"You
Have to Say I'm Pretty, You're My Mother"
by
Stephanie Pierson and Phyllis Cohen CSW
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The
following is an exclusive essay written for
Feminist.com by Stephanie Pierson and Phyllis
Cohen CSW, the authors of "You Have to Say
I'm Pretty, You're My Mother" How to Help
Your Daughter Learn to Love Her Body and Herself.
(Simon and Schuster, May 2003)
Not
long ago, I was giving a talk at my local library
about our recently published book, "You
Have To Say I'm Pretty, You're My Mother," an
advice book for mothers of teenage girls who
are struggling with body image issues. At the
end, I took questions from the audience. While
many people, particularly women, asked questions
about their own teenage daughters, one attractive
young woman (30 something) hesitated before asking
the following: "My daughter is only two
years old, but I just don't want her to have
the body image problems that I've had and I want
to do all the right things with her so she can
feel good about herself."
While the audience was amused that this mother
would be so concerned about body image so early
in her daughter's life, the depth of her sensitivity
and concern struck me. Of course these issues
and questions - about everything from diets to
depression to body piercing - really become paramount
when a teenage girl hits puberty, but this young
woman was onto something. She sensed that body
image and self-image are being formed during
the earliest years of her daughter's life. And
she realized that her own body image problems
could have a huge effect on her daughter. Whether
she gained this insight from her own experience
or from observing other mothers and daughters,
her keen interest in this subject confirmed everything
that we have learned in researching and writing
our book.
The essence of our findings are that while there
are many factors that help determine how a girl
feels about herself when she looks in the mirror
- everything from the media to peer pressure
to perfect body messages - there is one indisputable
fact: mothers matter the most to a daughter's
developing sense of her body and herself. A mother
needs to take a good look at herself and her
own ideas about body image because, as her daughter's
primary female role model, everything she says
and does is absorbed into her daughter's female
DNA. Even if she has a different body type, if
she's adopted or her parents are of different
races, her mother is the main influence on her
ability to develop a positive connection to her
body. A mother needs to realize that when she
is worrying about her three-year-old's chubby
thighs, her daughter is hearing her and in ten
short years those thighs will become her daughter's
her main obsession.
Naturally, mothers want to promote a healthy
body image and strong self-esteem in their daughters.
Just like the mother at my lecture, almost every
woman is aware of the importance of growing up
with a healthy body image. These concerned and
motivated mothers want to do all that they can
to help their young daughters grow into self-confident
women.
However, because women focus on their own bodies
- on gaining weight and losing their youth, sending
these positive body messages isn't always so
easy. Almost every woman you and I know has struggled
with feeling dissatisfied with her body at some
point in her life. It's difficult for a mother
to deal with the inherent contradictions of telling
her daughter to feel good about herself while
she complains about her own figure flaws, goes
on fad diets, obsesses about being a size larger
than she wants to be, contemplates plastic surgery
and lives at the gym. Does it have to be so tricky?
Apparently.
In
our body image focused world, even otherwise
confident and slim teenage girls can be consumed
by a fear of being "fat". If a girl
really does have a weight problem her self doubt
and struggles with her appearance can create
psychological problems. We have seen eating disorders,
disordered eating and depression in girls as
young as eight years old. Girls focus on their
bodies and looks from a very young age, because
it is such a loaded issue, mothers don't know
how to help and when to intervene. Telling a
young girl that she shouldn't worry about her
appearance because, "it's who you are on
the inside that counts" and that "people
will love you for your personality", is
not helpful. It's a sad commentary that in this
post feminist age, women, and in turn girls,
remain so focused on attractiveness and appearance
and that in our society, looks are still the
key to success.
To help a young daughter develop healthy body
image, mothers need to do some soul-searching
and planning. In our book, we urge mothers to
increase their awareness of all of the negative
body perfect messages they may be unintentionally
sending to their daughter. Good examples of the
kinds of questions that only reinforce the belief
that looks are everything can be seen the following:
Am I afraid that my daughter will be too fat
or thin?
Are her eating habits a source of pleasure or
pain to me?
Am I worried that she won't be popular because
she is overweight?
Am I looking in her room and her school bag looking
for candy wrappers?
Do I promise to buy her new clothes if she loses
weight?
Do I bribe her? "If you lose weight I'll
buy you that bikini".
It helps to understand some of the basics and
some of the givens. Growing up is a process (not
always a smooth straight line) and girls are
concerned with body image at various stages of
growth and sexual maturity. When she was a baby,
the pleasure and delight a girl gave her mother
(mother love), eventually became the essence
of her child's future self esteem (self love).
As an infant, her physical and emotional bond
with her mother is her first experience of body
pleasure. As a she grows the positive feelings
she has towards her mother extends her own body.
All of this nurturance helped her know her body
belongs to her and this becomes the basis for
her future emotional security.
Many
mothers have a hard time allowing this process
to unfold. They find their daughter's changing
body image threatening. Imagining all sorts
of troubles, they react by becoming overprotective
and over controlling. These mothers tend to perceive
their daughter's growing up as their second chance
at being "perfect" and getting it right.
When a mother doesn't handle her own fears and
separate herself from her daughter's body image
problems she unwittingly contributes to her daughter's
insecurities.
A
mother who listens to her daughter's feelings
and learns about her experiences helps her the
most. It's normal for girls to try on many different
styles and personas (at four years old she wants
everything purple, at eight she refuses to dress
like "a girl" and at twelve she wants
to be a rock star with pink hair). It helps for
a mother to support her through these stages
by giving her perspective on how she looks and
providing her with a reality check. It does not
help when a mother blames the media or resists
her daughter's need to follow some popular, totally
abbreviated style. The irony is that teenage
girls act like they need no guidance or advice.
They need their mother's guidance and feedback
more than ever.
Since almost every girl will have to deal with
some body image problem as she grows up, it's
important for a mother to understand as much
about these issues early in her daughter's life
so that she can help prevent problems from occurring
or respond when they do. If a mother has concerns
that body image issues are affecting her daughter's
emotional health and well being, a mother can
speak to her daughter's pediatrician and get
professional help. There is a great deal that
we can do to help our daughters feel good both
physically and emotionally, from the very beginning.
Getting help will allow a girl know that she's
valued and eventually, she will learn to value
her body and herself.
The
above is an exclusive essay written for Feminist.com
by Stephanie Pierson and Phyllis Cohen CSW,
the authors of "You Have to Say
I'm Pretty, You're My Mother" How to Help
Your Daughter Learn to Love Her Body and Herself.
(Simon and Schuster, May 2003)
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