Barbie

“Does she look like me?” asked my daughter, thrusting a tiny Barbie-doll clone into my face not long ago as I was earnestly scrutinizing an online checking account statement.

In the moment it took me to snap from one world into the next, I looked from the toy to my child and back again.  Both wore red dresses, shoes with heels, loud purple belts and messy blond hair, but I thought it best to focus on something else.

“She has a really pretty smile and so do you,” I said.  The child beamed while Barbie looked on blankly.  “I think she looks like a very kind person, and I know you are a very kind person.”

She kept smiling but was clearly interested in other characteristics.  “She has a dress and I have a dress,” she pointed out.

“That’s true,” I said, hoping the conversation wouldn’t turn to Barbie’s ample bosoms barely contained in the dress’s skin-tight bodice.  “Wait, what’s that?  Honey, Barbie is talking to me!”

She looked not in the least surprised.  In her world Barbie talks all the time.  “What did she say, Mommy?”

“She says she likes to read books!  And you like to read books too, don’t you?”  She nodded solemly.  I brought Barbie up to my ear again.  “You like to run around outside, Barbie?  And you like to look for worms?  Just like you!” I said to the child.

I was on a roll now; I could have written a dissertation about Barbie’s imaginary characteristics that I hoped my daughter would one day see in herself.  But she was ready to be off.  “We have sparkly shoes!  We both have sparkly shoes!” she yelled, off to find her siblings.

And as usual, I was left wondering if I’d said too much, not enough, or by some random miracle exactly what she needed to hear.

15 comments to Barbie

Leave a Reply

 

 

 

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Powered by WP Hashcash