Anonymous wrote:My kids all wear deodorant and perfume or cologne. They are in 5th and 2nd grades. Showering daily and smelling good are important. I buy very nice perfume or cologne for the kids and I buy them the same deodorant my husband and I use. I can't stand the idea of a dirty or smelly child.
Anonymous wrote:My DD is 9, and in 4th grade.
She came home yesterday telling me she needs to start wearing deodorant. I asked why. "The teacher told us to.". She told the whole class, did not single out my child.
I realize it's getting hot and the kids are getting sweaty at recess. But deodorant on a NINE year old???? My child is not in puberty yet. She doesn't smell. I buried my face in her arm pit to check, no smell.
I think I'd rather delay my child using deodorant as long as possible because I've heard that they can be linked to breast cancer. She'll have enough years ahead of her of exposure to deodorant, she doens't need to start at NINE.
Am I way off base here? Is it normal for a 4th grade teacher to give a blanket directive to a bunch of nine year olds to start using deodorant???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP just curious what you are thinking about the situation now that you've had all this input?
I will not put deodorant on my child until she needs it. But I can understand if there are a few kids who need it and the teacher can't say anything to them directly. Then it'd be a different post on DCUM I'm sure! "Teacher singled my kid out and said s/he needs deodorant".
Anonymous wrote:OP just curious what you are thinking about the situation now that you've had all this input?

Anonymous wrote:My kids all wear deodorant and perfume or cologne. They are in 5th and 2nd grades. Showering daily and smelling good are important. I buy very nice perfume or cologne for the kids and I buy them the same deodorant my husband and I use. I can't stand the idea of a dirty or smelly child.
Anonymous wrote:My kids all wear deodorant and perfume or cologne. They are in 5th and 2nd grades. Showering daily and smelling good are important. I buy very nice perfume or cologne for the kids and I buy them the same deodorant my husband and I use. I can't stand the idea of a dirty or smelly child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Kids with poor diets don't smell very good either. Ugh, that fried food smell just seeps out of the pores (poors?)
Did you intend the double-entendre?![]()
, though.