The Child She Hoped Would Look Like Me

I’m Belgian, and my wife is Chinese. We have two sons, and she’s pregnant with our third. Our oldest has brown hair and green eyes. The second has blonde/blue. My wife keeps wishing this one would be blonde, too. It started to rub me the wrong way so I asked her one evening, “Why do you keep saying that? You do know they’re your kids too, right?”

She laughed it off like it was nothing, saying it was just about how “cute” they’d look with blonde hair. But I’d hear her say it to her friends, too. Sometimes in Mandarin, but I caught enough of the meaning. Something about the “foreign genes being strong,” or how “foreign babies” got more attention in public. One time, she even said, “I hope this one looks Western, too.”

It stuck in my head longer than I wanted it to. I wasn’t mad exactly, just… uneasy. I love her. We’ve been married for seven years. She moved with me to a small town in the UK, and it hasn’t been easy for her. I get that sometimes, fitting in here, looking different, being a non-native speaker—it all weighs on her.

Still, the way she kept going on about the baby’s appearance made me feel like she wasn’t proud of where she came from. Or worse—like she wasn’t proud of me unless our kids looked a certain way.

One morning, while we were doing the school run, our oldest, Martin, piped up from the backseat, “Mama, do you think I’m handsome because I have green eyes?”

My wife turned around and said, “Of course, darling. You’re very handsome.”

He nodded, then asked, “Would I be less handsome if I had black hair?”

That stopped her. She just went quiet. I didn’t say anything either, but I glanced at her. She was staring out the window, lips pressed together. When we got home, she pulled me aside in the kitchen.

“Do you think I’ve been too focused on appearance?” she asked softly.

I shrugged. “Maybe a little. Why do you want them to look like me so badly?”

She hesitated before answering. “It’s not just about you. It’s about what they’ll go through. I was bullied for how I looked when I first came here. Even adults treated me like I was slow because I had an accent. When our kids look more like you, people treat them better.”

I didn’t know what to say to that at first. Because deep down, I knew she wasn’t completely wrong.

Still, I said, “But teaching them to be proud of who they are starts with us. If you keep wishing they look a certain way, they might start thinking something’s wrong with how you look.”

She looked down. “I didn’t mean to…”

“I know,” I said. “But it matters.”

Later that week, she told me she’d been thinking about it. She admitted she grew up watching white actresses on TV and hearing her classmates gush over blue eyes and pale skin. She didn’t even realize how much of that stuck until she had kids.

That was the start of her trying to unlearn it. She still slipped sometimes, but she made an effort. She started speaking Mandarin to the boys more often and showing them movies from her childhood. She even taught them how to make dumplings from scratch. Our little kitchen became this wild, flour-dusted space filled with steam and giggles.

The boys loved it. And I loved watching them connect with that part of themselves.

Months passed, and the pregnancy moved along. We found out we were having a girl. My wife cried during the scan. Happy tears, mostly. But I knew she was also nervous. “I’m scared,” she said later that night. “Girls are judged more. What if she goes through what I did?”

“Then she’ll have a mom who understands. And a dad who won’t let anyone treat her like less.”

That seemed to calm her down.

But the comments started again, just less direct. Like, “If she has your nose, it’ll be so cute.” Or “Maybe she’ll have light hair like Nathan.” It was more subtle now, but it was still there.

I was biting my tongue a lot by that point.

Then one weekend, her mother came to visit from Guangzhou. She hadn’t seen us in three years because of travel restrictions. It was emotional—the boys didn’t remember her much, and she barely recognized how much they’d grown.

She brought gifts. Toys, books, a tiny gold bracelet for the baby. And then, as we sat at the table, she looked at the ultrasound picture on the fridge and asked in Mandarin, “Do you think she’ll be white like the others?”

I didn’t understand all of it, but I caught the word for “white” and “like the others.” I looked at my wife, waiting.

She sighed and responded quietly in Mandarin, then switched to English for my sake.

“She asked if the baby will look Western,” my wife said. “I told her I don’t know, and I don’t care.”

Her mother looked surprised. “But it’s better for her if she does. People will treat her nicer.”

My wife turned to her mother and said something in Mandarin that I didn’t understand, but her tone was firm. Her mom didn’t argue. She just nodded slowly and went back to sipping her tea.

That night, my wife sat down next to me on the sofa and said, “I think I finally get it. I don’t want our daughter growing up thinking she has to be someone else to be loved.”

I smiled. “You think it’ll stick this time?”

She grinned back. “I’ll keep trying. Just remind me if I slip.”

Three weeks before her due date, something unexpected happened.

Martin got into a fight at school. Apparently, another kid had called him “half and half” and said he was “confusing to look at.” Martin shoved him into a desk and got sent home.

We had a long talk with him that night. My wife was visibly upset, not just about the fight but about what it meant. “He’s only seven,” she said. “Seven, and already getting judged for something he can’t control.”

“I know,” I said. “But he stood up for himself.”

She nodded slowly, eyes misty. “I’m proud of him. But it breaks my heart.”

A week later, she went into labor.

Our daughter was born with a full head of dark hair, just like her mother. Almond eyes. Tiny nose. And when I held her for the first time, my wife looked over and whispered, “She looks like me.”

There were tears in her eyes. And not the kind I’d seen before. These weren’t tears of fear or worry.

She looked proud.

We named her Mei.

For the first few months, things were chaotic. Sleep-deprived. Formula on the walls. Nathan trying to potty train himself at the worst possible time. But through it all, there was this growing sense of something healing in our home.

One evening, when Mei was about four months old, we took a family photo. All five of us. Martin stood tall, Nathan made a silly face, and Mei sat on my wife’s lap, looking sleepy and unimpressed.

When my wife posted it online, she captioned it, “This is what love looks like. Every shape, every shade.”

It got more likes than anything she’d ever posted.

But then came a message from an old friend of hers in China. It said, “Your daughter looks so Chinese. Are you disappointed she didn’t get your husband’s genes?”

I saw her reading it, jaw tightening. Then she started typing back.

She showed me the message before sending it.

“She got the best of both of us,” it said. “And that’s all I ever wanted.”

It took time, but she stopped caring what strangers thought. What relatives expected. She focused on teaching our kids to be proud of who they are. Mixed. Loved. Complete.

There was one final twist, though.

When Mei turned one, her hair lightened. A lot. By her second birthday, she had this soft, golden-brown shade that made her eyes pop.

I caught my wife looking at her one day and smiling to herself.

“She got her own look,” she said. “Not mine, not yours. Just hers.”

I nodded. “Exactly how it should be.”

It took a lot of unlearning, a lot of uncomfortable conversations, and a lot of baby spit-up. But in the end, I think we both grew.

This wasn’t just a story about appearance. It was about identity. About what we pass on—intentionally or not. And about learning to value what truly matters.

Love doesn’t need to fit a mold. And families don’t need to match to be whole.

If this story made you feel something—or made you think—go ahead and give it a like or share it with someone who might need to hear it too. You never know who’s carrying invisible baggage until you help them set it down.