Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you allow her to scream at you? Take her phone, car keys, shut off the internet and leave the house. She can fend for herself.
This is ridiculous.
OP I have boys the same age and every girl o see is wearing oversized clothes and hoodies in 95 degree weather.
I wouldn’t worry about it. The summer before college is hard for teens. They’re anxious. Have some grace for her. Watch movies, pick out dorm stuff, and move on. She must have picked up that you didn’t approve and you didn’t, so she called you out. Move on for both of your sakes.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you allow her to scream at you? Take her phone, car keys, shut off the internet and leave the house. She can fend for herself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 18 year daughter spent high school in baggy jeans and huge sweatshirts/sweaters. She's a small person but no one could ever tell as she wears giant things. She's headed to college and we recently went shopping and in the dressing room she tried on jeans that fit and decided to buy them. I think I made the mistake of saying "those look nice." She brought them home and has been screaming )literally screaming) at me ever since that I forced her into buying tiny clothing that she can't breathe in. first, I didn't force the purchase it all--it was her. Second-they aren't tight pants--they're still the super loose style and they're nowhere near being formed to her shape but they're a few sizes smaller than she usually wears.
I think this is all probably normal but the anxious mom in me (stress is high as she's leaving for college) is worried that maybe something happened to her and she is hiding herself as a result. Or it's probably all normal.
How is it a mistake to say "those look nice?"
OP, it sounds like you walk on eggshells around her. I would be more concerned about that than anything. There is definitely more going on here that you either don't know or haven't told us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 18 year daughter spent high school in baggy jeans and huge sweatshirts/sweaters. She's a small person but no one could ever tell as she wears giant things. She's headed to college and we recently went shopping and in the dressing room she tried on jeans that fit and decided to buy them. I think I made the mistake of saying "those look nice." She brought them home and has been screaming )literally screaming) at me ever since that I forced her into buying tiny clothing that she can't breathe in. first, I didn't force the purchase it all--it was her. Second-they aren't tight pants--they're still the super loose style and they're nowhere near being formed to her shape but they're a few sizes smaller than she usually wears.
I think this is all probably normal but the anxious mom in me (stress is high as she's leaving for college) is worried that maybe something happened to her and she is hiding herself as a result. Or it's probably all normal.
How is it a mistake to say "those look nice?"
OP, it sounds like you walk on eggshells around her. I would be more concerned about that than anything. There is definitely more going on here that you either don't know or haven't told us.
Anonymous wrote:My 18 year daughter spent high school in baggy jeans and huge sweatshirts/sweaters. She's a small person but no one could ever tell as she wears giant things. She's headed to college and we recently went shopping and in the dressing room she tried on jeans that fit and decided to buy them. I think I made the mistake of saying "those look nice." She brought them home and has been screaming )literally screaming) at me ever since that I forced her into buying tiny clothing that she can't breathe in. first, I didn't force the purchase it all--it was her. Second-they aren't tight pants--they're still the super loose style and they're nowhere near being formed to her shape but they're a few sizes smaller than she usually wears.
I think this is all probably normal but the anxious mom in me (stress is high as she's leaving for college) is worried that maybe something happened to her and she is hiding herself as a result. Or it's probably all normal.