Many young people who achieve early success in entertainment or modeling face pressure to make it their entire focus. Well-meaning adults sometimes encourage talented children to pursue opportunities at all costs, to sacrifice other areas of life for professional advancement. This family has resisted that pressure consistently.
The structure they’ve created allows the sisters to explore their interests and develop their talents without becoming consumed by any single pursuit. They’re learning valuable skills through modeling—professionalism, time management, the ability to take direction—while still experiencing the full range of what childhood and adolescence should include.
Friends from school invite them to birthday parties, sleepovers, and casual hangouts just like any other classmates. The sisters participate in school events, seasonal activities, and community occasions. They’re woven into the fabric of their local community, not isolated in an industry bubble.
This integration into normal life provides perspective that will serve them well regardless of what paths they choose as adults. They’re learning that success doesn’t require sacrificing everything else. They’re seeing that it’s possible to pursue excellence in one area while maintaining balance across all areas of life.
Their family’s approach also teaches them about values and identity. They’re learning that their worth isn’t determined by modeling success or follower counts. Their value as human beings is inherent, not earned through achievement or appearance. This foundation will protect them throughout life’s inevitable ups and downs.
The Power of Family Support
Behind every successful young person stands a support system that makes their achievements possible. For Leah and Ava, that support comes primarily from their family, who have navigated the complexities of childhood modeling with remarkable wisdom and care.
Their parents face decisions constantly. Which opportunities to accept and which to decline. How much travel is too much. When to say yes and when to protect their daughters by saying no. These aren’t simple choices, especially when opportunities are exciting and potentially lucrative.
What guides their decision-making isn’t primarily career advancement or financial considerations. It’s the wellbeing of their daughters. Every choice is filtered through the question of what’s best for Leah and Ava as whole people, not just as models or social media personalities.
This protective approach extends to how the family manages their daughters’ public presence. While the sisters do have a substantial online following, their family maintains appropriate boundaries about what’s shared and what remains private. Not every moment needs to be documented or posted.