Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Elementary School-Aged Kids
Reply to "Parents of middle school girls, please..."
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] Honest question... could you please help me understand why those kinds of clothes are a problem? Thanks! I get that certain places have rules, and while I disagree in some ways with most dress codes I can acknowledge that I think they should almost always be followed, but I don't actually understand why any sort of clothing is specifically bad. I guess I'm rather clueless, or at least not mainstream in my views.[/quote] This is my understanding of why it's an issue. There are areas of the body that we consider private, personal. For boys and girls, the genitals and the buttocks, and for girls the chest. Adults expose or accentuate these areas when trying to attract other adults. They will wear revealing, close cut clothing. If a child wears clothing that mimics that sexual enhancement, we read it as "wrong" because we're reading it as a child doing something to sexually enhance themselves. Those of us who don't see this as a particular issue understand that a young child wearing a triangle-cut bikini is not sexually enhancing herself because there is nothing to sexually enhance - she is a child. Those who view it as a girl's/woman's responsibility to cater to the male gaze see the girl as doing something wrong because she's trying to sexually enhance herself. Short shorts can make other people uncomfortable because they can reveal areas that we consider sexually important. The emphasis is placed on the girl to not make others feel uncomfortable, so that adults don't have to consider why they're viewing 11-13 year old children as sexual objects.[/quote] Bingo! Here's the interesting thing. The girls know about sex at this age and they want to look like the sexy TV stars and fashion models, but they don't want to attract glances from creepy old men. I just explained my objection to one of my daughter's clothing option in this way. "You're developing to look like a woman. If you wear things like this that show off your womanly parts, some men will look at you in a sexual way." She was flabbergasted and grossed out. She then defended her right to wear a bikini at our summer pool (where there are no creepy old men she thinks) and we discussed how that might be a better choice than at the beach under the glaring eyes of lots of strangers. We're still navigating how we set appropriate standards for my 12 year old, but I think this sort of open conversation about why certain things make me as her parent (and particularly her dad) uncomfortable are important for her to understand. Trying to educate her rather than just forbid tons of stuff. And NO her but cheeks don't hang out. [/quote] OK, but... there's another side to that. If SHE is uncomfortable by the fact that some people will possibly think of her based on her outfit, then it's totally legitimate for her to choose to avoid that. But, I hope that was your message, and not that she HAS TO care what anyone else thinks of however she dresses. That was my approach with my DD and the only one I personally think makes sense. If she's comfortable in what she's wearing, great. If someone else thinks a thing, thoughts are fine as long as their actions are appropriate (UNLESS DD has decided she doesn't want to be thought of that way, in which case altering her clothing choices may be the only option because no one can change another's thoughts). She still has the absolute right to wear whatever she chooses and NOT have anyone act inappropriate with her. That's totally on the agent of the potential action, not anyone's DD the recipient. To me, that message, "what people think doesn't need to be relevant to you unless it impacts your comfort; the important thing is that YOU like how you have chosen to dress" is usually the most important message to send about clothing, because the basic theme is applicable to so many other important topics.[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics