Saturday, July 25, 2009

"Just Ashlynn"

Out of morbid curiosity, I watched the season premiere of "Toddlers and Tiaras" the other day on The Learning Channel (TLC). I say "morbid" because to me, there is something inherently wrong about dressing small children up as sexpots, decked out with glam makeup and big hair and skimpy outfits. I mean, yeah, I can understand how putting makeup on your daughter a la "playing dressup" would be cute; we liked to do that when we were children. But there is a line between dressing a child up as an adult for fun or Halloween or something, and dressing a child up to actually look "desirable," which is what it seemed a lot of parents did to their children on the previews for this show. These children did not look 4 and 5 years old; they looked like miniature grown women, and were acting "sexy." I saw one little girl dressed up as a teacher or something, doing some sort of body skimming move with her hands that looked like how a rock video model would have done in the 80s, acting like the nerdy/sexy teacher being caught in some sort of naughty act. Other little girls were similarly decked out in provocative outfits, pursing their lips and shimmying on stage in ways that no toddler should even know how to do. Even these little girls probably have no idea that how they are acting is, for lack of a better phrase, sexually charged. Seeing these little girls made me think of JonBenet Ramsey.
Now, don't get me wrong. I am not completely against cute baby contests and not even pageants per se. I think my two children are extremely adorable and might even be able to win such contests if they cooperated, but I don't think I will subject them to an event where because of its very nature, if you don't win, you would surely feel that other people think someone else is prettier and better than you, and that cannot be good for the ol' esteem, not even for children. ESPECIALLY not for children. My shady views on these glam pageants for little girls (and boys apparently) were vindicated when I watched "Toddlers and Tiaras." But this time it wasn't because of the little girls looking like pedophile bait. It was because of the insane parents, namely a woman named Jamie Sterling from Texas who was a pageant girl herself and has all five of her daughters in pageants. The thing that really got me (and apparently dozens and dozens if not hundreds and thousands of other people) was that she was very obviously playing favorites and had one daughter, six-year-old BreAnne, whom she thought was her shining star and it showed. The person it showed to the most was BreAnne's twin sister, Ashlynn.
Now I am not going to go the route like a lot of ticked off people on TLC's forum did by insulting Jamie's or BreAnne's looks. But when they first appeared on the show, I did not expect that BreAnne was going to be the most "successful" pageanteer. But her mother has groomed her to be exactly that, and what is awful is that she is doing the exact opposite for Ashlynn, while making her compete against her sister in pageants, which she doesn't seem to want to do. I can't describe the heartbreak I felt while watching her tear Ashlynn down and build BreAnne up. This poor girl will probably have to have lots of therapy in her life because of what amounts to emotional and mental abuse, being made to feel inferior while her sister is busy developing an obvious superiority complex. Jamie Sterling gushed about how BreAnne lights up the stage and has such a bright smile and how she looks "just like Mommy," then she said that Ashlynn is "just Ashlynn." Said it with DISDAIN, as if it was a bad thing, adding that she is skinny and has a "bigger nose." (Ashlynn, for the record, is adorable.) She claimed she doesn't know how to work the stage, and she had no confidence in her. There were so many moments that made me want to punch through the television and take this girl from this awful shallow woman that I cannot even describe them all. She made Ashlynn cry because her pageant dress had a rip, which she "forgot" to sew, so Ashlynn had to wear it for the pageant that way even though they deduct points, and in fact, she made people cut the lace with scissors. BreAnne was acting like an extreme brat, to the point that her father (who does not like pageants but concede's to them to make his marriage work, he said) took her out of the competition before the talent part, to Jamie's dismay. Every time they showed BreAnne on stage, Jamie beamed with pride, and every time they showed Ashlynn, she looked like she couldn't care less and was embarrassed even. Now, I know that shows can edit certain parts of video to look a certain way, like Jamie's look of disgust could have been at a different point than the exact moment it was shown. HOWEVER, they could not edit the ugly things Jamie said and the way she was acting herself at the moments she said them. Ashlynn won 3rd runner up, and Jamie said she was shocked. BreAnne somehow won 2nd runner up, but was asleep and could not accept it. But what got me was that Ashlynn won a "Director's Choice" award, with a huge teddy bear and trophy, and her mother could not even bring herself to make over her the way she did over BreAnne. She said she couldn't believe it and she never expected it. She never expects Ashlynn to win anything. And in fact, at the end when TLC was interviewing the twins, BreAnne was stealing Ashlynn's winnings and Ashlynn was saying she won, and BreAnne said SHE won, and then to hurt Ashlynn said that she got 2nd runner up and Ashlynn got 3rd, and that Mommy had told her she'd won. Before they even went to this pageant, she was wearing tiaras and Ashlynn was meekly and sweetly asking for it back (might have been one she had won), and at the pageant, when BreAnne was sulking, Ashlynn was trying to share and offer her sister a balloon, then offered the whole bunch to her. I don't know that I've seen a child with a sweeter, more generous spirit in the face of being beaten so low emotionally. She also seemed sad, and very obviously felt like her sister was better than she because her mother and her sister acted that way. They both treated her like a nothing. I can't describe it adequately in a blog; it's a "you have to see it" thing, but I could not ever imagine treating my children the way this mother does. I am sure she loves her children, but she really has something wrong with her to treat Ashlynn like she is not good enough. The girl would have more confidence in herself if her mother would show her a little confidence and respect and not play favorites like she does.
I hope that Jamie Sterling sees this show and sees what an awful mother she seems to be. I know that pageantry is just one aspect of their lives, and I can't say she is a horrible mother just based on that because maybe she builds Ashlynn up in other ways, but I just don't think so. I can't wrap my mind around the way she tore her down constantly on this show, and is creating a monster in her other daughter. The younger ones, I can't say for sure how they feel because they didn't focus on them as much. They way I am not focusing on the other two pageant parents who clearly have a few issues too, but not as bad as Jamie Sterling. They love their kids I'm sure. One has spent nearly $70,000 on entering her 4-year-old in pageants, and the other has 2 boys and entered the second when he was 2 weeks old. But I guess if that is your thing and you have the resources, so be it. Just PLEASE, ladies (and fellas if you are a pageant Dad), teach your children that INNER beauty is the most important thing. Jamie Sterling, you did NOT exhibit inner beauty and you are NOT instilling that in BreAnne, I can promise you that. Don't make any of your kids feel like they aren't good enough, or are less than someone else, especially a sibling, and ESPECIALLY a twin sibling. If your kids do not want to participate in pageants or any aspect of them, don't make them. If your kids are acting up, even if they are your "shining star," discipline them, even if it means not letting them continue on in the show. If your kid is not feeling well, get them better first and foremost. I am not an expert on pageants, but I am a mother and I feel like this advice can span the spectrum of children's activities. I know I have a lot to learn about managing extracurricular activities because my kids are too young for a lot of those, and I have no interest in subjecting them to pageantry, but I know that when they are old enough to "get involved" with whatever their hearts desire, I will be supportive of them both and encourage them both, and never let one of them feel like he/she is better than the other. I want them to know I love them with all my heart at all times. Equally. I want their self esteem to be the mirror of the love they get at home, not the mirror (or what they see in it) to be the reflection of their self esteem. I want my kids to have true beauty, and they will not need a tiara or trophy to stack up to that.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Back to Blogging

When I signed up for this blog several years ago, I had literally just seen the word "blog" in an internet search and wondered, "What the crap is a blog?" I don't even remember what I was searching for. I clicked a link and it took me to someone's "blog" here at blogspot and so I signed up for one, thinking maybe it would be for me. I love to write. Then I just let it go. Actually, I didn't. I just didn't end up using blogspot; I posted my blogs on myspace, and besides the two little posts I put on here around the time I signed up, my blogspot was forgotten. Now I am overwhelmed with how many blog venues there are. I don't even get on myspace much anymore because I became a Facebook convert. Like many, I did not like Facebook at first and hung on for dear life at Myspace, but then Facebook took over my time. It's hard to keep more than one site updated with all your photos and thoughts and happenings, especially when most of the significant time you spend online is during the little tykes' naptimes. I've done a couple of blogs on facebook when the mood struck, and stopped blogging on Myspace altogether after my husband got home from Iraq.
The weird thing is that the past few years have been a time when I probably could have documented some of the most monumental happenings of my life. I got married and had two youngins, which fulfilled two of my biggest dreams. I did write the brunt of my blogs on myspace after I had my son, while my husband was in Iraq, but it wasn't really about motherhood or being an army wife. It was about weight loss. It kept me accountable. And honestly, it's something I need to do again because I'm sure I am heavier than I was when I started that blog. I blew up like a balloon after my daughter was born. I didn't really lose the baby weight; I gained more. I started taking Depo Provera, which I was told might make me gain weight, and I guess the way it works is that it makes you want to eat everything and gain so much weight that you don't feel desirable much less like having sex. Just kidding. I know it might have a slight something to do with my weight gain, but most of it is just good old fashioned lack of willpower. I had never taken birth control before and was reluctant because I'm breastfeeding my daughter, but the doc assured me it's safe. My husband has a back injury though, so that in itself is birth control. It doesn't seem like I need this dang shot, if you get my drift.
ANYWAY, how did I get onto that subject from blogging about starting to blog again? I am just happy to have picked this up again, and look forward to seeing where it might take me. I've been inspired by some other blogs on this very website that have become a national phenomenon, and while I don't expect a blog such as this entry to get me much if any attention, it just feels good to freewrite sometimes and get something off your chest. I am totally random, as you may be able to tell, and that's ok. Now I'm sounding like Stewart Smalley. (I might have his name completely wrong, and for that I apologize, but it's the character Al Franken played on SNL that said, "I'm good enough. I'm smart enough. And doggonit, people like me." Well, he may not have even said doggonit, but I do.) I hope if you are reading this, you will stay tuned and that you will like me. :)