Wednesday, 30 January 2008

Mum's the word.

Once the festive period has passed, people viciously attack the selection box of Christmas television to which they were cruelly subjected. Yet the weeks before they plonked themselves down in front of the gogglebox, munching and slurping their way through fridge-fulls of treats, without batting so much as an eyelid.

It seems that each year the listings somehow manage to out-do the year before in the sheer volume of worthless, superfluous and in a word trashy TV that is produced. There are only so many repeats, best ofs and Christmas specials any British family can digest along with the third day’s serving of cold turkey sandwiches.

So presumably, come January, television is back on track. Well, one evening’s schedule certainly had me more than bewildered. I could not, and nor, I imagine, could the rest of the nation, decide which was more mind-boggling, the half tonne mum or the all-singing, all-dancing fake babies.

For those of you who didn’t manage to watch either of these psychologically disturbing documentaries, let me fill you in. 9pm: the largest woman ever to undergo gastric bypass surgery, weighing in at an almost humanely impossible 64 stone. That’s the weight of a large baby rhinoceros. 10pm: a collection of pseudo-mothers who push plastic dolls around in prams. Dolls with real hair. And breathing mechanisms. And made-to-order facial imperfections. I don’t see anything wrong with this. I just don’t understand it.

Now, a friend of mine who didn’t manage to have her sanity totally scrambled by this latest display of astounding social behaviour said she had heard they were both real tear-jerkers. The lady whose synthetic offspring replaced her dead son was certainly moving, albeit simultaneously troubling.

But I stand by the fact that the only thing that was genuinely “sad” about the American supermom was the fact that she single-handedly managed to ruin the lives of both her poor children. These poor kids will spend the rest of their lives – alone – having a totally erratic and unhealthy obsession with food. The thirteen year old had already been thirty pounds overweight at the age of 10.

But the poor lady was bedridden for four years following an accident, I hear you cry. Well, firstly, who had been feeding her during this time? And secondly, she was already “super morbidly obese” before the incident.

Surely, if she truly loved her kids and cared about their future, then she would have sought serious psychological help and medical intervention long ago. And been given a gastric band without the added complications of an extra twenty four stone.

What a strange world we live in. On the one hand we have women playing mums and dads with synthetic substitute babies. And on the other women blessed with children of their own turning a blind eye to the responsibilities that must go hand-in-hand with parenthood.

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