Daring To Dream And Building Self-Esteem


My daughters and I talk almost daily about their dreams. When they are in the car they are famous singers, belting out their latest hit. When they are in the yard, they are fearless explorers, discovering strange beasts and exotic lands. When they are in the den, they are graceful dancers, choreographing dance routines for a rapt audience (our dogs.) One day my 5-year-old wants to be a dancer or an artist, the next day she wants to be a dentist. My 8-year-old loves horses, archeology, and dreams of being a famous soccer player or actress. I don’t dare diminish their ideas or tell them to limit their ambition. I know that self-doubt will soon start to chip away at those dreams. In just two years my oldest daughter will be in middle school and I want her to be ready to face peer pressure head on!


I am very proud to be a champion for the Dove Movement for Self-Esteem and to help spread the word about the Dove Self-Esteem Weekend October 22-24. Dove wants to help create a world where every woman and girl has the confidence to reach her full potential.


You can share your own insights at dovemovement.com and read what I, along with the other fantastic champions for the Dove Movement for Self-Esteem, had to say to our 13-year-old selves. What would you say?


There are three ways to get involved during the weekend of October 22-24:

  • Participate in one of Dove’s national partner events: Girl Scouts of the USA, The Boys & Girls Club of America, and Girls, Inc.

  • Host a self-esteem building event in your community.

  • Download free self-esteem building activities and spend an hour with a girl or girls, in my case, in your life.

Don’t forget to register your events on the map at dovemovement.com

I’ll also be co-hosting a Tweet chat one evening in mid-October with a few of the Dove Movement champions, so stay tuned for details on what will be a great conversation about building self-esteem in young girls, tweens, and teens.

You can also show your support by liking the movement on Facebook or Tweeting your support by using the #Dovedifference hash tag.


Disclosure: I am not being compensated in any format for my participation as a Dove Movement for Self-Esteem champion. As a mother to two young girls, this is just a cause that is important to me!

In Which I Fantasize Of Karaoke Using Dove Deodorant As A Mic, But Refrain

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Photo courtesy of Shab from No Todo Yago


Gorgeous hip vibe upstairs at Red Pony Restaurant in downtown Franklin


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Photo courtesy of Shab from No Todo Yago


(L-R) Amy from Milkbreath and Margaritas, me, Malia from Just Malia.


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Photo courtesy of Shab from No Todo Yago


(L-R) Kelly from Faithful Provisions, Mary from The Writer’s Block, Rebecca from Tooth Whale, and Tori from Baby Bloomr


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Photo courtesy of Malia from Just Malia (Top row, L-R) Amy from Milkbreath and Margaritas, me, Shab from No Todo Yago , Tori from Baby Bloomr, Busy Mom, Rebecca from Tooth Whale Malia from Just Malia (Bottom row, L-R) Kelly from Faithful Provisions and Mary from The Writer’s Block


When I was little my grandmother always had Dove soap in the soap dish in her harvest gold tile bathroom. It had a distinct aroma and creamy texture that seemed luxurious to me as I stood on tippy toes to wash my hands. Today I use Dove cucumber and green tea deodorant and I’m a big fan of Dove’s Real Beauty campaign, especially since I have two daughters who are increasingly bombarded with pop culture images of what women are “supposed” to look like.

Dove contacted me about hosting a girls’ night out Oscars weekend and I was excited because a) hello get out of the house on a Saturday night and b) hello chance to wear a little black dress and not yoga pants and a stretched out Old Navy t-shirt. Dove also provided me and my guests with gorgeous blingy necklaces from enBeadia in Chicago. Swoon.

Dove is promoting their new Dove Visibly Smooth deodorant which helps gradually minimize the appearance of underarm hair. I don’t know about you, but pools will be opening Memorial Day weekend, OH MY LORD, and I need all the help I can get with all my nooks and crannies in their various states of ebb and flow and me in my various states of mama brain.

I invited several local bloggers to join me for dinner at the fabulous Red Pony Restaurant on Main Street in beautiful downtown Franklin, a place I fantasize about moving to so hubby and I can sit on the porch of our stately renovated home while sipping Bloody Marys. The Red Pony’s menu and vibe is absolutely phenomenal. Hubby and I had only been there once for drinks so of course I loved having an excuse to host a Red Carpet weekend dinner party there.

Thanks ladies for joining me for a fun night out courtesy of Dove!

Visit my review blog, Savvy Housewife, for a chance to win your own stick of Dove Visibly Smooth (5 winners will be chosen at random from all eligible comments left by Tuesday, March 23.)

To participate in the Dove Visibly Smooth VIP program, I was provided with five (5) product samples to giveaway on my blog as well as ten (10) product samples for my guests, and compensation for dinner out with my friends. Dove provided me with these items so I could organize the event myself and without any influence from Dove.

Real Girls, Real Pressure

Would you believe it if I told you my daughter has already started with that self-bashing all women are guilty of…“I don’t like my hair. I wish it was darker, I wish it was longer.” And she is only 6 ½. And this is my girl. My girl who, in my eyes, is absolutely perfect in every way.

When I was contacted in November (yes, I’m painfully slow at getting around to these things) by a representative with Dove’s Campaign for Real Beauty about the findings from Real Girls, Real Pressure: A National Report on the State of Self-Esteem, I agreed to help spread the word because as a mother to two young girls and as someone who has struggled with her own self-confidence demons, this was a topic that hit home. This time of year women, especially, are prone to the “does this make me look fat” talk and the stocking up on Lean Cuisines, myself included. I mean I can’t tell you how many times I’ve wanted to fling our digital scales into the trash can since the numbers staring back at me every morning just can’t be right. While it’s important to place value on a healthy diet and fitness, it’s also important to step back and look at the signals we send our daughters about the traits we value in ourselves and others.

Commissioned by the Dove® Self-Esteem Fund, the study reveals that there is a self-esteem crisis in this country that pervades every aspect of a girl’s life, including her looks, performance in school, and relationships with friends and family members.

The key findings include:

  • Seven in ten girls believe they are not good enough or do not measure up in some way, including their looks, performance in school, and relationships with friends and family members

  • 57% of all girls have a mother who criticizes her own looks

  • More than half (57%) of all girls say they don’t always tell their parents certain things about them because they don’t want them to think badly of them

  • The top wish among all girls is for their parents to communicate better with them (more frequent and open conversations as well as discussions about what is happening in their own lives)

I’m not sure what to blame this crisis of self esteem on, but our nation’s obsession with superficial beauty and celebrity worship doesn’t help matters. I’m hoping to raise girls who are confident, kind, and believe that they can be anything and do anything. I’m also thankful that I’ve picked up on Miss C’s signals that lately she isn’t so sure of herself. Dance class combined with soccer has really helped her with her poise and self-confidence and she’s lucky to have parents who want her to love herself for the beautiful, smart, kind girl she is.

Maybe your daughter isn’t into dance or soccer, maybe she’s into gymnastics or art or music or swimming. Whatever it is, I encourage you to help your daughters find their talents and listen to them and what their subtle choice in language is telling you. We’ve started a tradition at dinner where we each take turns at the table discussing our favorite part of the day. It’s just a small event, but we’re now to the point where the girls will remind us if we’ve forgotten to do this and it’s a great little reminder about how important communication is. Some day when the girls are teenagers they may roll their eyes at this little Kumbaya dinner moment, but it’s worth it.

Thanks to Dove for sending me two wonderful books written by women affiliated with its Campaign For Real Beauty: Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters, by Courtney E. Martin and Life Doesn’t Begin 5 Pounds from Now, by Jessica Weiner. As a side note, if you have younger daughters I’d also highly recommend When I Grow Up, I Want To Be Me by Sandra Magsamen.

Check out the free downloadable self-esteem online tools for girls, moms, and mentors, as well as a workshop facilitator guide on Dove’s website at www.campaignforrealbeauty.com

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