, I agree it's a total waste of money re the hair and super high maintenance (for both of you) but I like the above philosophy. I think more than $3 though - gas, your time... The danger of course -- with a kid dedicated to her looks, as tweens/teens are -- is that she will NOT learn the lesson and keep doing it! |
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I always had very frizzy slightly curly slightly wavy hair as a teen and preteen and my mom had absolutely no understanding of what it was like to take care of and have that hair type. I was self-conscious and I hated my hair and wore it in a slicked back bun for years. I would have loved the opportunity to have done something about it but that was never an option.
If she wants to pay for it I would let her but I would not supplement paying for other things that she would typically pay for with that income. So she would typically pay for a movie tickets with her friends. I would not offer to do that if she spent it on hair. Straightening. I think it's a great time for her to prioritize what's important to her and to see if she has the funds to do it. I think also getting her some product and styling tips would be great. College, I met a girl with my hair type and it was a game changer. I love my wavy hair now and it is controlled by three times a week washing and the products I use. I get compliments on my hair all of the time and if I had better information on how to handle my actual hair type in high school I would have been a lot happier and less self-conscious. |
| Asian girls have been getting straight perms since the 90s. Look into them. |
+1 we love this dryer! My daughter has thick curly hair and gets great results from this. In a way I think she’s embraced her curls more now because she feels like she has options. She only does the dryer about once a week, but it’s fast and gives her another style that she likes. She uses a heat protectant spray, which of course is not as good as avoiding drying but her hair is shiny and healthy so far. |
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| My worry for a 12 year old is that she will then avoid being physically active - swimming , etc for fear of ruining her hair. That’s just so young for that. |
| Just spend $200 on a keratin treatment that will last for months instead of doing every week. |
| Where is your 12yo getting $200/month? |
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No way. She can do this when she can drive herself there. That’s too much of my time for something like this.
Even to use her own money, I would say that she needs to first truly try the curly girl method or whatever things are out there now and learn how to do her hair, use a straightener to do her hair. She should know how to do her own hair and be comfortable with that. (Assuming she’s not black; I would pay for that, as another PP said.) I might say yes to once a month at this age. Having her hair done all the time will give her a complex, or a bigger one than she has. She has to figure out how to be comfortable with herself. |
What race is she? This can do long term damage to her curls. There are treatments that can get it smoother and then wash out over time. Try haute Feng Shui in Tyson’s. |
She is white. -OP |
| She should get a Japanese straight perm or similar. I get these and I’m Asian with straight but frizzy hair. |
Stop it. This would ruin her hair and look terrible as her hair grows out. She needs to come to terms with having curly hair and learn to work with it- both for curly styles and how to blow it out herself |
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It's ridiculous and probably damaging to enable this focus. She's 12.
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When you say hair matters to "them," who do you mean? I hope you don't mean Black people, because hair matters to everyone, per the OP. This is a different example. You are paying because you lack the ability to do your daughter's hair in a style appropriate for her hair type. The op's daughter wants to change her hair type. |