Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You wear a crop top with high waisted pants and have barely any skin show. Or the same top with low rise pants/skirt and it looks trashy.
Mostly, it's the girls not knowing how to wear the fashion.
Overall though, if you don't let it in the house, less chance a crop will be worn. Not perfect. Generations have changed at school or removed something to look different at school, without parent knowledge.
This is true. But I think some of the 12 year olds want to show off especially to the boys.
My daughter still thinks boys are disgusting idiots as an 8th grader. But she loves to look like every other girl that is hearing Lulu, Alo, FP movement, hollister and aerie. While I know she and her friends “theoretically” like boys, they seem to be dressing for each other and not to get boys attention.
You are correct that some girls want to show off for boys. But I don’t think that is the case for any 12 year old girl in a crop top and 2.5 inch lulu shorts. And I say this as a woman who was boy crazy at age 12. My daughter and many of her friends don’t seem to have the same agenda about boys as myself and my friends in the 1980s when Daisy Dukes, a crop top and wearing a high pony with a swatch around it was all the rage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You wear a crop top with high waisted pants and have barely any skin show. Or the same top with low rise pants/skirt and it looks trashy.
Mostly, it's the girls not knowing how to wear the fashion.
Overall though, if you don't let it in the house, less chance a crop will be worn. Not perfect. Generations have changed at school or removed something to look different at school, without parent knowledge.
This is true. But I think some of the 12 year olds want to show off especially to the boys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was a teen and wanted clothes my mom disapproved of, she said if you want it earn the money and buy it because I’m not buying it for you. I feel like that was a good compromise.
"This is my budget for x number of shirts. You may supplement with as much of your money to get what you want... as long as you get that number of shirts and they meet the dress code. You can buy anything that doesn't meet dress code entirely from your own money, and they don't count toward the required number."
Anonymous wrote:When I was a teen and wanted clothes my mom disapproved of, she said if you want it earn the money and buy it because I’m not buying it for you. I feel like that was a good compromise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden out of nowhere my DD is begging for new shirts that she sees a lot of girls wearing in middle school. Fitted crop tops, off the shoulder tops…I’m not comfortable with it. I’ve talked to her about it and I get tears and pouting. Not sure how to handle. Any advice?
Tell her if she wants you to consider it to give the tears and pouting a rest. If she wants to dress 16 stop acting 12.
Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden out of nowhere my DD is begging for new shirts that she sees a lot of girls wearing in middle school. Fitted crop tops, off the shoulder tops…I’m not comfortable with it. I’ve talked to her about it and I get tears and pouting. Not sure how to handle. Any advice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:doesn't the school have a dress code?
Do any public schools have dress codes anymore? Ours doesn’t bc parents threw a fit about “policing girls’ bodies.” So pretty much anything goes as long as it isn’t racist or profanity.
Anonymous wrote:doesn't the school have a dress code?
Anonymous wrote:You wear a crop top with high waisted pants and have barely any skin show. Or the same top with low rise pants/skirt and it looks trashy.
Mostly, it's the girls not knowing how to wear the fashion.
Overall though, if you don't let it in the house, less chance a crop will be worn. Not perfect. Generations have changed at school or removed something to look different at school, without parent knowledge.