Anonymous wrote:20 years from now: my daughter never lets me see my grandkids, won't let me host holidays, never wants to vacation with me.
Anonymous wrote:My kid aesthetic is grunge so they would probably be pretty happy if I tell them they look like a homeless person (which they often do).
Anonymous wrote:20 years from now: my daughter never lets me see my grandkids, won't let me host holidays, never wants to vacation with me.
Don't worry, she'll be old too and she just gave her kids a great lesson in how to treat elderly.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. How many of you would judge OP if you saw her with her daughter looking like this in the store? Be honest. Moms worry about their kids' appearances because other moms judge ruthlessly.
Literally not at all. I was a goth teen and wore some outrageous stuff at that age. A teen in glasses with frizzy bedhead wouldn’t even be on my radar. Even a teen in literal pajamas doesn’t make me bat an eye.
+1. I also would not judge an adult woman with bedhead and glasses at the store. I don't care how other people present themselves.
If I was in a store and heard a woman tell her daughter that she "looked homeless" I'd judge the heck out of her, though. And I'm glad to live in a time when people get judged more for being unkind to their children than for the way their children look. It's not 1955. Thank goodness.
LOL and I would be high fiving the mom and laughingly rolling my eyes with her at the getup of the kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. How many of you would judge OP if you saw her with her daughter looking like this in the store? Be honest. Moms worry about their kids' appearances because other moms judge ruthlessly.
Literally not at all. I was a goth teen and wore some outrageous stuff at that age. A teen in glasses with frizzy bedhead wouldn’t even be on my radar. Even a teen in literal pajamas doesn’t make me bat an eye.
+1. I also would not judge an adult woman with bedhead and glasses at the store. I don't care how other people present themselves.
If I was in a store and heard a woman tell her daughter that she "looked homeless" I'd judge the heck out of her, though. And I'm glad to live in a time when people get judged more for being unkind to their children than for the way their children look. It's not 1955. Thank goodness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. How many of you would judge OP if you saw her with her daughter looking like this in the store? Be honest. Moms worry about their kids' appearances because other moms judge ruthlessly.
Literally not at all. I was a goth teen and wore some outrageous stuff at that age. A teen in glasses with frizzy bedhead wouldn’t even be on my radar. Even a teen in literal pajamas doesn’t make me bat an eye.
Anonymous wrote:NP. How many of you would judge OP if you saw her with her daughter looking like this in the store? Be honest. Moms worry about their kids' appearances because other moms judge ruthlessly.