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Shannon Bradley-Colleary

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Why I Stopped Trying to Make my Daughter Be Pretty

Posted: 09/21/2012 4:13 pm

My 10-year-old daughter Clare only likes to wear clothes from the boy's section. Preferably a boxy, shapeless t-shirt with pictures of Spiderman or any other superhero on them. She always wears two braids. Always. Even to bed. Her hair is thick, blonde and gorgeous. Clare has beautiful, wide-set blue eyes, high cheek bones and long, slender limbs that remind me of a baby colt. I think she's beautiful. She doesn't care. She's not interested in being beautiful.

Last year I made her take her braids down for her class picture. It was an epic battle and I played dirty. I used psychoanalysis, telling her I was afraid her braids were like a security blanket (which I am) and that I wanted her to be comfortable in every Hair Iteration and that I didn't want her to fall prey to bullies who might socially ostracize her (which is true) and to that end I was willing to bribe her with an Obi Wan Kenobe FX lightsaber that could have paid for a month's worth of groceries.

But underlying my bid for her emotional well-being was the down-and-dirty truth: I wanted her to look pretty in her school pictures, her cascading hair framing her face, so I could show her off to friends and relatives.

On picture day she wouldn't actually wear her hair down. She wore it in ponytails, then took it down just for the picture. Apparently the entire 4th grade female student body had to witness this anomaly. Shrieking and cooing and telling Clare how gorgeous she looked. After the picture mission was complete one of the little girls carefully, respectfully braided Clare's hair for her.

When I got Clare's school picture a month later my mission was achieved. She did indeed look very pretty with her flowing locks. But she also looked, well, not quite like Clare.

I'm over it. I'm letting it go. Clare doesn't need to fulfill my vision of how she would look most beautiful. She doesn't need to care about being beautiful. She DOES have to wash her hair at least once a week. There I will not budge. But my girl won't define herself by her appearance the way I did. The way I still do.

What defines her now are her passions: making weapons out of paper, learning to sketch manga characters by following tutorials online, playing a version of Dungeons and Dragons with her dad all night, reading The Hunger Games with me, playing the piano and taking up Judo. And so many more things she's passionately interested in. These kids man, they teach you how to live.

2012-09-21-RowanatLittleLeague.jpg

She also plays Little League and collects baseball cards.

 
 
 

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My 10-year-old daughter Clare only likes to wear clothes from the boy's section. Preferably a boxy, shapeless t-shirt with pictures of Spiderman or any other superhero on them. She always wears two br...
My 10-year-old daughter Clare only likes to wear clothes from the boy's section. Preferably a boxy, shapeless t-shirt with pictures of Spiderman or any other superhero on them. She always wears two br...
 
 
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08:45 AM on 10/01/2012
I appreciate having children around me. They do teach you a lot about yourself.
02:59 AM on 10/01/2012
She's healthy and her personality shines through the happiness in her eyes. Now that's gorgeous!

I always loved both "girly" and "nongirly" activities. We need more support for people to be who they truly are, and stop calling some things girly and some things nongirly.
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01:30 AM on 09/30/2012
She's still pretty here. But hey, there are some girls who are absolutely beautiful who instinctively fight against being defined by their beauty and she's probably one of them. I've seen a beautiful teenage girl fighting her mom and her mom's friends of pushing her into another beauty pageant. Those are the most beautiful girls because they are not shallow or taught to be defined that way. Like the song goes "You Don't Know You're Beautiful."
12:22 AM on 09/30/2012
Clare is perfect.
08:35 PM on 09/29/2012
I have a niece just like this. It started when she was three when she found out her mom was pregs with her brother.He is now 5 years old and still thinks his sister is his brother! LMFAO
11:29 PM on 09/28/2012
What a great post. I have a girl who would rather play dragons and knights or ninja instead of princess or traditional girly games. I agree we have to support and foster these interests and not be so focused on appearances and / or acting the way a girl "should" act.
10:38 PM on 09/28/2012
You're awesome.
06:29 PM on 09/28/2012
My daughter has always been a "comfortable" dresser-jeans, t-shirt and sneakers. Now that she is a sophomore in high school, she has been asked out to homecoming. She isnt the prissy dress type, so she wants to attend with her date dressed up as "Dr Who"-her favorite TV character. We are both looking forward to hitting Goodwill and finding a suitable jacket, tie and sneakers to fit the bill! And, its not going to cost me an arm and a leg. The other kids she hangs with are into cosplay and anime and there is talk that they may dress up as their favorite characters, too. Since homecoming is the same month as Halloween, it should be fun! Yes, it is great to be different and comfortable with who you are...even if you come off rather silly, odd or eccentric. ALONSY!!!
01:33 PM on 09/28/2012
Why is this news, everyone knows we should just be comfortable with who we are. Why does there have to be a news story about it when there's a million other more important issues. For example, unemployment, cancer, war, the election, curing aids, and basic human rights and those are just a few.
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02:31 PM on 09/28/2012
You can find plenty of news about all those things even on this website. Isn't it nice to take a break from time to time?
03:18 PM on 09/28/2012
oh sorry for a lighthearted topic.

its not like this is the only piece of news released today.
10:09 AM on 09/28/2012
That child is gorgeous in her braids. Look at the confidence in her eyes and in her smile! Look at the glowing good health radiating from her. Look at the mischiefous twinkle about her.

Breathtakingly, heartbreakingly beautiful.
08:42 AM on 09/28/2012
I was a Clare too. Until I was about 13. Some girls grow out of it - like me, I hate trousers and won't wear anything more like them than bloomers - and some are just tomboys forever. And that's fine. A girl doesn't have to be pretty to be valued as a living being. My parents never tried to make me girly. They just let me go and do what I pleased. My sisters did dance, and I came home from school, in my mum's words, "looking like nobody owns you." I was build like a bear as a kid, now I am short and a lot smaller in proportion to others. Gender roles suck, kids, and you don't have to follow them.
12:37 AM on 09/28/2012
Just wait till your daughter starts puberty and breaks out.A few months ago my tomboy 10 yo(who gave little thought to hygiene and hair) all of a sudden requested "face stuff and a clarisonic mia to fix my face". I don't think the author's child has gotten zitty and smelly yet. I would hope the parent would offer up solutions if her child didnt initiative a conversation. Its about giving your kid certain skills not so much making her "pretty "
11:36 PM on 09/27/2012
I love how parents are more open minded these days...let people be themselves. Great going mom!
02:04 AM on 09/27/2012
I was also a little tomboy, all arms and legs, t-shirts and blue jeans, dirt and bruises. My parents raised 3 children and for the most part forgot I was a girl until my teenage years. Then I hung on to the independence and toughness my brothers taught me and the self-respect my mother and father showed me by example. My mother was a grown-up tomboy but that didn't stop her from lamenting the lack of shine in my hair or neatness in my dress. But I grew up as girls tend to do, and I developed a love of vintage dresses and an even fiercer independence and self-respect and my parents learned to accept what was because it was a refection of them. Your daughter will leave somethings behind to take new things into womanhood, just be sure you are there as a helpful advisor when she is ready to make new starts.
09:06 PM on 09/26/2012
My daughter had a friend growing up who was quite the "tomboy". I always thought "if she would just brush her hair, she could be really pretty" Well she grew up into a beautiful young lady. Lesson learned: Let your daughters enjoy thier childhood as they want, they will "grow up" too soon as it is.
06:06 AM on 09/29/2012
My comment is not directed solely at you, mom. As a small child I overheard my grandmother say "it's too bad she's not pretty". That was 60 years ago and I still am hurt by that. Many of the comments here are in the vein of "let her be herself, she will, in essence, go girly later on." Maybe she won't, and THAT"S OK! Lose the mom-dream of a princess walking down the aisle, and enjoy her uniqueness.
09:21 PM on 09/30/2012
SO AGREE!!!!
07:43 PM on 10/15/2012
And BTW, at 68 men still hit on me.