Vying for a Title
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Vying for a Title
The contenders have been primped and manicured by their masters and are ready to be placed on display. The subjects with the wealthiest owners attend top-notch obedience schools where they are trained in the art of acting and appearing in a way uncharacteristic to their nature. They are rewarded with special treats when they work hard during training. The skills learned in these unique schools are not useful anywhere else, but in the competitions are judged and often given a champion prize.
The contestants are paraded in, coached by their owners. Each standing tall with her head raised and nose up. Most are showing their teeth as if to be smiling or happy. Truthfully, they are showing the judges the straightness and whiteness of their teeth. Both the long-haired and short-haired have had chemicals applied to them to make certain every hair lays perfectly.
The outward appearances of the participators are close to flawless. If any flaws are detected in the preparation they are quickly covered up. Trainers and owners see imperfections as point deductions. Those are deductions they cant afford when a title and thousands of dollars are on the line.
A woman moves from one contestant to the next testing them. To the last in the line of female competitors the question is asked, “If you could change the world, what would you change?” Too confidently the girl replied, “I would end world hunger and poverty.” When all she really aspires to do is win this contest and the next.
This is what pageantry is about. Parents who subject their children to beauty pageants teach their children that winning these contests will bring them happiness. Is being deemed the best at being fake really anything to be happy about? Too many mommies and daddies believe so.
Do the pageant parents have their own dreams about their daughters being Miss Americas? Do the participants really compete in beauty contests to better themselves or their futures? Do they have a driving force from behind the stage? Will these parents go to any extent to mold their daughters into something that might win a few of these superficial contests?
“Didnt the Ramseys think that putting JonBenet in all those beauty pageants, looking so seductive, was inappropriate. The child was 5. All the pictures we saw were of her looking 25 and slinking and winking.” (Schwartz)
“Mrs. Ramsey said that was just the publics problem and if they thought a 5-year-old trying to look more sexy than Madonna was a bit twisted – well that just shows what twisted people we have in this country.” (Schwartz)
“Then the mother looked straight into the camera and explained that this was her way of bonding with JonBenet. She had been in beauty contests and she loved sharing this with her daughter.” (Schwartz)
“Its like a father who was once in baseball who plays baseball with his son and helps him in Little League games,” said the mother.” (Schwartz)
I believe mothers who were once in beauty pageants and then, in turn, put their daughters into the pageantry circuit are simply fulfilling their own lost goals and dreams through their daughters.
“”Too much emphasis