Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. She is beautiful and has a lovely figure (she is a dancer and swimmer). I feel like the shorts and crop tops look trashy honestly. I would never say this to her. I say things like "too revealing" or "too mature." I bought a couple of "tasteful" crop tops at the beginning of the season at her begging and hoping that that would shut her up. It didn't and she has since bought several more at Target with her own money. After purchasing yet another couple today at Target with friends, I told her "I think that's enough crop tops." She was horribly offended and stormed upstairs.
She seems to be interested in a look designed to sexually arouse boys.
Is it possible your teenage daughter is experiencing adolescent normal changes driving her toward mating behavior?
Anonymous wrote:OP I think the first step is to sit with yourself until you can honestly articulate the reasons her clothes are bothering you. If you use a word like “trashy” or “mature” you need to be able to explain what you mean and why you feel it’s a defensible position.
I think that will go a long way towards keeping yourself out of insult territory, and if/when she disagrees, you’ve modeled that the conversation can be had in a mature way. You can argue about it, but do it respectfully. If you start out by being disapproving and using insulting euphemisms, you can’t be surprised when she responds poorly.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. She is beautiful and has a lovely figure (she is a dancer and swimmer). I feel like the shorts and crop tops look trashy honestly. I would never say this to her. I say things like "too revealing" or "too mature." I bought a couple of "tasteful" crop tops at the beginning of the season at her begging and hoping that that would shut her up. It didn't and she has since bought several more at Target with her own money. After purchasing yet another couple today at Target with friends, I told her "I think that's enough crop tops." She was horribly offended and stormed upstairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is dressing trashy. And stomps off when it is pointed out. Disrespectful.
Getting good grades is a normal expectation from all kids. This is not something worth getting a nobel prize for. And it does not absolve her of disrespectful behavior.
PP, are you currently a parent of a teen girl? I guess not because they ALL are dressing trashy these days. Crop tops are in, and so are tight shorts with oversized Ts that do look like there're no pants underneath.
OP, I hear you. I let my teen wear those 'trashy' outfits as long as she's not wearing them to school/events/family gatherings. If she wants to wear them to go to Starbucks with her friends, so be it.
Anonymous wrote:Meh. I've not seen a well dressed teen in this area once in the whole of the past 15 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 12 year-old girl dresses like a 14 year-old boy in grunge-era Seattle. Skater shorts, flannel shirts, shaggy haircut, baseball cap.
Sometimes I want to grab her and push her hair back just to get a look at her face, but I don't.
Welcome to parenting teens/tweens, OP. You can't control their bodies as much as you did when they were little.
Lol, seriously!!! I don’t know why parents are so overly controlling these days. Parents want to control how our kids dress, their food intake, their sleeping schedules, their academic lives. How they dress is the least of our worries and if my daughter wears a cropped top and jeans shorts, I don’t blink an eye. She looks cute. She’s confident and I like how she’s developing a sense of style.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is dressing trashy. And stomps off when it is pointed out. Disrespectful.
Getting good grades is a normal expectation from all kids. This is not something worth getting a nobel prize for. And it does not absolve her of disrespectful behavior.
“Dressing trashy” is subjective. You’ve only been conditioned to think it is trashy because this is America, we are puritanical and we are also victims of toxic masculinity that tells women that we are the problem, not the men who rape and harass women.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't let my DD get any clothes I didn't approve of, so I never bought her shorts that showed her ass cheeks. But my DD did go through a phase of wearing all black, a phase of wearing two stars under her eyes, and now she does low pigtails and heavy eyeliner and looks very emo.
Her clothes are not her heart. I only ever say something complimentary, or keep my mouth shut. I think it significantly contributes to keeping our relationship good. My parents hated what I wore as a teenager, and I keep that in mind.
Anonymous wrote:My 12 year-old girl dresses like a 14 year-old boy in grunge-era Seattle. Skater shorts, flannel shirts, shaggy haircut, baseball cap.
Sometimes I want to grab her and push her hair back just to get a look at her face, but I don't.
Welcome to parenting teens/tweens, OP. You can't control their bodies as much as you did when they were little.