I have a child in care who has striking features, and it's the first thing everyone comments about. She has grown up and been surrounded by people making these comments and, at 5, is now very aware of them and makes them about herself. Today I heard "I look perfect today!" and "I'm cuter than I've ever been!" I am an after-school provider so my time with the child is limited each day.
Is there a kind yet educational way to address these kind of self-involved comments to help the child understand that looks aren't everything? It's troubling enough that I'd like to try to model better language and behavior around her to give her a little balance. I've heard the mom make a comment or two about it, but I think she's just waiting it out and expecting some miracle to arrive to change the behavior.
Thanks.
Is there a kind yet educational way to address these kind of self-involved comments to help the child understand that looks aren't everything? It's troubling enough that I'd like to try to model better language and behavior around her to give her a little balance. I've heard the mom make a comment or two about it, but I think she's just waiting it out and expecting some miracle to arrive to change the behavior.
Thanks.
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