Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter is 12 and just started youth group , and one of the women leaders has made multiple comments about her height. She’s 5’9 and 130 lbs so small framed and is developed for her age and very pretty by all standards, and knows how to dress her body well. But doesn’t dress inappropriately, no crop tops or anything. Has a very preppy lululemon loveshack golden goose sense of style. But this one women has told her that people look at her more because she’s tall, she can’t wear shorts because it draws the wrong attention to her, that she has to act like a role model to her peers because she’s tall, and has even made comments to me that she wished she had my daughters body. I personally found this so weird and I can tell it makes my daughter uncomfortable. Wwyd?
What's the problem? She looks like an adult and adults are treating her more like one, as obviously do her peers. Time to grow up emotionally for her also to match the body, and be a young lady.
Anonymous wrote:Some of these comments are inappropriate and others are truth telling.
2inch inseam shorts look very different on a 5’ girl vs a 5’9” girl. Just like a sheath dress looks very different on an A cup woman vs a DD cup woman. It is what it is and more women and girls need to know this.
The comments about wanting her body type are inappropriate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Please stop commenting on my daughter’s body, clothes and looks. It’s very inappropriate.”
This, but also know that predators go to church young groups because it's church and people trust church. She sounds creepy and I'd keep my kid away.
Anonymous wrote:Some of these comments are inappropriate and others are truth telling.
2inch inseam shorts look very different on a 5’ girl vs a 5’9” girl. Just like a sheath dress looks very different on an A cup woman vs a DD cup woman. It is what it is and more women and girls need to know this.
The comments about wanting her body type are inappropriate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on how it’s affecting your daughter. When I was in church/youth group growing up, some of the adults were NUTS and by the time we were teens we easily recognized that they were insane and it was them, not us. We were not affected by them whatsoever. So, feel free to say something if your daughter is bothered of course, but that’s my experience.
That's because we learned how to deal with people, which sometimes includes ignoring them or letting their comments roll off our backs. Kids these days do not have that skill. This thread is a case in point.
I agree not everything needs some kind of snippy confrontation. I could never imagine saying some of these comebacks, they sound really petty. I would not let this lady bring me down to that level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on how it’s affecting your daughter. When I was in church/youth group growing up, some of the adults were NUTS and by the time we were teens we easily recognized that they were insane and it was them, not us. We were not affected by them whatsoever. So, feel free to say something if your daughter is bothered of course, but that’s my experience.
That's because we learned how to deal with people, which sometimes includes ignoring them or letting their comments roll off our backs. Kids these days do not have that skill. This thread is a case in point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of these comments are inappropriate and others are truth telling.
2inch inseam shorts look very different on a 5’ girl vs a 5’9” girl. Just like a sheath dress looks very different on an A cup woman vs a DD cup woman. It is what it is and more women and girls need to know this.
The comments about wanting her body type are inappropriate.
The shorts things doesn’t make sense to me. A 2-inch inseam is covering the same parts regardless of how tall or short you are. Everything else is just leg.
Anonymous wrote:Some of these comments are inappropriate and others are truth telling.
2inch inseam shorts look very different on a 5’ girl vs a 5’9” girl. Just like a sheath dress looks very different on an A cup woman vs a DD cup woman. It is what it is and more women and girls need to know this.
The comments about wanting her body type are inappropriate.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is 12 and just started youth group , and one of the women leaders has made multiple comments about her height. She’s 5’9 and 130 lbs so small framed and is developed for her age and very pretty by all standards, and knows how to dress her body well. But doesn’t dress inappropriately, no crop tops or anything. Has a very preppy lululemon loveshack golden goose sense of style. But this one women has told her that people look at her more because she’s tall, she can’t wear shorts because it draws the wrong attention to her, that she has to act like a role model to her peers because she’s tall, and has even made comments to me that she wished she had my daughters body. I personally found this so weird and I can tell it makes my daughter uncomfortable. Wwyd?
Anonymous wrote:It depends on how it’s affecting your daughter. When I was in church/youth group growing up, some of the adults were NUTS and by the time we were teens we easily recognized that they were insane and it was them, not us. We were not affected by them whatsoever. So, feel free to say something if your daughter is bothered of course, but that’s my experience.