HAS DARA-LYNN WEISS JUST WRITTEN THE WORST VOGUE ARTICLE EVER?

by hurricanevanessa on March 24, 2012

Jeez.

In their annual “The Body Issue,” Vogue US ran a piece by “Manhattan Socialite” Dara-Lynn Weiss, on how she “encouraged” her 7 year-old daughter to lose 16lbs in one year.

This is was Jezebel had to say about the piece, which has caused controversy all over the net: ” (This) has to go down in history as the one of the most fucked up, selfish women to ever grace the magazine’s pages. Weiss’ initial quandary is a complicated one, to be sure: what do you do if your pediatrician tells you your child is clinically obese? But the justifications to which Weiss clings as she describes the abrasive, often irrational weight-loss strategies she imposed upon her young daughter are truly disgusting, as is the obvious fact that Weiss was projecting her hatred of her own body onto her child throughout her year-long diet.”

So what did she write, that caused so much of a stir?

Here’s an extract: ” I once reproachfully deprived Bea of her dinner after learning that her observation of French Heritage Day at school involved nearly 800 calories of Brie, filet mignon, baguette, and chocolate. I stopped letting her enjoy Pizza Fridays when she admitted to adding a corn salad as a side dish one week. I dressed down a Starbucks barista when he professed ignorance of the nutrition content of the kids’ hot chocolate whose calories are listed as “120-210″ on the menu board: Well, which is it? When he couldn’t provide an answer, I dramatically grabbed the drink out of my daughter’s hands, poured it into the garbage, and stormed out. I cringe when I recall the many times I had it out with Bea over a snack given to her by a friend’s parent or caregiver … rather than direct my irritation at the grown-up, I often derided Bea for not refusing the inappropriate snack. And there have been many awkward moments at parties, when Bea has wanted to eat, say, both cookies and cake, and I’ve engaged in a heated public discussion about why she can’t.”

How awful.

Yes, says Jezebel, it all appeared very awful.

For Mama Dearest, particularly.

“”It is grating to have someone constantly complain of being hungry, or refuse to eat what she’s supposed to, month after month,” Weiss writes. It was also “exhausting managing someone’s diet, especially when her brother has completely different nutritional needs.” And then you have the embarrassment, as “no one likes to see a child or her mother humiliated over something as trivial as a few dozen calories.”

Of course, it turns out that Mama has issues of her own: ” “Who was I to teach a little girl how to maintain a healthy weight and body image?” she asks, given that she’s spent the past three decades “[hating] how my body looked and [devoting] an inordinate amount of time trying to change it.” Among other destructive habits, Weiss took laxatives as a teen and “begged” a doctor friend to score her appetite suppressants that had been proven to cause heart-valve defects. “I have not ingested any food, looked at a restaurant menu, or been sick to the point of vomiting without silently launching a complicated mental algorithm about how it will affect my weight,” she admits.”

All of which might go some way to explain why poor Bea took to eating “too much,” in the first place.

But a year passes and Bea loses the weight.  In the style of all future Vogue readers, she is rewarded by “many pretty dresses.”

“For Bea, the achievement is bittersweet. When I ask her if she likes how she looks now, if she’s proud of what she’s accomplished, she says yes…Even so, the person she used to be still weighs on her. Tears of pain fill her eyes as she reflects on her yearlong journey. “That’s still me,” she says of her former self. “I’m not a different person just because I lost sixteen pounds.” I protest that, indeed, she is different. At this moment, that fat girl is a thing of the past. A tear rolls down her beautiful cheek, past the glued-in feather. “Just because it’s in the past,” she says, “doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.”

Poor, poor Bea.

I don’t know which is worse. Carrying the heavy weight of childhood obesity and it’s many dangerous burdens into adulthood, or carrying the shame and humiliation her mother appears to have heaped on her little shoulders, along with her for the rest of her life.

First in real life, then through the pages of Vogue Magazine, and now amplified across the net.

I wonder what the mood was like, around the Weiss dinner table, is this weekend?

My instinct tells me that I should be careful about judging a mother who I don’t know and who obviously (in her own way,) wants what she believes  is best for her child.

Obesity is an epidemic and one which we need to find solutions for, that is for sure.

But education about balanced eating, love, exercise and peace are surely more crucial to any rehabilitation of dangerous eating habits, than screaming at your child about a side dish of corn salad?

I do believe, as a parent, that our role is to prepare our children for life, not protect them from it – but this article turned me off my food.

In it’s values, it’s methods and what I suspect must be it’s essentially mad thinking:

A child who is probably already eating for comfort, surely needs comfort from her mother, and not abuse?

How long, I wonder will it will be, before these kind of bullying, judgmental tactics  just cause Bea to reach for a secret, warm, comforting hot chocolate, when chilly, Police Officer Mommy next shoots icicles in her direction?

And disapproval and anger will surely happen, because this does not appear to be a woman who is at peace with her child’s space in the world.

Or, and most importantly, her own.

Will the next slip, twixt cup and lip, result in an equal eruption from Mama?

Equal pressure, hysteria and judgment?

Probably.

I wonder how Bea will react then?

Will she deprive herself to make her Mommy happy? Or comfort herself with that warm, non-judgmental mouthful of processed calories?

I would guess it could go … either way. But neither of those options makes children feel happy, confident and relaxed around the issues of their body, their mother and their eating habits.

I think we all know the way the story ends.

Via Jezebel.

You can read the original article here

{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

Heidi March 24, 2012 at 13:47

One of the most disgusting things I have EVER read!

kim March 24, 2012 at 19:14

This is why I don’t read US Vogue.

IHSAN March 26, 2012 at 07:55

I also wanna reduce my weight so kindly guide!

Mimi March 26, 2012 at 13:12

I have been thinking about this since I read the original Jezebel article. How as a child my HORRIBLE eating habits didn’t affect me (I was underweight during high school, and ate more than a loaf of bread in carbs every day in addition to nutritional shakes to get my weight up). I got in the habit of large, second and third portions and thought that a “healthy meal|” was Macaroni cheese with no veg and very little protein. As soon as I hit varsity, quit sport and stated drinking (as well as taking medication that causes weight gain) I ballooned (my weight in high school was between 50 – 52kg and is currently anywhere from 78 – 86kg) and have struggled ever since.

My problem is that I was TAUGHT – like most of us are – that food equals love. It’s your birthday, here is a cake, chocolate, meals out! Well done for ding well in your exam, have a chocolate. Family time = friday night dinner (challah, kneidlach soup, roast potatoes). Go to the dentist, YAY no cavities, lets have a milkshake! One time with my dad – steak, egg and chip breakfast!

SO part of me wishes that as a child, I WAS taught to eat healthily, that McDonalds is not a “treat” or a “reward for being good” it is (contrary to my profile photo) poison that makes you crave more msg and processed sugar. That steamed veg actually ARE delicious, that pasta should go with a tomato based, protein-rich sauce rather than cheese and cream. That soups iis actually a meal and not only a starter, that a salad WITHOUT a roll, croutons or foccaccia ia a full meal.

BUT on the other hand, I have never taken a diet pill, gone on an extreme diet, stuck my fingers down my throat or anything else “unhealthy”. All I do is reward myself for binge-drinking til 5am with binge eating of burgers or pizza. When my body is craving healthy and nutritious, I punish it with cheap and easy.

SO now the question is: is there a middle ground? How do we as adults, not reveal our problematic relationships with food to our kids, and teach them to be healthy – not so that they can look skinny – but so that they can give their bodies the fuel they need to grow and be healthy.

In my opinion, Bea and her mom are both screwed. She will resent her mom for giving her these issues, embarrassing her and making her feel like fat Bea wasn’t good enough. That alone is years of therapy, before we even think about how she can form a healthy relationship with food. Dara-Lynn will struggle with a the consequences of not forming a warm, loving and trusting bond with her daughter. I am imagining the scene from “Girl, Interrupted” where that girl hid a roast chicken under her bed and ate it down to the bones.

And after that diatribe, I STILL don’t know the answer. Let your child be fat? Drag them to Weigh Less meetings? Watch like hawk? Scare into health? Pretend they are allergic to certain things? All I know is that I had better sort out my issues so that I can lead by “good” example when I have kids. Treat them to Kauai smoothies (Milla’s idea) rather than ice cream or hot chocolate.

Shanna March 26, 2012 at 13:55

“Manhattan socialite.” That explains a lot — she has nothing better to do but sit around being rich and shopping for expensive clothes; a heavy kid would severely cramp her style, wouldn’t it? It’s one thing to take control and manage your kid’s diet — teach them how to make good choices, restrict what kinds of food come into the house via the grocery list, etc. But spoiling a good time like birthday parties or special school days like the French Heritage thing? What a witch. While you want kids to make healthy choices, you can also teach them that it’s ok to break the rules and eat things that aren’t so great for us, as long as we don’t do it all the time.

cathie March 26, 2012 at 14:12

Reading about sweet beautiful Bea and her mother brought on a rush of memories for me. I went through a similar thing with my mother and to make a long story short I have gone through a life time of struggle with weight issues….dieting yo-yoing that has destroyed my body and lead to morbid obesity. I take personal responsibility in this too…do not think I am laying this all at my mother’s doorstep….but had things been different and I had been treated differently percentages are I would not be having the physical and psychological challenges & problems that I have now and struggled with my entire life. I am not bitter…I have forgiven…I am learning how to live my life in a more healthy way now. I pray and hope Bea will be all right and it is not too late for her. I truly hope that her mother wises up. I hope her mother gets therapy for herself to deal with her issues.

Tom April 21, 2012 at 10:03

This woman puts her duaghter in danger. It is very likely that Bea will suffer from eating disorders like bulimia nervosa or anorexia. This happens when a child is indoctrinated by force – let it be physical or psychological – to change its nutrition. And what is absolutely cruel, is the fact that the child of this mentally insane mother is only 7 years old.

She would have done better if she had her daughter join a sports club where she could find other children to play with. Sports, especially team sports are positive when it comes to social behavior and it would create a bond between the children. They have to work together and support each other.
I would say that there are better ways to keep a child healthy than letting her suffer a so called crash diet.

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