Posted on 05/23/2015 10:58:54 AM PDT by drewh
The ice princess dress looked so innocent in the discount store, no idea what it was in for. It wasnt a Disney-sanctioned, Elsa from Frozen dress, but it looked the part an ankle-length number with a powder-blue velvet bodice, cerulean skirt accented by silver swirls, a white gauzy cape down the back and a plastic diamond gem centered just below the collar. Grace, nearly four, had been talking about being Elsa next Halloween since last Halloween. For $14.99, I figured Id get a jump on her costume.
Its odd that I would buy a princess dress for my daughter, let alone let her wear it nearly three weeks straight. Like a lot of pre-parenthood people, I had definite ideas of what wouldnt happen in my home once a child entered it. No sugar. No TV. And for certain, no princesses, with their helpless ways and infuriatingly tiny waists.
Of course, like every parent, I laugh at todays reality vs. my pre-child expectations. File TV and sugar under if you cant beat em And the princess thing its ubiquitous, some kind of magnetic call from deep in her DNA. By osmosis, Grace knew the Frozen theme song, Let It Go, months before she ever saw the movie. Suddenly it was all Frozen-themed nail polish, pencil erasers, stickers and lip balm. Elsa had eclipsed Graces first love, Hello Kitty, and her second, Batman, who had even made an appearance at her birthday party. I took solace that at least Elsa and her sister Anna were plucky heroines who solved their own problems and helped each other, not like that doormat Cinderella (time to move on, girl, and start that vet-tech training) or the dim-witted Aurora of Sleeping Beauty (you had one job: dont touch the spinning wheel. Just the one job).
So when I gave Grace the Elsa dress one Saturday afternoon, she put it on immediately and wore it the next day as well. On Monday, she wanted to wear it to school. I gently tried to change her mind. Getting her dressed makes me painfully, acutely aware of my control issues. In theory, it shouldnt matter what she wants to wear as long as its seasonally appropriate. But a part of me Id like to deny, but cant all the time, wants her to wear what Ive picked out, whatever is nuanced and correct for each occasion. Maybe its a kind of inability to truly separate myself from my daughter. Maybe its my own kind of latent narcissism, putting forth my daughter as a reflection of myself into the world. And then theres the side-eye I imagine Ill get from other preschool parents and staff (whos making the decisions here?)
Grace is one of the most determined people Ive ever met. Shes confident in her ideas, with a fierce independence that simultaneously calms and alarms me. When she was only a few weeks old, she insisted on holding her bottle herself. At two, she was able to pick ingredients and make her own sandwiches. Now, at nearly four, aint nobody going to tell her what to wear.
So for more than three weeks straight, she picked the Elsa dress, and to my shock, it was a win for me. Knowing what she was going to wear each day eliminated a good 20 minutes of outfit and dressing angst. Grace would accommodate practical exceptions for after-school activities and sleeping. (I know what youre wondering, and yes, wed wash the dress at night.) On day five, I started posting pictures on Facebook of her in the dress and how she styled it out: Rappers Delight with shades and a backpack; Santa Fe hippie with shell and crystal necklaces; Fresh Princess of Bel Air with pink sparkle Vans and a tiara. Friends started to check in daily to see if she was still wearing the dress. She was.
On day nine, her Aunt Karen sent in a stunt double: A real Disney Elsa dress, though a little scratchier from the stiff tulle on the arms and shoulders. No matter, Grace decided she would wear that one over the original one.
Day 12, ironically enough, happened to be Costume Day at school. It was Elsa, again, of course. This prompted a discussion about dressing up.
Im going to change my Halloween costume, she said, looking at me, seriously, deliberately, as if explaining the complexities of an adjustable-rate mortgage.
Oh really? What will it be? I asked.
Anna, she said. Anna is the resourceful, fun princess sister who thinks up interesting things to do, while Elsa is like your worst emo-PMS friend from college, so I guess that would be an improvement.
By day 13, the dress-wearing had taken on a kind of anthropological, performance-art quality. I was in full support of her going with it as long as possible.
I suppose there are two kinds of parents: those who cant roll with 23 days of an Elsa dress, and those who can. The reason I switched from being the former to the latter is because of what the dress means to Grace. Its not because shes waiting for a prince to rescue her, or because shes trying to channel the glamour of Elsas lush platinum locks. Its because, as she explained, Elsa has ice powers.
I understand the parents who worry. When I was 10, I rode New Yorks crosstown bus to school and back, no chaperone required, a bus pass allowing me and my friends access to the entire city. Today, parents in my quiet, safe, L.A.-adjacent neighborhood barely let their tweens and teens walk a few blocks to the ice cream store. Most families are over-scheduled. Grace does karate, swimming and ballet, which she loves, but I wonder if its too much? Im a single, working mom, and after school, theres not a lot of time for a stock-photo life flying kites in meadows or jumping around on the beach. Grace doesnt have a lot of say in where she goes or how she spends her day. So if this little blue dress and what it symbolizes makes this small child in a big world feel powerful, Im totally, utterly, completely down with that.
If its my job to help Grace along in her life, the least I can do is let her fly her own freaky flag and enable her take her power where she can. The day of this writing, she broke the Elsa spell and opted for a long black sequin skirt my mother made her, a neon-pink tutu T-shirt, and silver sandals, an ensemble Im calling Boca Raton Pinochle. Grace may or may not go back to the Elsa dress tomorrow. Shell let it go when shes ready.
Vanessa McGrady is a Los Angeles-based freelance writer specializing in parenting, small business, personal finance and things that make her go hmmm. Shes crazy in love with her own life right now. Shed be super thrilled if you come play with her on Twitter @VanessaMcGrady and read her blog at vanessamcgrady.com.
Hey, in future years she can write about the challenges of having a mentally ill kid.
Wow, there’s a few minutes I’ll never get back...
Gack!
The mother has enough issues to fill a counseling textbook.
"Vanessa McGrady was way crunchier than any of your Prius-driving Santa Cruz-alumni friends: She was so crunchy, a bear once pooped on her coffee table."
Mom never had much of a childhood, Im guessing!!
Gazing into the crystal ball, I forsee interesting
situations in about 10 or 12 years.
Awwwww. Isn’t that soooooooooo cute and special?
mom is reliving her childhood through her daughters!
Maybe she thinks “Louie” is some kind of parenting guide.
When I was growing up with my 5 siblings we each would get a couple of pair of pants and a couple of shirts for school. We would wear the first set of shirts on Monday and Tuesday and they would go in the wash. The second set was for Wednesday and Thursday then into the wash. The first set would come out for Friday and Sunday morning. This was repeated through out the year. I had two younger brothers who were twins so they could alternate between 4 outfits but since nobody at school could tell them apart it didn’t matter.
“”Grace is one of the most determined people Ive ever met. Shes confident in her ideas, with a fierce independence that simultaneously calms and alarms me. When she was only a few weeks old, she insisted on holding her bottle herself. At two, she was able to pick ingredients and make her own sandwiches. Now, at nearly four, aint nobody going to tell her what to wear.””
In other words I can’t discipline my kid or stand firm and she will never know what the word “no” means.
Also, funny how the father doesn’t seem to be int he picture here at all either. Perhaps he has a problem with the way you’re dealing with his kid.
Parents control children. I know many like to fall back on the old saw that you should pick your battles - seems like the first here is reclaiming that 20 minute what will you wear battle.
Of course, no baby daddy is mentioned in the article.
ONLY 23 days???? AMATEUR!
I have two grand daughters who have her beat by months.
Oh, and mrs p6 would wear one everyday if she didn’t have to go to work.
Bingo.
Hey! When I was a kid I wore my cowboy outfit to school.
Hat, boots, shirt, pants and two revolvers on my hips.
Hey! When I was a kid I wore my cowboy outfit to school.
Hat, boots, shirt, pants and two revolvers on my hips.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Today, you’d be in juvie the first time you showed up that way. Fake guns, oh the horror! I think I tried to wear my Davy Crockett Coon Skin Cap to school once, but that fizzled before I left home. And anyway, I was a girl, so I guess it would have been unseemly...:)
Leni
this woman is the reason that Promises Malibu exists...:)
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