| Unflattering is fine. My mom said things like "you look like a 2 ton baker". Don't say that. |
I would never comment on somebody else’s appearance like that. I don’t think most of that little stuff matters that much. And folks who are rigidly focused on details like that often don’t imo have great personal style. |
I have a boy and a girl. My kids also depend on my honest feedback. They also give back their honest opinion to me when I ask their opinion on my cooking, clothes, decoration choices etc. The important thing is that we all also give our logic behind the opinion to each other also. And that makes it clear that the feedback has been given to improve and no hurt each other, I suspect the reason that your daughter is miffed is not your criticism per se, but rather the truth of your criticism. She may be having low body image issues and that is probably because she is unhappy with her own looks, body, skin, hair etc and knows that she is not looking good. I think parents should educate their kids about nutrition and health from the time that they are very little. Because it is hard when you are not fit in your teen years because teens are very concerned with their looks at that age. |
| I didn’t wear pointed toe shoes until I was in my 30s because my petite mom with size 5.5 feet thought pointed toes made my size 8.5 feet look too big. |
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Raising kids who can’t handle a comment that address is unflattering when trying on clothes in a store is a parenting failure. How will your kids cope in the real world if you have raised them to think that they are so perfect that every single piece of clothing will look amazing on them and that no one should ever give them any constructive criticism. You are setting them up for mental health issues when they get out on their own and no one is going to constantly act like they are perfect.
OP you need nothing wrong. She is a teen and got bent out of shape which can happen over just about anything. If something doesn’t fit right or isn’t sitting right and just isn’t flattering there is nothing wrong with saying so. You don’t have to tell her that every item looks simply amazing and perfect on her when it doesn’t. Not all clothes are flattering when trying them on. |
Next time ask her opinion first: what do you think? How do you feel in it? What do you like about it? Did you really use “unflattering”? Words like this are so easy to misinterpret. “She needs to get over it?” She’s a kid. She has hurt feelings. You’re her parent, act like it. You sound like you think that your feelings are the most important thing here. Obviously you love her, but put her feelings in front of your own. |
| This is always so hard to manage with girls. I stick to "it's not my favorite" when my kids ask opinions of their outfits. I want them to be confident and happy with what they choose. Sometimes it looks amazing and sometimes it's odd but I'm a different generation than them so what do I know. My mom still does this to me and criticized my clothes and I just don't talk to her about them and much less likely to open up about anything when I get "you know that shirt is too tight for your age" or "what's with the wide pants, looks funny" when I see her. I don't want my kids to bristle when they talk to me. |
For what? |
| IMHO, the perfect phrase is, “I think you can do better.” |
Like a monster obviously |
I mean, they probably did. Pointy toes add a lot of length. |
Thanks for this totally irrelevant story. So glad your shoes were okay in the end
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Don't say either one. I'm sorry your mom said things like that to you. |
| I think Deborah Tannen's book has some good advice on mothers commenting on daughters' appearances. Basically tread very carefully. |
There is QUITE a bit of projection in this post. Holy Moly. |