You don't want a long-term partner. You want a man to father your child and then exit your life. You will never have to look at that man again. Do you think you will care how attractive he was when you are raising the child? Will the good looks of the child be at the forefront of your mind when they are born? Would the idea of being a parent be less attractive to you if your baby didn't have the looks you wanted? If the answer is yes, I think you are excessively focused on the superficial and I think that focus is evidence of not understanding what parenting is really about.
No of course parenting wouldnt be affected. of course i iwouldnt treat my child any less than that. im just thinking. what if my child was physically beautiful. fancy that. its human nature. what parent would willingly want an ugly child. none. like i said its human nature and theres even research on that
its like this. it reminds me of this analogy. do u have a girlfriend? from my experience ive seen husbands say all the time of their wives yes i love my wife i love her but come on inside the vast majority of men would prefer it EVEN MORE if their wife had a smokin body a drop dead gorgeous wife. sure they fancy that idea. just how i fancy that. if i had a child i would love him regardless but couldnt help it
what do you think of parents who brag about their beautiful children or who do toddlers and tiaras beauty pageants
Maybe those appearances matter a lot to some people, but they really don't matter to me. I have had girlfriends, but I've always felt awkward complimenting their appearance because I think it's so superficial. Complimenting beauty is an admission that it's important. I did compliment their looks because I did think they were attractive and I knew they liked being complimented, but the fact that they were beautiful wasn't important to me at all. I never liked my own appearance being complimented either. It's entirely possible that I'm the odd one out, but that's how I feel.
I think those parents are teaching their kids the wrong lessons about what is really important. I'm sure they love their kids, but the message they are teaching them about the importance of beauty is damaging to their self-esteem as adults.
IIN I want a man free child
↑ View this comment's parent
← View full post
A long-term partner? Not very important at all.
You don't want a long-term partner. You want a man to father your child and then exit your life. You will never have to look at that man again. Do you think you will care how attractive he was when you are raising the child? Will the good looks of the child be at the forefront of your mind when they are born? Would the idea of being a parent be less attractive to you if your baby didn't have the looks you wanted? If the answer is yes, I think you are excessively focused on the superficial and I think that focus is evidence of not understanding what parenting is really about.
--
Anonymous Post Author
9 years ago
|
pl
Comment Hidden (
show
)
Report
0
0
No of course parenting wouldnt be affected. of course i iwouldnt treat my child any less than that. im just thinking. what if my child was physically beautiful. fancy that. its human nature. what parent would willingly want an ugly child. none. like i said its human nature and theres even research on that
its like this. it reminds me of this analogy. do u have a girlfriend? from my experience ive seen husbands say all the time of their wives yes i love my wife i love her but come on inside the vast majority of men would prefer it EVEN MORE if their wife had a smokin body a drop dead gorgeous wife. sure they fancy that idea. just how i fancy that. if i had a child i would love him regardless but couldnt help it
what do you think of parents who brag about their beautiful children or who do toddlers and tiaras beauty pageants
--
dom180
9 years ago
|
pl
Comment Hidden (
show
)
Report
0
0
Maybe those appearances matter a lot to some people, but they really don't matter to me. I have had girlfriends, but I've always felt awkward complimenting their appearance because I think it's so superficial. Complimenting beauty is an admission that it's important. I did compliment their looks because I did think they were attractive and I knew they liked being complimented, but the fact that they were beautiful wasn't important to me at all. I never liked my own appearance being complimented either. It's entirely possible that I'm the odd one out, but that's how I feel.
I think those parents are teaching their kids the wrong lessons about what is really important. I'm sure they love their kids, but the message they are teaching them about the importance of beauty is damaging to their self-esteem as adults.