Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares?!!
In the 70s and 80s none of us drank water in school.
People didn’t carry around personal water bottles.
We were healthier and skinnier back then too.
News today says the Stanley’s have lead in them.
Fake news. All mainstream metal water bottles have lead in them. It meets the industry standard and its not the part you drink from. Do more research instead of believing every clickbait headline you see.
Anonymous wrote:ridiculous nonsense. Just let her get thirsty. I wouldn't get a stupid cup over that.
Anonymous wrote:There’s no need to constantly be guzzling water throughout the day. She’ll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares?!!
In the 70s and 80s none of us drank water in school.
People didn’t carry around personal water bottles.
We were healthier and skinnier back then too.
In the 70’s and ‘80s we drank from the water fountains— since they hadn’t tested them for lead yet. We had an open campus, so we could leave during lunch and other free periods to get water or slurped or whatever we liked.
We were skinnier back then. Less exposure to plastics and much more smoking. My HS had designated smoking areas for the students.
So: no smoking, no leaving school grounds for lunch, and lead pipes. I’m fine with the personal water bottles.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares?!!
In the 70s and 80s none of us drank water in school.
People didn’t carry around personal water bottles.
We were healthier and skinnier back then too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a first generation immigrant, i just don't get it. 8th grade DD goes all day without drinking water even though her dermatologist and her doctor told her she needed to. She said any other water bottles aside from a Stanley Cup is "trashy" and she would be judged by "people in the hallway". She would rather go for 7 hours without a drop of liquid and it's clearly taking a toll on her skin and overall health. Her close friends are kind although all of them have the "right" sneakers and "right" water bottles. She's in a MoCo public school, which has both FARMS kids and kids from relatively affluent families, I was really hoping to raise a confident daughter who's not too worried about how shes' being perceived by others when it comes to material processions. Am I sending the wrong message by giving in?
Get her the stupid cup and trendy shoes but tell her how deeply disappointed you are in her
Also take her back to the old country this summer and show her what real poverty is like
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her skin and health are not suffering going 8 hours without drinking water. If she's thirsty, she'll drink. Frankly she probably IS drinking and is just manipulating you so you'll buy her the Stanley.
I wondered what was going on with OP's daughter since a dermatologist weighed in. Not sure that the vast majority of us are in that situation.
Some medications that the dermatologist prescribes to clear up skin eruptions also requires that the person drink water throughout the day to flush them from the kidneys/liver.
Do you really believe a bratty spoiled teen would ignore her own thirst before she drank from a trashy bottle? Don’t be dense. This is a poor bargaining tactic by a kid used to getting her way.
I absolutely believe this.
Anonymous wrote:Question for those parents whose kids are really wrapped up in brand name stuff: when did it start, and was it sudden? I never ever cared about brand names/“cool” stuff, and so far my kids don’t either (oldest is 14). So I’m wondering what to expect/when.
I assume that parents aren’t raising their kids to think this stuff matters, so is it all social media?