Anonymous wrote:No because it's always been my experience that ugly babies turn into cute kids/teens/adults and vice versa.
My niece was the ugliest baby. She was even an ugly toddler and unfortunate looking little kid. She's now very pretty at age 24 and had a glow-up at around age 13.
My other niece was a beautiful baby and toddler. She was such a pretty little kid as well. Puberty hit and she had a glow-down (if that's a thing). Terrible acne that has left her face scarred, the puberty weight she gained was never shed, etc.
I've also seen these same scenarios play out with many of my friend's kids.
Anonymous wrote:I think we are all biologically programmed to find our own kids stunning but by elementary school you will be able to tell if your kids are objectively good looking because they will be generally be the kids that other kids are drawn too. I have seen this play out time again with my kids and their friends (my kids are not the stunners) and as a teacher. Popular kids are almost always good looking. If you take a grade of 100 elementary kids, I think most of us can pick out the 1 or 2 who are head turners. The rest are all variations of "nice looking" but are fairly interchangeable. But there are are always 1/100 or so that are like "wow, she/he is stunning".
By middle school looks definitely correlate with social cred. 100%. People are drawn to attractive people.
Anonymous wrote:When my daughter was born, my partner commented that he would not have believed that she was ours if he wasn't there to witness the delivery. She is much more attractive than either of us, as people have pointed out. She is outgoing and has the confidence of someone who has always been treated well. She gets more attention from teachers and lots of smiles from strangers. I want her to be kind and hardworking, which is more important than looks. As others have pointed out, she could turn out to be an unattractive adult.
I hope your feelings do not translate into how you treat your child. All children deserve the same amount of love and attention. Having a smart, funny, athletic (fill in the blank) kid is wonderful too! Find the quality that makes your child special.
Anonymous wrote:From the perspective of a childfree woman:
1. All children are cute, but very few merit a second glance from a stranger.
2. Cute kids definitely don't always grow up into attractive adults. Two girls in my elementary school class were breathtakingly beautiful children, but as adults they have bad skin and weight problems. Meanwhile, some of the ugly ducklings blossomed into swans.
Anonymous wrote:I think we are all biologically programmed to find our own kids stunning but by elementary school you will be able to tell if your kids are objectively good looking because they will be generally be the kids that other kids are drawn too. I have seen this play out time again with my kids and their friends (my kids are not the stunners) and as a teacher. Popular kids are almost always good looking. If you take a grade of 100 elementary kids, I think most of us can pick out the 1 or 2 who are head turners. The rest are all variations of "nice looking" but are fairly interchangeable. But there are are always 1/100 or so that are like "wow, she/he is stunning".
By middle school looks definitely correlate with social cred. 100%. People are drawn to attractive people.