Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:whatever you do, don't place this responsibility on a teacher.
I'm a teacher, and I've had this conversation with kids. It's hard.
But I can not figure out how OP thinks the teacher hasn't noticed. So, either the teacher doesn't want to intervene, or the teacher has tried and it didn't work.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of teens smell and many of them don’t care - especially if she is on the spectrum or has other challenges, but even if she does not.
My guess is her mom knows and has talked to her about it and she chooses not to care.
Don’t ostracize her for it. There are worse things in life.
Anonymous wrote:Out of curiosity, I asked my DD (14) about this post in the car, and she said “don’t do anything, eventually a kid will say something about it to her….anything a mom does will just make it worse”
FWIW.
I’m surprised her parents have not noticed and said something? I had to be super firm with one of my sons about hygiene around preteen age.
Also- is it at all possible this is a “ food/cooking odors” issue- odors picked up on clothing? Sometimes smells JUST like BO IME. In college, we all had to change shirts after eating in the dining hall- the place just had a stench and seeped into our clothes! I realize that sounds crazy but was totally true. I don’t know the cause either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe say to BOTH girls, when they get into the car, "Okay, girls. Car rules -- everybody knows that teens smell when they hit puberty, so everybody has to wear deodorant," and hand them each their own stick. That way, you are not singling one girl out.
Omg. Wtf is wrong with you? That is weird and would totally embarrass your kid and the friend.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe say to BOTH girls, when they get into the car, "Okay, girls. Car rules -- everybody knows that teens smell when they hit puberty, so everybody has to wear deodorant," and hand them each their own stick. That way, you are not singling one girl out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe say to BOTH girls, when they get into the car, "Okay, girls. Car rules -- everybody knows that teens smell when they hit puberty, so everybody has to wear deodorant," and hand them each their own stick. That way, you are not singling one girl out.
No, don't penalize OP's daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Grill them both in the car!
“You both smell like a week old turnip! I’m not driving you stinkers around if you don’t start showering and putting on some deodorant! Welcome to womanhood!”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leave it alone. A lot of kids stink. There isn’t a non offensive way to bring this up
This is OP. Something has to be done. Our car actually smells when she leaves. Even my DH complained today and he doesn’t smell anything. I really want to protect her from getting embarrassed or her feelings hurt by someone else who may not be nice about how they tell her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leave it alone. A lot of kids stink. There isn’t a non offensive way to bring this up
This is OP. Something has to be done. Our car actually smells when she leaves. Even my DH complained today and he doesn’t smell anything. I really want to protect her from getting embarrassed or her feelings hurt by someone else who may not be nice about how they tell her.
This sounds very fake.