Teach Your Daughters Well

Highercallingblogs.com has a good post about the importance of teaching our daughters to find their value beyond the surface level of physical appearance, material belongings, and social status. Maybe it’s because I have a daughter on the way, but I can only think of one lesson more important for parents to teach their little girls, and it’s a related lesson - that’s the Gospel of our King Jesus. Here’s the post from highercalling:

I have three daughters. In watching them grow up and deal with peers and popularity and teen-age pressure, I have come to understand that we put an enormous amount of pressure on our girls to concern themselves with appearance. Everywhere our girls look they are told that they are not good enough. And now plastic surgery provides an easy solution. If you don’t like the way you look, you can pay someone to fix you. My wife spent 20 years as a hospital chaplain. She tells me that some parents are now giving their daughters breast implant surgery for their birthdays.

Our girls face enough challenges to their self-esteem without mom and dad reinforcing the message that somehow they need surgery to look good enough.

Tanya Dennis has discovered a rather disturbing book called “My Beautiful Mommy.” It’s a book that helps young girls understand their mothers’ plastic surgery. Something seems terribly wrong with this.

“The mom in this children’s book doesn’t just deal with what went wrong (the extra stretched-out skin); she also gets a nose job and breast implants. She explains to her inquisitive daughter: “[I'll be] more than different … I’ll be prettier!”

I’m against teaching our kids - especially our daughters - that their value is found in their appearance.”Read More.

In the Dailies - Discovering the extraordinary God in ordinary life.

HT: highercallingblogs

One Response to “Teach Your Daughters Well”

  1. Dr. Paul Says:

    Thank you for this post - we really could use more voices of reason to combat the vanity that threatens the souls of our children. People come in all shapes and sizes, with varied appearances. We can see how foolish it is when we read books like “The Sneetches” by Dr. Seuss. Why do we still insist in our media-driven culture that you can only play if you belly has a star?

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