DD dyed her hair pink and I’m not mad but am concerned

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Are you serious? Who cares?

If my child did this they would be grounded. If anything OP’s response is tame.


Wait help he understand. Grounded why?




Her church friends would disapprove and think she's a bad mom


Close. Her temple friends would disapprove.


+1 LOL. You aren’t pinning this particular overreaction on white people. Not today Satan.




You are nuts. You mean Hindu?

Do you know the process of stripping color from black/dark brown hair and how long it takes before you can have pink?

There is no way OP wouldn't be aware that her Indian kid wasn't having her hair dyed pink not to mention the cost

Also she is way to laid back about it to be an Indian mom who doesn't like pink hair


How sad this thread has turned into yet another hate-fest toward Asian/Indian people. It’s commonplace in College / University part of DCUM, so I guess it’s not surprising the same anti-Indian/Asian bigots are showing up here too.


It’s not just DCUM, it’s the entire democrat party in the U.S.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why do you believe that dyeing your hair pink is a cry for help?


NP.

There is an extremely high correlation between people with oddly-dyed hair colors (green, pink, purple), and mental illness.

OP, you are good mom for being concerned and seeking to get your daughter the mental health support she needs.


There's also a high correlation between having hyper controlling parents and being depressed.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Are you serious? Who cares?

If my child did this they would be grounded. If anything OP’s response is tame.


Wait help he understand. Grounded why?




Her church friends would disapprove and think she's a bad mom


Close. Her temple friends would disapprove.


+1 LOL. You aren’t pinning this particular overreaction on white people. Not today Satan.




You are nuts. You mean Hindu?

Do you know the process of stripping color from black/dark brown hair and how long it takes before you can have pink?

There is no way OP wouldn't be aware that her Indian kid wasn't having her hair dyed pink not to mention the cost

Also she is way to laid back about it to be an Indian mom who doesn't like pink hair


Plenty of black haired people have pink streaks and magenta hair. It's not that hard to do with the right product and extensions. OP never said it was solid bubble gum pink.
Anonymous
We should all be -a little afraid- of what our mothers will think. As teenager, we should be
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why do you believe that dyeing your hair pink is a cry for help?


NP.

There is an extremely high correlation between people with oddly-dyed hair colors (green, pink, purple), and mental illness.

OP, you are good mom for being concerned and seeking to get your daughter the mental health support she needs.


+1.

And the DD’s choice to do this behind her mother’s back suggests this is a cry for help.


I think her choice to do it behind her mother’s back suggests that her mom is judgmental and overly concerned with appearances.


This. And that the teenager wants to separate herself from that.

It's best if teenagers get rebellion out of their system without any permanent changes OP.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Are you serious? Who cares?

If my child did this they would be grounded. If anything OP’s response is tame.


Wait help he understand. Grounded why?




Her church friends would disapprove and think she's a bad mom


Close. Her temple friends would disapprove.


+1 LOL. You aren’t pinning this particular overreaction on white people. Not today Satan.




You are nuts. You mean Hindu?

Do you know the process of stripping color from black/dark brown hair and how long it takes before you can have pink?

There is no way OP wouldn't be aware that her Indian kid wasn't having her hair dyed pink not to mention the cost

Also she is way to laid back about it to be an Indian mom who doesn't like pink hair


How sad this thread has turned into yet another hate-fest toward Asian/Indian people. It’s commonplace in College / University part of DCUM, so I guess it’s not surprising the same anti-Indian/Asian bigots are showing up here too.


It’s not just DCUM, it’s the entire democrat party in the U.S.


Nice try fascist Trumper

Better than a bullet in the brain
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Are you serious? Who cares?

If my child did this they would be grounded. If anything OP’s response is tame.


Wait help he understand. Grounded why?




Her church friends would disapprove and think she's a bad mom


Close. Her temple friends would disapprove.


+1 LOL. You aren’t pinning this particular overreaction on white people. Not today Satan.




You are nuts. You mean Hindu?

Do you know the process of stripping color from black/dark brown hair and how long it takes before you can have pink?

There is no way OP wouldn't be aware that her Indian kid wasn't having her hair dyed pink not to mention the cost

Also she is way to laid back about it to be an Indian mom who doesn't like pink hair


Plenty of black haired people have pink streaks and magenta hair. It's not that hard to do with the right product and extensions. OP never said it was solid bubble gum pink.


"Maybe I wouldn’t if it was just a streak or something but dyeing ALL your hair (which she did) is what I would deem a cry for help."

This is from the OP

It is not streaks and it is hard to do. If you have experience with what we think of as typical Indian hair you would know it as i do from an unfortunate stint in college.

And I'm the previous PP. I am Indian American so I don't get what about my statement made it anti Indian. It's not like the Satan PP i was responding to.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We should all be -a little afraid- of what our mothers will think. As teenager, we should be


My parents were like this. It caused a ton of self esteem issues.
Didn’t do that w our kids. Never.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We should all be -a little afraid- of what our mothers will think. As teenager, we should be


What? No! Maybe if it were something significant like using drugs, but coloring hair? No.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Why do you believe that dyeing your hair pink is a cry for help?


NP and I disagree it’s a “cry for help” but it’s definitely a “please notice me” statement that contains a message.
And that could be anything from “I wanna have some kind of identity other than the boring-haired brunette I am” to “all the cool kids have dyed hair and I wanna be cool too” to “my family is so conservative and I’m so edgy and this is my first step in the process of rebellion” to “I’m depressed and outcast and this is my way to get you to ask me about how I’m doing or for me to fit in with other outcasts”
And however OP reads it, the solution isn’t grounding or punishment. It’s communication! Get curious, OP, and ask your teen to tell you about it. Express genuine interest in learning more about why she made the choice and what led up to it. Just say “I wasn’t expecting you to do that because we hadn’t talked about it. But I’d love to hear more about what led you to want to dye your hair pink….” and see where that leads.
Maybe it’s nothing, maybe it’s something…but ask and you’ll know instead of worry.
Anonymous
I would be shocked if my child even at 16 did not give me a hint in advance that his/her hair would dye in at a different color other than brown or nore than a few highlights. Our hair is black, so our kids need to do hair bleach if they want to dye their hair anything other than brown.

Op, have you considered that there is a chance that your daughter is into fashion or cosplay or Japan animation as a reason to dye hair in pink?
Anonymous
[quote=Anonymous]Some of you have never bought dark towels to minimize Manic Panic cleanup, and it shows.

OP sounds like you've got a 16 year old daughter who has never given you a single thing to worry about. Congratulations on hitting the lottery, and stop looking for trouble to borrow.[/quote
Anonymous
Well adjusted people don’t dye their hair non-natural colors. They don’t get nose rings either. People pretending otherwise are silly.

If OP is still reading, I’d be concerned too. Did she do it at home? The other issue is that she is sneaking around and hiding stuff. What else is she hiding, I would want to know. I’d start doing phone checks at night if you aren’t already.

How are her grades? Her friend circle? This is most likely influenced by another person she knows. Is she college-bound?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well adjusted people don’t dye their hair non-natural colors. They don’t get nose rings either. People pretending otherwise are silly.

If OP is still reading, I’d be concerned too. Did she do it at home? The other issue is that she is sneaking around and hiding stuff. What else is she hiding, I would want to know. I’d start doing phone checks at night if you aren’t already.

How are her grades? Her friend circle? This is most likely influenced by another person she knows. Is she college-bound?


This nonsense makes me want to dye my 17 year old’s hair bright pink myself.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well adjusted people don’t dye their hair non-natural colors. They don’t get nose rings either. People pretending otherwise are silly.

If OP is still reading, I’d be concerned too. Did she do it at home? The other issue is that she is sneaking around and hiding stuff. What else is she hiding, I would want to know. I’d start doing phone checks at night if you aren’t already.

How are her grades? Her friend circle? This is most likely influenced by another person she knows. Is she college-bound?


I was a 16 year old with straight As who dyed my hair purple because it was fun. Literally never smoked, drank, did drugs, etc. I was beyond a good kid. You have to give kids space to express some individuality in a same way.

So, I can tell you that we'll adjusted healthy teenagers do dye their hair funky colors, because I was a healthy well adjusted teen who dyed my hair funky colors.
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