Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd focus on how healthy her body is. Does she enjoy any physical activity? Wow, your legs are so strong, I bet your cycling has done this! Your shoulders are amazing, swimmers' bodies are so gorgeous. But she needs value somewhere other than looks to have a good self esteem.
Nope, this is still missing the mark.
Anonymous wrote:I'd focus on how healthy her body is. Does she enjoy any physical activity? Wow, your legs are so strong, I bet your cycling has done this! Your shoulders are amazing, swimmers' bodies are so gorgeous. But she needs value somewhere other than looks to have a good self esteem.
Anonymous wrote:I share the same concerns others do. I also want to point out, OP, your choice of your title speaks volumes. What a difference it would have made if your title was "Beautiful girl." The fact is that you're more focused on her weight than anything else.
Anonymous wrote:My 12yo has been on the chubby side since she was about 9/10, but I’m pretty sure she is going to slim out with puberty and be a tall, well proportioned woman, not skinny but not overweight. All her excess weight is in her belly. I’m trying very hard to keep her self esteem high because she has been called fat at school, and been bullied. She’s popular and generally a happy kid, but I am worried about her self image. She is not allowed on any social media and we model good habits and I have high self esteem now, though I suffered terribly as a tween/teen and had an eating disorder so I’m quite sensitive about all of this. It doesn’t help that she has a younger sister who is naturally very thin, though that could change as well as she approaches puberty (though they’ve always had different body types).
Eldest dd is a strikingly beautiful girl, with long, thick, wavy blond hair, unusually large hazel eyes with very long lashes, a nice nose, full lips, etc. She will likely be a gorgeous woman. She was an adorable toddler and young child, and often looks at old photos of herself and laments at how cute she used to be.
What are positive words I can say to her to help her get through this awkward stage? She hasn’t really started puberty yet (just starting to get breast buds) so I know the worse awkward stage is still to come…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Offs, I wrote about her looks because someone on here inevitably would say something like “some people are just fat and ugly, so she has to learn to live with it”. I’ve never said anything about those aspects of her appearance other than to say that her hair looks nice in a certain style, or tell her she looks great for x occasion. But she is 12 and like most 12yos she cares how she looks and she is conscious of her looks compared to her peers - which is completely typical.
It's the detail and length that everyone is picking up on. Most people would have said "she's quite pretty, but doesn't feel that way" or something similar. Not wax poetic about her unusually large hazel eyes.