Anonymous wrote:I'd have had her take it all off, and then drawn a globe on her cheek.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, I can't answer your subject line as written.
I think you're a good mom who was coming from a wonderful place of love for your child and wanting only the best for her. In isolation knowing only this about you, it seems likely your DD is lucky to have a caring and attentive mom like you.
That said, based on my parenting philosophy, yes I do think you probably handled this a bit wrong. When you say you made her take it off by being honest about your concerns... was the discussion completely open where it was her choice after caution but NOT judgement from you, or was it either obvious what choice you wanted her to make or not actually her decision?
The first option is the only way I would have handled it, as I would consider the other two to be sending my child a de-legitimizing message about her own control of her body. In this case, likely not a major or catastrophic one, but not something I'd want to do regardless.
Considering others' reactions to how we look can be good to make sure we're ok with the likely result, but I'm trying to teach my DD that insofar as it respects others' boundaries she may do anything she's comfortable with to her body and that others' judgement of her shouldn't matter.
In general, we are to follow rules, but if this was in the school rules I would have explained possible reactions and then "allowed" it (although that's not the word I would use) while probably also providing a means of removing the facepaint if she should decide at some point during the day that she no longer wishes to wear it, as I would with any new fashion choice she's not sure she will like if I suspect there's a chance the whole day committed to it may become uncomfortable.
I don't think you messed up badly or anything, but I would consider the situation carefully, including the message you think you sent versus what message you would prefer to send, and analyze why you are doubting yourself here. Why do YOU think your handling of it may have been a mistake? Maybe it wasn't and is fully in line with perfectly reasonable values of yours. But since it made you uncomfortable, maybe reflect and try to decide how you intentionally want to handle similar things in the future, because this likely won't be the last time something like this comes up.
Actually, this is exactly what I did. I told her that I thought kids would laugh/tease and that the paint would end up all over everything. I gave her a washcloth to take to school in case she wanted to take it off, and reminded her again that she had been warned. A few minutes later she was in the bathroom washing it off. Of course, by the time I had helped her scrub it off, we were going to be late, so there was not even time for me to do a small earth.
Anonymous wrote:Well, I can't answer your subject line as written.
I think you're a good mom who was coming from a wonderful place of love for your child and wanting only the best for her. In isolation knowing only this about you, it seems likely your DD is lucky to have a caring and attentive mom like you.
That said, based on my parenting philosophy, yes I do think you probably handled this a bit wrong. When you say you made her take it off by being honest about your concerns... was the discussion completely open where it was her choice after caution but NOT judgement from you, or was it either obvious what choice you wanted her to make or not actually her decision?
The first option is the only way I would have handled it, as I would consider the other two to be sending my child a de-legitimizing message about her own control of her body. In this case, likely not a major or catastrophic one, but not something I'd want to do regardless.
Considering others' reactions to how we look can be good to make sure we're ok with the likely result, but I'm trying to teach my DD that insofar as it respects others' boundaries she may do anything she's comfortable with to her body and that others' judgement of her shouldn't matter.
In general, we are to follow rules, but if this was in the school rules I would have explained possible reactions and then "allowed" it (although that's not the word I would use) while probably also providing a means of removing the facepaint if she should decide at some point during the day that she no longer wishes to wear it, as I would with any new fashion choice she's not sure she will like if I suspect there's a chance the whole day committed to it may become uncomfortable.
I don't think you messed up badly or anything, but I would consider the situation carefully, including the message you think you sent versus what message you would prefer to send, and analyze why you are doubting yourself here. Why do YOU think your handling of it may have been a mistake? Maybe it wasn't and is fully in line with perfectly reasonable values of yours. But since it made you uncomfortable, maybe reflect and try to decide how you intentionally want to handle similar things in the future, because this likely won't be the last time something like this comes up.
Anonymous wrote:Well, I can't answer your subject line as written.
I think you're a good mom who was coming from a wonderful place of love for your child and wanting only the best for her. In isolation knowing only this about you, it seems likely your DD is lucky to have a caring and attentive mom like you.
That said, based on my parenting philosophy, yes I do think you probably handled this a bit wrong. When you say you made her take it off by being honest about your concerns... was the discussion completely open where it was her choice after caution but NOT judgement from you, or was it either obvious what choice you wanted her to make or not actually her decision?
The first option is the only way I would have handled it, as I would consider the other two to be sending my child a de-legitimizing message about her own control of her body. In this case, likely not a major or catastrophic one, but not something I'd want to do regardless.
Considering others' reactions to how we look can be good to make sure we're ok with the likely result, but I'm trying to teach my DD that insofar as it respects others' boundaries she may do anything she's comfortable with to her body and that others' judgement of her shouldn't matter.
In general, we are to follow rules, but if this was in the school rules I would have explained possible reactions and then "allowed" it (although that's not the word I would use) while probably also providing a means of removing the facepaint if she should decide at some point during the day that she no longer wishes to wear it, as I would with any new fashion choice she's not sure she will like if I suspect there's a chance the whole day committed to it may become uncomfortable.
I don't think you messed up badly or anything, but I would consider the situation carefully, including the message you think you sent versus what message you would prefer to send, and analyze why you are doubting yourself here. Why do YOU think your handling of it may have been a mistake? Maybe it wasn't and is fully in line with perfectly reasonable values of yours. But since it made you uncomfortable, maybe reflect and try to decide how you intentionally want to handle similar things in the future, because this likely won't be the last time something like this comes up.
Anonymous wrote:So she looked like a soccer hooligan or something? Yeah, you made the right call. A little earth on a cheek would have been acceptable.