This is what she wants for her daughter. Above all else. Sigh.
What do you want for your kids? Success? Love? A good education?
Or do you just want them to be smoking hot? To rock out their Year 12 formal gown like no other girl in that room? To wow the other parents when they get the class photo?
You think I am speaking in jest right? No one could possible have ‘good looks’ as the top of their wish list for their daughter’s life, could they?
Well yes.
And one brave mother has written about it to prove it.
British mother Polly Phillips has told The Daily Mail that her number one goal for her 11-month old daughter is that she is pretty.
“While we all want what’s best for our daughters, few of us are brave enough to face the reality that more attractive people tend to do better in life,” she wrote.
“And more importantly, that even, wave after wave of feminism later, women still worry about their looks more than anything else.”
She says that studies have shown attractive people get paid more and get ahead further in life.
“Being born beautiful breeds an innate sense of confidence and self-worth that equip you to deal with the ups and downs of growing up.”
She says, “Who can honestly say that, were it under their control, they wouldn’t want their daughter to be pretty too?”
That “beauty is [the] most important attribute for her daughter.”
While her words make me want to go find that other “earth-like” planet Nasa discovered last week and see if we women get a better deal over there, I can, sadly, see where she is coming from.
Even if I don’t quite agree.
She’s right, we all want the best for our kids.
She’s right that if there was a mysterious god-like creature looming above me in the delivery suite while I was screaming for more-bloody-happy-gas-now asking me to choose whether I wanted a baby with ogre-type looks or the cute one, who wouldn’t say the cute one?
Top Comments
I was not a typically pretty child. I was tall, red hair, gawky, had braces. I never had a boyfriend at school. Particularly in my teenage years I felt it didn't matter how smart or witty or creative I was, no one would be interested because I wasn't attractive.
And then I hit my twenties and it turned out I just needed time to grow into my looks. I was the gangly awkward sidekick then turned 25 and suddenly became hot. And it's taken me another ten years to shake off most of the negative body image I developed as a teenager. It messed me up. Even now I am still an overly friendly people pleaser because I'm conditioned to think I have to try a bit harder to make up for my looks.
if that was the goal she should have made babies with a better looking guy.
Snide and judgmental reactions like that demonstrate just how image-focused people inherently are. I am uncomfortable with Polly's suggestion but I can completely understand her thinking process - most people aspire to happiness for their children above all else and it is just a taboo fact that some physical or demographic characteristics make that easier to obtain without significant hurdles. Much like the fact that my son was born white and male to educated parents in a good socio-economic band. It comes down to dumb luck but if he does turn out to be attractive as well, that would be the genetic equivalent of winning $50 million on Powerball - twice.