Mar
07
2014

Tattoos, Piercings, and Plastic Surgery: Okay for Teens?

on body modification

Tattoos, Piercings, and Plastic Surgery: Okay for Teens?

teenagers and plastic surgery

How do you feel about your body? Do you want to change it? When I look back at photographs of myself when I was sixteen and seventeen I wonder how I wasn't the most confident person in all the land, because despite whatever I thought then, the clarity that comes in looking back shows how amazing I was. I don't think I would have done anything drastic to change that teenage body if I had the chance, but it seems that many teens now have that option and are taking it.

Can you imagine how you'd feel if your teenager came up to you, and instead of requesting concert tickets or a pair of jeans for their birthday, they asked for a tummy tuck or boob job?

Body modification is a touchy subject even when the conversation is limited to adults. It can be dangerous and complications include shitty stuff like death and being close to death and hovering near death, and if procedures aren't done with restraint you can wind up looking and feeling worse than whatever the “problem” was you were trying to correct in the first place. But it's your body and logic dictates that humans are entitled to autonomy over their own bodies. But what if the body in question is one currently under your care and required travelling through your sex parts or a shit-ton of paperwork to acquire and also happens to be younger than the jar of bread and butter pickles in the back of your fridge?

Adults modify their bodies through tattoos, surgical procedures, and piercings all the time. Plastic surgery is a huge (and growing) field in medicine, and you can't throw a silicone implant in a crowded room without hitting, well, a silicone implant. If an adult makes the decision to have work done — be it a tummy tuck, a neck lift, or getting a hole punched in their cheek and replaced with a stained glass window – then I say more power to them. Adults have earned the right to make decisions on their own even if those decisions are really stupid. I’ve made decisions some people don’t agree with, like naming one of my children after a "Golden Girls" character and remaining in a relationship with a man who proudly owns the Titanic soundtrack. (And I also have a tattoo.)

My daughter asked for years to have her ears pierced. I married into a culture which typically pierces the ears of female infants, and I didn’t participate. By the time my daughter was out of diapers she had a jewellery box filled with tiny earrings, waiting for the day to be showcased in her little ears. I made her wait until she was ten, old enough (in my view) to care for the holes herself. Then, when she wanted an additional piercing in one ear, I made her wait again until she was 14. I explained that while many piercings will grow over if left unattended, it’s not always the way and one should give serious thought before they poke holes into any part of their body. (Bonus sex talk? CHECK.)

I’m not against piercing, and I’d love a nose piercing myself but the thought of pain keeps me from it. My boobs are plenty big already and I could care less about a little squish on belly because I just don’t care about things like “bikini season” or “being naked in public.” I think people who have beautiful, well-done ink look amazing and I applaud their creativity and dedication to what I believe is an art form. But if my 16-year-old daughter wanted my permission to get a tattoo, the answer would be a don’t-even-have-to-think-about-it NO. I know that there are many mature, responsible, intelligent and self-aware sixteen year-olds who are ready for tattoos — but none of them live in my house. If she had tattoos now they’d be full sleeves of One Direction or a back covered with pug puppies in strollers. And tattoos aren’t something easy to get out of, like jail or a marriage; they are forever things and in my view a sixteen year old should not be making "forever thing" decisions.

As for plastic surgery, that also gets a HELL NO. The only surgeries I’d even give more than a moment of consideration would be those which help to alleviate a medical condition or a physical characteristic which was obvious, unchangeable, and had lasting effect impact on their self esteem. I don’t care if her bra size was a 28 A-, an augmentation would never happen while she’s in my house. I’m talking about things like a rhinosplasty or ear pinning or dermabrasion for severe acne scarring and only if it was a problem for the child, and a serious one at that. The idea of Botox for teens is just ridiculous. Here’s what I would say to a teenager worried about wrinkles: You think you have wrinkles now? Wait until you have a teenager who is worried about wrinkles.


Read more from Jeni Marinucci on Teens

Why Does This Job Get Harder the Longer You Do It?

Is Your Teenager Ready for the Workplace Trenches?

Image courtesy of WikiCommons

Mar
03
2014

Why Does This Job Get Harder the Longer You Have it?

A Parenting Paradox

Why Does This Job Get Harder the Longer You Have it?

The other day I stumbled upon a parenting blog while doing a Google search. That blog’s blogroll led me to another blog and then to another blog and then to an afternoon of shaking my head and wondering when we all became so short-sighted. I shook my head for these parents because they have no idea what is coming. It’s not that the content of the blogs was harmful or ignorant — it was just incorrect. But it wasn’t “wearing white after Labour Day” incorrect; it was “striped knee socks with sandals and no pants” incorrect.

The blogs in question were written by parents of various ages and backgrounds, but they did have one thing in common: they were all parents of babies under two years old. The underlying theme of the posts was generally positive, and no worries; everyone loves their babies. There is — as you would expect — a lot of talk about how hard dealing with a baby is. And it is. I’ve been there — twice. My first baby was a happy, easy child who slept whenever, wherever. If you laid her down, her eyes closed just like those “real life” baby dolls. I remember thinking how I must be the best mom ever because this was so easy. As much as I wanted to believe it was my innate maternal skill, I was soon proved wrong, because when baby number two arrived, all bets were off.

Babies and toddlers are hard. They can be demanding and needy and forceful and sullen and dance around in underpants and rubber boots designed to look like frogs and they stick things up their nose and into sockets and they cry and make messes and…I’m exhausted reliving it. But imagine taking that toddler and her friend and dropping them off 50 kms away for a whole day at an amusement park where she could be stolen or maimed or fall off a roller coaster because Curtis the Carnie can’t read and faked his way through the entrance exam at Carnie school. That’s what I did recently. My daughter is 14, not a toddler at all, but in my eyes she will always be a small dimple-cheeked child whose warm presence on my hip was such a constant in my life that now, without a baby there, I feel weightless.

By all accounts I should have been an even better mother that second time around, because I had a few years of real life experience by then. My internship was over and I was ready for a senior position! Where was the key for the secret executive bathroom because I was now on the top floor of Parenting Incorporated!

If you’ve seen “Grease 2” you know that sometimes things aren’t as good the second time around. Baby 2.0 was just as healthy, just as cute, just as loved and wanted. But he never, ever slept, and he cried so loudly my hearing is partially damaged. Seriously, what? I should have realized his vocal power when as a 15lb infant he accomplished what several teen years of cranking Led Zeppelin cassettes could not. I thought this parenting gig was supposed to get easier with subsequent children and years under your belt, but it was much harder. I know it can go the other way – you can have a “difficult-to-handle” baby first, and then an “easy” baby later, but I think that phenomenon has statistically low occurrences due to sciencey evolutionary reasons, none of which I can explain except to say that if the hard baby came first there would be a whole lot of single child households in the world.

During his baby years, I looked forward to the good times ahead. The kids would be able to take of their own bathroom needs and fasten their own seat belts. They could make a sandwich for themselves. Or me. (Mostly me.) They’d practically raise themselves from age seven or eight!

There are teenagers in this house now and it’s just getting harder, and there is a decided lack of sandwiches being prepared in my honour. Some things about parenting do get better. For instance, I haven’t had to look at anyone’s behind in a business manner in a long, long time and don’t think I’m not thankful for that. Some things are harder; a lot of things are a lot harder. Balance is a word you’d do well to forget about once you have a child in your life, because Ying is usually stronger than Yang and Yang can be a real asshole sometimes. Teenager problems are harder to solve and most of time you shouldn’t be solving them anyway. I do not like this. I am a fixer. I do research and consult people and determine resources and… guess what? Nobody care. Some lessons have to be learned the hard way, and the hard way is harder for the parent than the child in all but 5% of cases.

I asked a mom I know whose kids are all grown — two are married and her youngest is away at University. “So,” I asked, “When you think about all your kids, and all the stages of development you’ve experienced, what would you say was the easiest age?”

I’ll let you know when it happens,” she replied.

Yep; I’m screwed.

Photo Credit: WikiCommons

Read more from Jeni Marinucci on Teens:

The Cost of Raising a Child: The Teenage Years

Teenagers and Natural Consequences