This is OP. She is 13. |
Why so mean? The girl needs help if her parents are clueless. |
I agree. |
No, don’t shame her and even if you tell her then what? She has none. |
| Is she south Asian Indian? My son has a friend like that. The boys all tell him he needs to use deodorant and he doesn’t smell it so he doesn’t believe them. He does nothing. It’s been 3 years. They still tell him he smells, especially on humid days. Even girls tell him. |
I posted earlier. I don't see anything wrong with these suggestions that you are calling passive aggressive. I believe the term is tact. A lot of people lack it but it does a long way in having difficult conversations and preserving relationships. Op has the ability to teach this skill to her daughter. Some situations call for tact. Communicating kindly to an unrelated teen needs tact. |
| This is very contrived, but because the girl is so young, I think this might work... Arrange for the girls to hang out for some spa time and watch a self-care video or read a teen self-care guide. I'm sure something appropriate exists. Gift them both a self-care kit that includes deodorant. Have your daughter reinforce the idea that as they get older, teens smell and that using it will help them smell nice. I disagree with others that you should not do anything. This poor girl will be shunned for something that she is totally unaware of and that has the easiest fix. |
Exactly. A little tact goes a long way. |
Thank you. Your DD has high empathy and social understanding. Non-related adults really have no business talking to this tween/teen about her hygiene. The recommended scripts are all terribly inappropriate because of that. Kids do generally figure these things out eventually through their peer groups, if not at home. |
Agree. A friends mom buying you “hygiene kit,” really? That is terrible. Say nothing and air your car out when you get home. You have minimal interaction with her. Stay in your lane. I would bet she has deodorant sitting in her bathroom, going unused, because she forgets or doesn’t care. Or maybe her mom bought her Tom’s and it’s crap, but she doesn’t want her using aluminium. You have no idea if she has deodorant or how their family want to handle this. Do not buy her deodorant. |
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Buy her a cutesy/fancy "spa" hygiene kit as a gift. Something and trendy that teens like.
There is nothing you can say with a kind heart that is worse than the brutal treatment she will get from everyone at school who she is grossing out. |
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Kids at school are already avoiding her and talking about her behind it back. They are "behaving" by not telling her, and just avoiding her. Keeping her in the dark is making it worse.
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I would have your daughter tell her. My daughter needs deodorant and often forgets to use it, then stinks when she comes home from school, because of PE. It's been slow progress to remind her in the morning. She doesn't get offended at all, but she's so forgetful! ADHD, probably. It runs in the family. Also, maybe she should shave. It cuts down on odors. But one thing at a time! |
Most of the middle school kids smell too and they likely have their gym teacher already harping on them to wear deodorant |
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Native has "fun" deodorants that my MS kid likes. Maybe get a few and give them to your kid and her friend in the car, "I knew we'd see you so thought it would be fun to get one for you, too!" That way, you could avoid offending her or her mother.
https://www.nativecos.com/collections/limited-edition?/utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=search&gclid=Cj0KCQjwsp6pBhCfARIsAD3GZubFzeLompkbuIKYrGSO5I-lowb4gkp1Wl-GC1czMf0gjpEjcJdh3VgaAgQ8EALw_wcB |