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In which my daughter wants to lose weight

 

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We were sitting across from each other, at our chipped white Ikea kitchen table, the tinies were eating oatmeal, I was eating peanut butter toast, the baby was chucking bits of food off her high chair tray, and I was studiously ignoring it. My coffee was almost ready. We were talking about the day ahead. First, math, then maybe playground? I want to ride my bike. Okay, we can do that. Laundry absolutely MUST be done (note: it did not get done).

“Mum? I want to lose some weight.”

Boom.

whaaaaaaat?

Boom.

My heart has started to pound, my wrists feel weak, my palms, oh, my God, now? already? this morning? SERIOUSLY?!

Boom.

In an instant, I thought of that letter I wrote to my daughters, about how I wouldn’t call myself fat. I thought of how we studiously avoid television or access to commercials, how we limit music, how I keep magazines out of our home, how I avoid the mall, how we homeschool, how we try to celebrate and affirm womanly beauty in many ways and forms ….and still.

Still.

Still.

Oh, darling girl. How are we here … already?

I laughed nervously, oh, don’t be silly, I sputtered.

“I’m not being silly, Mum.” Serious blue eyes across the kitchen table, shaggy blonde hair slowly growing out of her pixie cut, long limbs swinging beneath her chair, then the baby chucked her plate to the floor with a crash. Anne is nearly six now.

And in that sentence, my baby girl of the triangle mouth seemed to grow up before my eyes. I couldn’t dismiss her, move her onward and elsewhere with laughter or distractions. She meant it. Now.

I got up for my coffee. I was stalling.

We talked at the kitchen table this morning. we talked about her body, about her self. It turns out that she’d heard my sister and I talking about how I wanted to lose a bit of weight, we hadn’t known she was listening, but she was (aren’t they always?). And she thought, well, if my Mum wants to lose weight, I probably do, too.

Boom.

She said, “people ALWAYS tell me I’m thin and I’m tall, so I don’t want to be fat” and I couldn’t breathe for just a second, I didn’t know what to say. She is very tall for her age, all legs, naturally thin, she takes after my husband’s sisters in her body shape and every one feels the need to remark on her physical stature in some way. And already, she feels labeled.

It’s in these moments, the ones right now, on the ground, in my real life, with my own child sitting across from me, thatI can only pray I don’t screw this moment up. You can read, you can prepare, you can think, you can philosophize, you can hypothesize, you can cast judgements on others, but when it’s your sweet and perfect and wild and tender baby girl, there, tall and thin and waiting for something, she doesn’t even know, does she? But she is, she’s waiting for something, from me, in that moment, and all I could think was, “I have no idea what to say now.”

I don’t have words to say that she’s beautiful and perfect. That it doesn’t matter, that I don’t care, that she’s healthy and strong, that life is about living and working and loving and not about what size your clothes are, that I like her just the way she is. There is something in me wants to lay down rules, to order her to not “EVER say that again!” but I don’t want to do that and I don’t know what the hell I’m doing half the time, do any of us?

You’re beautiful.

You’re healthy and you’re strong.

Fill your mind and your heart and your life with things that add to you, darling, don’t consume yourself with restrictions and deprivations. Just fill up with all of the good and glorious stuff of life, and grow, grow, grow. Grow up to love Jesus and love people, grow up to be fully alive in your own life, it’s wild and it’s precious, and you only have this one, you know. This is your childhood, please, just go ride your bike, read a book, build a house out of Legos, let me wash your hair in the bath tub, I’ll use the baby shampoo that you still like so much, and I’ll pour water down your back in rivers, I’ll sing “Danny Boy” into the echoes of the bathtub, I’ve been singing it to you for your entire life, I’m so in love with you, honey, and I’ll tell you again and again, in a million ways, that to me, you are beautiful, and you are enough, just as you are right now and then and someday, always enough.

We finished our breakfast. She wanted seconds. I lathered on the butter.

She asked me if I liked my own body, and, like a prophet, I said, yes, yes, I do. I like my big breasts, I nursed all of you, I like my belly, I carried three huge Bessey babies past term, you know. I like my arms, I like my blue eyes, I like my freckles,  I ran a 5K on these legs, you know, aren’t they strong? (Even though I don’t like my own body, not really,  not most of the time, because all I can see is what I wish was there, and I want to fit into cuter clothes, but I wanted to believe it about myself. And so I said what I wanted to believe) and she looked like she believed me, she said, “I like your body, too, Mum, because you’re warm, I like to be close to you. I don’t think you need to lose weight. Let’s just not do that.”

Speak those things that are not, as they will be, I whispered, and I said, I love my body, too. I like to be healthy, too, but we can’t do that without worrying about that stuff, right? We both like our bodies, isn’t it great?

And that will have to do for today. Who knows about tomorrow?

 

Want to help build a school in Haiti? Click here to do some good.

I’m taking some time off from blogging to finish my book. In the meantime, I am reposting a few of your requested favourites.

 Today’s post originally appeared on 19 June 2012.

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  • Word of a Woman

    gorgeous
    bravo. well done mum.

  • http://twitter.com/RachelRHeath Rachel Heath

    This is one of my favorites.

  • http://thepoorganiclife.com/ Katrina

    My seven year old and I had virtually the same conversation this morning. It was agonizing to see her point to her sweet little tummy and call it fat. Uggh. I just have to remember that body image doesn’t come from external reinforcement, but internal truth. If she believes the inner lie–that something isn’t right with her, it doesn’t matter whether she is actually fat or not. If she sees ME believe that lie, that my face and body are who I am, then of course she thinks the same. Oh that I would live in the truth of who God has created me to be, renewed and perfect rather than ashamed and inadequate.

  • Beth

    One of my favourites, too. Brought me to tears – again.

  • Alana G

    how old is your daughter? not that it matters but it sounds like she’s too young to be judged and labeled like this. she should be happy with herself not by how people see her. it may take a while for her to be comfortable in her skin.

  • Pete A.

    Now that was a story I loved! And a great example of what makes your writing so outstanding (even if I still can’t define it!) Merry Christmas to your whole family.

  • http://twitter.com/MelissaBeaver Melissa

    moved me the first time you posted this and moved me today. a great reminder that they are watching and taking everything in!! everything. thank you sarah.

  • Josieanna

    Thanks for your post- words we use about ourselves are so important it’s scary how much our children listen and copy. I dither about wearing make-up at the moment, I don’t wear much but I use it as way to put on a mask, look prettier than I am especially if I’m going somewhere I’m worries about, or seeing someone I’m scared of. I’d want to tell my children they look beautiful as they are but then I go and put my warpaint on! What Katrina said – Oh that I would live in the truth of who God has created me to be, renewed and perfect rather than ashamed and inadequate.

  • http://www.adamshome.blogspot.com Erin Adams

    I am glad you reposted this, Sarah. I think I missed it back then. Of course I was teary reading this. You are beautiful & so is Ann!

  • Brittney

    It’s almost bound to happen, completely unavoidable. We can homeschool, limit commercials, tv, magazines and so on, and it will still creep in. People have been concerned with their appearances since the beginning of time, in some fashion or another. I have found with my kids, to put more emphasis on the relevancy of what we believe about ourselves because it’s a neurosis we’ll never settle, and one that can steal more precious moments than we’re aware of. I try to encourage them to fixate on how differently our day could go if we concentrated on what positivity we can find in each and every moment. My son is about to go back to school after being homeschooled for a couple years, and he’s much smaller than most children his age, I can’t tell him that he’s not, that he’s the same size but it’s a matter of perspective; he is smaller, but does that matter? Is it relevant? Would we know beauty in bodily form? Can we unbiasedly point out too thin or too heavy? Too big, to small? It’s futile. And irrelevent. My son is frank about his insecurity with being smaller, and told me just yesterday that he plans to simply concentrate on something else, on having fun, studying harder, being funny. He’s grieved the grief already, that our cultural standards are perverse and leave him physically “less valuable.” It’s the world we live in. It leaves everyone “less valuable” at some point in each of our lives. I hate it for my son, and I hate it for your daughter, and I hate it for the rest of us. It’s a daily struggle to reorganize our thoughts to have a perspective that perpetuates life, rather than death. Kudos to you for breathing life and perspective into her confused little mind.

  • Liz J

    Well done. When my daughter says that to me one day, I too wills stare at her and panic. In a world that teaches our beautiful lovely daughters to be thin because it is better…to hate their bodies if it is different – we have to teach them the opposite. That they are beautiful lovely perfect just the way they were made.

  • http://twitter.com/Whois_Beautiful Who is Beautiful?

    What a great post and picture of courage in conversation with your daughter! I love what you told her. I love what you said about yourself. I love that you are guarding her little heart and mind against our culture. I too, am determined to be a voice to many, including my daughters, to remind women that they were fearfully and wonderfully made. Perfect just the way God created them :)

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