Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your college graduate daughter is “fed up” with shopping, so her mommy is now buying a wardrobe for her online and crowd-sourcing to find out what the college grad daughter might tolerate? Really?
Give her a budget and tell her to pick out her own clothes for her job. She’s a college grad. She had a job. Her mommy should not be fretting over this as if she were a middle schooler.
Reading between the lines, there may be some neurodivergence involved, PP. Be charitable and accept OP's premise. My college kid is on the spectrum and I will be buying his clothes for a few more years, while he integrates what's appropriate for what circumstance. And he's a man, which is easier to shop for.
Anonymous wrote:Your college graduate daughter is “fed up” with shopping, so her mommy is now buying a wardrobe for her online and crowd-sourcing to find out what the college grad daughter might tolerate? Really?
Give her a budget and tell her to pick out her own clothes for her job. She’s a college grad. She had a job. Her mommy should not be fretting over this as if she were a middle schooler.
Anonymous wrote:Your college graduate daughter is “fed up” with shopping, so her mommy is now buying a wardrobe for her online and crowd-sourcing to find out what the college grad daughter might tolerate? Really?
Give her a budget and tell her to pick out her own clothes for her job. She’s a college grad. She had a job. Her mommy should not be fretting over this as if she were a middle schooler.