Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and can be very culturally dependent. I have a coworker who makes a lot out of her daughter’s platinum blonde hair. I feel sorry for the kid if it darkens because that is all her mother ever brags about.
well to be fair probably most moms are going to be sad when their kids blonde hair starts to darken so she wouldn't be in the minority.
We live in a country full of Nazis.
Np. My family is very liberal and still likes their blonde hair and blue eyes. It’s just unique. (I have neither)
It’s the same as me hoping my kids have my own curly hair.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting question. For me, my DD is the most beautiful kid in the world, but I understand that what our culture considers beautiful may be different. It's the same with my H, he is by far the most attractive, gorgeous man in the world to me, even though he looks different than what our culture holds as ideal beauty. I can tell when a person fits societal beauty norms, but that doesn't necessarily mean I find them beautiful or attractive. I find most beauty norms fairly generic and bland.
But that being said, I have been working to stop defaulting to noticing/commenting on peoples' looks. I was classically beautiful my whole life and have heard non-stop commentary since I was a very young child. It was not good for me to hear and did damage to my self-esteem, since I thought that was all I was good for. And I was a total wreck once I hit my 30s, had kids, and suddenly wasn't "hot" anymore. So I've been training myself to notice other aspects of children and adults other than their looks, and to never comment on someone's looks to either them or other people. Humans are more valuable than that.
But on the other hand-- I would definitely say there are one or more kids in her class every single year that are as attractive as she is. And I can definitely recognize and even comment on that-- but only to my husband, in private. Or maybe once in a while to their parents.
Anonymous wrote:I will say that my cousins kid was stunningly beautiful as a child, like seriously pretty. She's in her teenage years now (16 I think?) and she's still cute but as she aged her chin never grew with the rest of her face so she's not nearly as pretty as she was-cute still but no longer eye catching. You never know how childhood looks will translate...see a lot of child stars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and can be very culturally dependent. I have a coworker who makes a lot out of her daughter’s platinum blonde hair. I feel sorry for the kid if it darkens because that is all her mother ever brags about.
well to be fair probably most moms are going to be sad when their kids blonde hair starts to darken so she wouldn't be in the minority.
??? My kids are blond and I have brown hair and my DH has very dark brown hair. We were both blond as kids. I will not care one whit when my kids' hair darkens. I hope it gets as dark as my DH's hair.
OK great that you think that way, but you know you are in the minority.
Why do you think most adult women we see out on the streets with blonde hair are bottle blondes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and can be very culturally dependent. I have a coworker who makes a lot out of her daughter’s platinum blonde hair. I feel sorry for the kid if it darkens because that is all her mother ever brags about.
well to be fair probably most moms are going to be sad when their kids blonde hair starts to darken so she wouldn't be in the minority.
Anonymous wrote:Not me.![]()
My children are the most beautiful people on earth. I know I am very biased, but what the heck. lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and can be very culturally dependent. I have a coworker who makes a lot out of her daughter’s platinum blonde hair. I feel sorry for the kid if it darkens because that is all her mother ever brags about.
well to be fair probably most moms are going to be sad when their kids blonde hair starts to darken so she wouldn't be in the minority.
??? My kids are blond and I have brown hair and my DH has very dark brown hair. We were both blond as kids. I will not care one whit when my kids' hair darkens. I hope it gets as dark as my DH's hair.
OK great that you think that way, but you know you are in the minority.
Why do you think most adult women we see out on the streets with blonde hair are bottle blondes?
DP: I don't know that I know that--if I go with my gut, I think blonde hair on adults looks kind of childish and not quite as attractive as darker. I know this is just subjective, but that's my taste and I don't know that it's a minority view. The expression tall, dark and handsome? Women with dark hair always strike me as more beautiful and interesting whereas blond has more of a cute (or fake) look. I think there might have been a generation that liked blondes most, but I don't think that's a current preference.
There are certainly other children more striking than her across a range of beauty standards, and especially so if we're considering print/media and not just "kids you might see on the street".Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and can be very culturally dependent. I have a coworker who makes a lot out of her daughter’s platinum blonde hair. I feel sorry for the kid if it darkens because that is all her mother ever brags about.
well to be fair probably most moms are going to be sad when their kids blonde hair starts to darken so she wouldn't be in the minority.
??? My kids are blond and I have brown hair and my DH has very dark brown hair. We were both blond as kids. I will not care one whit when my kids' hair darkens. I hope it gets as dark as my DH's hair.
OK great that you think that way, but you know you are in the minority.
Why do you think most adult women we see out on the streets with blonde hair are bottle blondes?