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Filed under: Opinions
Beauty in a syringe? Image: sxc.hu
While most of us try to set a healthy example of self-love and acceptance, there are those who seem incapable of that. If a daughter learns from her mother to accept and appreciate herself the way she's made, what happens to the child of a mother who is obsessed with her appearance and will do anything to achieve her idea of perfection? In the case of Margaret King, she raises a daughter who won't be happy until she herself is perfect.
King is a 49-year-old housewife who has spent about $90,000 upgrading her face and body. She's had two breast enlargements, a nose job, a mini-face lift and a tummy tuck. In addition, she's had regular Botox injections for past eleven years. Given all that, it is no surprise that her daughter, 18-year-old Jodie, has learned to be critical of her own appearance.
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When Jodie began to complain that her forehead was too wrinkly, her friends assured her that it wasn't. But her mother didn't even try to convince her that she was beautiful the way she was -- she gifted her with Botox injections for her 18th birthday.
Despite the fact that many experts don't recommend Botox for anyone under thirty, there is no law prohibiting it. But at least one cosmetic surgeon thinks King is leading her daughter down a perilous path. "It sounds like this young lady is on a dangerous spiral. She's obviously getting encouragement from her mother who sounds like she might be addicted to Botox as well," says Alex Karidis.
"It is very very unusual to have Botox at that age and 18-year-olds should only have it if there is a real facial deformity, not just normal lines when they frown. There is a real psychological danger. This is setting a precedent for using anti-aging procedures for many years to come. The mother needs to be taking responsibility if she is encouraging her daughter to have injections into her face."
Unfortunately, Karidis' prediction is already playing out. King has moved beyond enabling her daughter to have Botox; she has taken her for a breast enlargement consult and promised her a nose job for her 21st birthday.
Women getting plastic surgery is nothing new and ultimately nobody's business but their own. But I can't help but feel sad that this lovely young woman has been raised to believe that she needs medical intervention in order to feel good about herself. And anyone who believes that there is nothing worse than looking old desperately needs a reality check.












ReaderComments (Page 5 of 5)
5-27-2009 @ 10:43AM
Kim said...This is absolutely ridiculous. What is wrong with this mom? This girl probably has no self esteem thanks to Mom. Does this girl not have any clue what people who over-do it on Botox look like? Maybe she should take a good look at Olivia Newton John's daughter Chloe. She is a true fright to look at with the anorexia, botox, and breast implants, all at the ripe old age of 21. I have had some plastic surgery on my body I admit it, after having 2 9 lb babies, but I have never done anything to my face. I love the way I look and I'm 37. There is NO reason why an 18 yr old should have to use a filler, or do anything to her face.
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5-27-2009 @ 11:20AM
Dee said...Pics of these two. eeeeeeewwwwwwwwwww
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1187380/I-bought-daughter-Botox-jabs-18th-birthday--says-mother-spent-45-000-plastic-surgery.html
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5-27-2009 @ 12:02PM
WILL said...WHY CANT PEOPLE JUST GROW OLD GRACEFULLY?
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5-27-2009 @ 12:04PM
WILL said...AMERICAN WOMEN ARENT THE ONLY WOMEN HAVING PLASTIC SUGERY
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5-27-2009 @ 12:55PM
Jo said...This is nuts. The mom isn't fooling anyone....look at her hands, they tell the story.
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5-27-2009 @ 2:20PM
Landri said...It's nobody's business but theirs!
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5-27-2009 @ 12:41PM
jiboko said...Mom "encourages her daughter to do the same. It may harm daughter. Hey, daughter...Wait till 30-35 and you need to make your own decision for yourself.
I felt major change over 45 yrs old...I admit I need to lose many lbs and may have to have surgery to remove stomach pocket of fat. I try to exercise more ....
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5-27-2009 @ 8:56PM
angela said...Every batch of Botox needs to be tested on animals (mostly dogs) before humans can receive it. If the batch is bad, doctors can tell because the animals suffocate to death. Beauty kills.
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5-27-2009 @ 1:04PM
Moira said...This is awfully young to start this. I have always thought of Botox as a treatment for an older face or body, as it goes through the changes associated with aging. But I see injections as a last resort, to fix a flaw that could keep me from being seen in public. I'd consider creams and staying out of the sun first. Back to Botox, I also don't see any good coming of encouraging such a habit in a teenager, who probably looks just fine. It's as bad and addictive as an eating disorder, with the person obsessing on something that does not need to be done, and is dangerous.
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5-27-2009 @ 1:08PM
Beth said...Carol.... you are so right. I would never have considered a face lift until I reached 48 and everything fell. So at 51 I am started the search. May gravity fight with you
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5-27-2009 @ 1:11PM
Moira said...And the breast enlargement? I can't see doing that in teenagers. I always worried that if I damaged my breasts in anyway, that I'd be miserable when they grow naturally during pregnancy and start to hurt. Besides, what happens when the skin stretches? Huge stretch marks, if there's no room for the glands to expand. Besides, breast augmentation looks phony. Unnatural.
Be patient if you're thin now. Girls, even I grew naturally without any help, no scalpels. No foreign objects for my immune system to attack. And who wants a figure that can't be fit off the shelf? Because I have a chest that's several inches larger than my hips, if I buy a suit that doesn't allow size mixing and matching, either my girls get squashed if I buy the hip size, or my hips and waist swim in the bottom half if I buy for the top size.
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5-27-2009 @ 1:44PM
jonnysheen said...Wow I just saw a picture of the both of them. Well mom definitely needs help. $90,000 bucks for that? Damn! She should have used it for poor kids in the 3rd world. At least she could feel good inside cause outside... ewwww. I mean if she looked like Demi Moore it was worth it but to wind up looking like Michael Moore wasn't.
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5-27-2009 @ 1:53PM
Roger Garrett said..."Mom gifted Botox to Daughter"
GIFT IS NOT A VERB!!!!!!
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5-27-2009 @ 2:15PM
Sam said...I just saw the picture and Mom needs to get her money back, if she has spent all that money and looks that bad then she deserves what she gets and as for daughter... you aren't far off from looking ridiculous as well.
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5-27-2009 @ 2:16PM
Sam said...Forehead looks like the wigs are pulled forward enough, the eyes are all puffy and wrinkled, nose is is pig nose, not pug nose, mouth looks fake and chin is lopsided, neck looks nasty, boobs look fake...and hands look like the hands of a 90 year old farm worker. If that is beauty then the beauty that is in the eye of the beholder is blind. Too bad they don't like themself enough to accept themself without looking like plastic blow up dolls...
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5-27-2009 @ 2:48PM
COOKIE said...my sister in law used botox and facelifts at an early age, and
guess what, she had a butt ugly kid anyway..........she keeps
that kid under a blanket in the summer....
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5-27-2009 @ 5:23PM
Linda said...This is crazy. I also believe this is a form of child abuse. We should teach our children to accept themselves for who they are, not what they look like. I agree the mother looks horrible. She doesn't even look like a real person. I am going to be 53 and am so proud that I look 15 years younger than her with no cosmetic surgery. A little TLC goes a long way with little to no expense
compared to what she has spent. My prayers are with her daughter.
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5-30-2009 @ 2:14PM
damoki said...Linda,
I mostly agree with your response and observations, but I would disagree on the "child aduse" label and opt for calling it "Parenting Neglect". The mother is sprinkling her daughter with Mom's warped view of self-image, or if you prefer, just being a bad parent.
The other point is one you and others tend to gloss over. You stated you were proud to look 15 years younger than her with no medical intervention... OK. But, would you (and others) be so quick to avoid the sculpting process or chemicals and sharp knives if you looked 15 years older than your age? The statement of pride in your "by comparison" observation is exactly the point. You are happy to look younger naturally, but hint at dicsontent with those who desire the same through technological advancement. I feel friction between the two views.
What do you think?
DaMoKi
6-01-2009 @ 1:39PM
Melissa said...Yes, I'm only 30....but things have changed (they tend to do that after you have babies, too), I have a little crow's feet going on....and I still wouldn't do it....My mom, my grandmother, and my aunts have never done anything like Botox or plastic surgery to improve themselves, because we all have the same belief that God gave me my body, fat, thin, wrinkles or no wrinkles, and I love it....I just think everyone is missing the point I was making though....this is CHILD is 18 YEARS OLD, and her mother is telling her it's perfectly fine to get this crap! I really can't see why an 18 year old CHILD would need it, and why with the first complaint, her mother would not only allow it, but encourage it! That's what really bothers me, and I don't think you people that are talking back to me are seeing that!
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