By Editorial Staff
Kids these days are too insulated from the harsh realities that
await them in the real world. This month’s hero, though, has written a
children’s book that helps prepare them to face our brutally superficial
society.
Dr. Michael Salzhauer, a Florida plastic surgeon, has written a
first-of-its-kid book aimed at 4-to-7-year-olds. My Beautiful Mommy is a picture book designed to reassure small
children about mom’s pending elective procedure.
More importantly, though, it teaches them that, just like millions
of other women in our shallow culture, Mommy will feel better about herself
after going under the knife. It’s also an ideal gift for Mother’s Day.
Salzhauer, a father of four, said he was inspired to write the
book after repeatedly seeing patients wanting “mommy makeovers” (breast
implants and a tummy tuck) a few years after childbirth, but they were
concerned about what to tell their children. He said the kids often get
confused and upset when they see their bruised, swollen, and incapacitated mother
covered in bandages after surgery.
“It sounds like a joke but there really is a need to address this
issue,” Salzhauer told Reuters. "It is for the mom who has already booked
her plastic surgery and now has to tell her kids, why she is going to be in
bed, why daddy is picking the kids up from school and all those other
issues."
My Beautiful Mommy tells the story of a little girl whose mother gets both the
aforementioned mommy makeover as well as rhinoplasty. Before the surgery, she
explains to her daughter, “You see, as I got older, my body stretched and I
couldn’t fit into my clothes anymore. Dr. Michael is going to help fix that and
make me feel better.”
As for the rhinoplasty, the woman explains to the girl, “My nose
may look a little different after the operation.” When the girl asks why she’ll
look different, Mommy responds, “Not just different, my dear – prettier!”
While feedback from Salzhauer’s patients has reportedly been very
positive, the book has drawn criticism on several fronts, including the cartoon-style
depiction of the mom. Most of these critics have not read the entire book, yet
they’re judging it by its cover, which is exactly what they claim gratuitous
plastic surgery encourages. Shame on them for being so ironically hypocritical.
Others claim the book sends the wrong message. We at Red Shtick Magazine, though, see nothing
wrong with letting kids know that Mommy wants to look like Barbie™. Besides,
isn’t it their fault that she’s got saggy boobs and a slack belly?
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May 02, 2008