Iheartdusty, I agree, I stupidly joined a thread to agree that Barbies are not the best in terms of their shape being anatomically impossible to achieve, partly because I'm worried about the number of eating disorders in my DP's family. This resulted in flippant remarks about someone's son not thinking he would grow up to look like Iggle Piggle. Then you get all the folk that say I had a Barbie when I was young and I'm ok - well I was belted as a child and I'm ok, that doesn't mean I will unquestioningly do the same with my daughter.
The thing for me is that we have all this shit on the TV, in magazines, etc telling us how we should look, that we really didn't have to the same extent when we were growing up (I'm 33), plus we didn't have people having operations then to conform to these images.
Maybe I'm just an old stick in the mud? A lot of people were saying what's wrong with being pretty. There's nothing wrong with being pretty, I think my daughter is beautiful. However, I don't want her appearance to be at the forefront of her thoughts. I can't remember thinking about how I looked until well into secondary school.
Anyway, part of the reason I wrote this is that some adult (her gran, I suspect) has told her she has a fat tummy. She's 3 for Christ's sake. Anyway, I told her it's a beautiful tummy and blew raspberries on it.
I think these folk underestimate the strength of the subliminal messages that our kids are subject to. At 2 years old, my daughter started asking for Barbie merchandise after seeing 1 advert. It's not JUST A DOLL.
[preparing myself for the backlash, and not giving a shit, cause she's not having a piece of plastic tat Barbie]