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the mature beauty that radiates from a wholesome
personality, it is just as true that a beautiful child who
invests his or*her total life’s interests in the maintenance
of physical beauty, largely spoils that beauty by the
shallowness of vanity.
The tragic end is that the hollow shell of mere physical
beauty crumbles with time, and the beautiful child, having
developed no emergency supports for old age, finds
himself mentally bankrupt, commits suicide, or suffers
from melancholia as a poor substitute for popular esteem
and attention. The host of women who crowd
psychiatrists’ waiting-rooms when they reach the
“ dangerous age ” are usually women who have trusted
too much in their beauty to “ get them across ”. In a
later chapter we shall tell the story of such a woman,
and point out the mistakes of her life’s pattern, and
describe a better technique of growing old gracefully.
2. The Family Constellation
Just as no one is born with a perfect body, and all may
therefore find physical disabilities a source of an inferiority
complex, so no one escapes the dangers of his peculiar
position in his family. A good judge of human nature
can often tell whether a grown man or woman has been
an only child or a youngest child or an eldest child in his
family. A young woman once applied to us for a position
as secretary. When we asked her what she studied in
college she answered, “ You’ll laugh when I tell you,
but I’m really most interested in archaeology.” We
immediately asked her whether she was the eldest child
in her family and with a surprised look she admitted that
she was the eldest of seven children. This is neither
magic nor clairvoyance, but simply an application of the
fact that an individual whose focus of interest is in the
“ good old days ” probably regards his childhood as a
lost paradise whose ancient flavour he wishes to recapture,
and the family situation in which this most frequently
occurs is the situation of the eldest child.