nice living before the time of mirrors! You can get a plastic film that frosts the glass at Home Depot. This is so, if they need to look in the mirror, they have to go to the bathroom or somewhere else; there isn't that judgy mirror distracting them all the time.
Also, no one ever tells a kid the *purpose*, the *reason*, for looking in the mirror. If left to their own devices, many girls think the reason to look in the mirror is to pick themselves apart. When they were younger, I told my girls the reason to look in the mirror is to make sure they are dressed appropriately for the occasion. That they have not mis-buttoned. That they are not in a dress for hiking or in hiking shoes for church. Your DD is older so those examples are a bit silly, but you can get that message across. The mirror is a tool. There is a reason to be looking in the mirror; make the mirror work for you by using it appropriately.
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Finally, a few years back I attended a lecture on girls' development. The speaker said that a girls' dad has a huge influence on a girl, because they are this very important adult male that has no sexual interest in them. The researcher said that dads have to be very careful with this power. (I'm paraphrasing) "The guaranteed way to start a daughter on an eating disorder is for a dad to say that she is too fat, or needs to lose some weight, or that she looks sexy in that dress."
Ok I hope this helps!
Not OP but this was very helpful! Thank you for posting!