I decided to stop taking my daughters to family gatherings. It was a choice that came after years of not quite grasping what was truly happening.
My daughters, Charlotte and Emily, are now fourteen and twelve. From early childhood, theyve been at the heart of so-called harmless remarks:
Shes got an appetite on her, hasnt she?
That doesnt suit her at all.
Shes far too old to dress like that.
She ought to watch her weight at her age.
At first, I brushed it off. Our family has always been blunt, so Id tell myself: Thats just how they are. When Charlotte and Emily were younger, they had no way to push back. Theyd go quiet, hang their heads, sometimes force a polite smile. I could see it didnt sit well with them, but I convinced myself it was normala rough-and-ready sort of tradition.
The table was always fullroast beef, Yorkshire pudding, laughter, snapshots, and awkward embraces. But beneath it all ran a steady undercurrent: drawn-out stares, constant comparisons with cousins, questions no one needed to ask, and teasing that stung more than it amused.
By evenings end, my daughters would always be quieter than before.
As the years passed, the comments changed form. Food wasnt the only focus anymore. Now it was their bodies, their looks, how they were growing.
Shes filling out, isnt she?
The other ones a bit scrawny, isnt she?
Heaven knows wholl fancy her, looking like that.
If she keeps eating like that, only herself to blame later on
No one asked how they felt. No one seemed to realise these were girlsnot just ears in the room, but minds and hearts taking it all in and never forgetting.
Everything shifted when they became teenagers.
One afternoon, after another Sunday roast in Aunt Margarets conservatory, Charlotte turned to me and said: Dad, I really dont want to go anymore.
She told me these gatherings were miserable: getting dressed up, sitting stiffly at the end of the table, swallowing back remarks, smiling out of politeness, only to come home feeling rotten.
Emily just nodded, silent and resigned.
Suddenly it hit meboth had felt this way for years.
Thats when I stopped. I started playing back memories: the side-eye glances, the sly jokes and snide comments, gestures that felt like a warning shot. I began to hear other people’s storiesEnglish families handing out criticism for their own goodand I saw how deeply it wounds self-esteem.
So, together with my wife Helen, I made a decision: Our daughters wouldnt go to places where they didnt feel safe. No more forcing them. If they ever want to join in, the choice is theirs. If not, nothing to worry about. Their peace of mind matters more than leftover tradition.
Its not gone unnoticed. The questions came thick and fast:
Whats going on?
Why arent the girls here?
Youre being over the top.
Weve always done it this way.
Youre treating them like fragile glass.
But I didnt explain. I made no scene. I didnt argue. I simply stopped bringing them.
Sometimes silence says everything you need.
Now, Charlotte and Emily know their dad will never put them in the firing line, forcing them to bear the sting of humiliation disguised as well-meaning opinions. Some in the family might not approve. They might see me as difficult, stirring up trouble. But Id far rather be the father who draws a linewho stands upthan the father who turns a blind eye as his daughters learn to dislike parts of themselves just so they can blend in.
Would you do the same for your child? Do you think Im right?












