Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all are missing the point that the teen has to live off and pay her bills on a meager hair stylist apprentice pay after 7 months of working there. The parents are setting her up for failure. She also does not want to be a hair stylist. Do you all want someone doing your hair who doesn't want to be doing it? Probably not.
OP doesn’t really have a clue what the plan is because she isn’t involved in it at all. Even if that is the tentative plan, parents are supporting her fully for the first 7 months of working. Surely there will be some discussion around how much things are costing and how much she is making in those 7 months and what a realistic plan will look like moving forward.
I know the plan because I sit next to the mom of this kid all day 5 days a week. She talks nonstop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like the mother is trying to help her daughter find a job to help pay the bills while the daughter is in college, heavy weekend hours, tips, no nights, low stress, ability to study during down time. Much better than working the counter at a McDonald’s.
Where did you get the idea that working in salons means no nights? Hair stylists have to work when other are not working to get them in for appts. And no stress? My sister is a hair stylist. It is stressful. If Larala doesn't get her hair perfect, she is gonna be pissed. And to the poster who claimed someone makes 300k they probably own the salon. A regular hair stylist does no make that much and it takes 2-3 years to build a clientele. You make NOTHING when you start out.
Up in the thread the OP stated the daughter graduated with academic honors and has an AP course.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all are missing the point that the teen has to live off and pay her bills on a meager hair stylist apprentice pay after 7 months of working there. The parents are setting her up for failure. She also does not want to be a hair stylist. Do you all want someone doing your hair who doesn't want to be doing it? Probably not.
We didn’t miss that. We see that this isn’t OP’s kid and not even OP’s friend. It’s a coworker and OP needs to stay out of it.
NP. I think the following things are true:
1) Being a hairstylist is a fine job
2) Forcing your adult child to become a hairstylist is not a choice I'd make
3) I spend zero time worrying about the bad parenting decisions of my coworkers
So you agree that this is bad parenting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all are missing the point that the teen has to live off and pay her bills on a meager hair stylist apprentice pay after 7 months of working there. The parents are setting her up for failure. She also does not want to be a hair stylist. Do you all want someone doing your hair who doesn't want to be doing it? Probably not.
We didn’t miss that. We see that this isn’t OP’s kid and not even OP’s friend. It’s a coworker and OP needs to stay out of it.
NP. I think the following things are true:
1) Being a hairstylist is a fine job
2) Forcing your adult child to become a hairstylist is not a choice I'd make
3) I spend zero time worrying about the bad parenting decisions of my coworkers
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all are missing the point that the teen has to live off and pay her bills on a meager hair stylist apprentice pay after 7 months of working there. The parents are setting her up for failure. She also does not want to be a hair stylist. Do you all want someone doing your hair who doesn't want to be doing it? Probably not.
We didn’t miss that. We see that this isn’t OP’s kid and not even OP’s friend. It’s a coworker and OP needs to stay out of it.
Anonymous wrote:You all are missing the point that the teen has to live off and pay her bills on a meager hair stylist apprentice pay after 7 months of working there. The parents are setting her up for failure. She also does not want to be a hair stylist. Do you all want someone doing your hair who doesn't want to be doing it? Probably not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all are missing the point that the teen has to live off and pay her bills on a meager hair stylist apprentice pay after 7 months of working there. The parents are setting her up for failure. She also does not want to be a hair stylist. Do you all want someone doing your hair who doesn't want to be doing it? Probably not.
OP doesn’t really have a clue what the plan is because she isn’t involved in it at all. Even if that is the tentative plan, parents are supporting her fully for the first 7 months of working. Surely there will be some discussion around how much things are costing and how much she is making in those 7 months and what a realistic plan will look like moving forward.
I know the plan because I sit next to the mom of this kid all day 5 days a week. She talks nonstop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all are missing the point that the teen has to live off and pay her bills on a meager hair stylist apprentice pay after 7 months of working there. The parents are setting her up for failure. She also does not want to be a hair stylist. Do you all want someone doing your hair who doesn't want to be doing it? Probably not.
OP doesn’t really have a clue what the plan is because she isn’t involved in it at all. Even if that is the tentative plan, parents are supporting her fully for the first 7 months of working. Surely there will be some discussion around how much things are costing and how much she is making in those 7 months and what a realistic plan will look like moving forward.
Anonymous wrote:You all are missing the point that the teen has to live off and pay her bills on a meager hair stylist apprentice pay after 7 months of working there. The parents are setting her up for failure. She also does not want to be a hair stylist. Do you all want someone doing your hair who doesn't want to be doing it? Probably not.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like the mother is trying to help her daughter find a job to help pay the bills while the daughter is in college, heavy weekend hours, tips, no nights, low stress, ability to study during down time. Much better than working the counter at a McDonald’s.
Anonymous wrote:It's a good career and I assume they are doing this because she didn't do well in school. Sounds like the parents are trying to give her a taste of real life so she starts self launching soon.