Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The “sophisticated” girl has older siblings.
Yep. The ones causing problems in ES are always the ones with middle school or teenaged siblings.
Anonymous wrote:I am a strict mom but have some different perspective on some of this stuff. Honestly, I think we are at the same school as OP.
My girls aren’t allowed crop tops, but I have allowed cropped sweatshirts (as a birthday gift from Lulu) - and they can wear full length shirts underneath. I’m not particularly panicked about Lulu or Sephora. They both have extensive chores and receive an allowance for them - and they pay for a lot of this stuff themselves (also with money they get for birthdays or Xmas from extended family). They are responsible and have bank accounts where they save their money. Sephora buying is mostly lip gloss, sol de janiero sprays (slight step up from bath and body works I guess but ugh!) and skincare products like bubble that are ok for kid skin.
Both of my girls started dance in pre school and had to wear makeup for recitals - I’ve explained what I absolutely do not want to see (raccoon eyes, eye liner, etc) - so if they want to swipe some blush and lip gloss on before school I just don’t think it’s a big deal.
My older DD has a phone in sixth - but I’ve chosen to lock it down and have monitoring software all over it. All text messages come to my phone as well. Screen time is 90 mins a day - no social media- but she is allowed to text and FaceTime friends. Phone goes dead at 9 pm and doesn’t re open until 7 am. For my kids, handing them a phone in eighth and allowing them to go wild with it wouldn’t work - so we are gradually easing into things while they show me they are mature enough to handle it. With both, I’ve allowed YouTube this year - and I can track their searches and videos on monitoring software - I won’t allow tik tok or instagram etc probably until early eighth or right before high school. I also like the phone for safety reasons - the Apple Watch signal was never as reliable as I liked and with things like sleep overs, school dances, and more freedom I like that they can contact me.
I do think fitting in is important at this age - but it can be done with some tweaks that keep them safe and also allow them to learn the skills they’ll need eventually in high school to manage all of this.
Honestly the biggest issues I see are with kids wearing Apple Watches or who have iPads - those kids are the one who’s parents don’t seem to be monitoring and are swearing or sending inappropriate things - or they’ve figured out how to out discord or tik tok on their laptops/chrome books. I am floored by a lot of the stuff I see but I think it’s very naive parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Mental health -- esp for girls -- is basically linear with respect to age of first smartphone. Girls who got their first smartphone at 18 have better mental health than girls who got their first smartphone at 16, who have better mental health than girls who got their first smartphone at 14...
Anonymous wrote:The “sophisticated” girl has older siblings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there really 4th graders wearing makeup? No, you are not crazy for not wanting your kid to wear makeup or expose her midriff at school. We don't even own an iPad in my house and life is all the better for it.
OP and yes, there are some who wear stuff beyond lip gloss in 4th and 5th. I can’t imagine putting on eyeliner because I can’t even do it fast on me, let alone her, in the mornings. It’s not everyone at all, but it’s some, and same for the belly tops in 4th. It’s cute but I guess I don’t like it for the age, not at the pool or whatever. DD has an iPad and I let her play on it, but put some limits and that works for us so far. No older sibling, so no phone, but we had kids in her class with older model iPhones in 2nd, more in 3rd, even more this year. The principal e-mails the parents every year telling us to avoid getting them phones for as long as possible, but having them seems somewhat common.
Where do you live? We live in Mclean, there is a lot of wealth here, and no child has a phone in 2nd and 3rd grade. You are either lying or are in a private school.
OP and no, I am not lying. I don’t live in McLean, and did not claim I did.
Anonymous wrote:Mental health -- esp for girls -- is basically linear with respect to age of first smartphone. Girls who got their first smartphone at 18 have better mental health than girls who got their first smartphone at 16, who have better mental health than girls who got their first smartphone at 14...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 4th grader. I am not into the crop top look either, but DD begs to wear them and I’m just not going to die on that hill.
Don’t you remember when you were young and your parents forbade you to wear something, so you just brought it to school and changed there? I’m just skipping that charade. Banning stuff just increases their allure.
I draw the line at:
hair dyeing/highlighting.
Multiple piercings
OP and her friend who is the most adventurous with this stuff has salon bleached hair and all that. I am not “sexualizing” this girl; she and her mom tease me for not taking DD in for hair dye or permitting the makeup or belly shirts; the girl claims she is “bisexual” and maybe she is. DD hasn’t expressed any identity-defining sexuality stuff ever to us but to be fair, she seems quite far from her first period and puberty, small for her age and not into crushes at this point. She doesn’t ask for clothes and has never changed at school or anything. I posted because this mother and another keep trying to needle me over this sh!t and I feel pretty defensive and fed up at this point. I totally get that curiosity and appropriateness over time will change things, but I don’t think I’m an oppressor since DD doesn’t ask and has friends who are absolutely not into cool clothes or devices on any level, so I think it’s okay. I got flamed initially and I don’t think I’m being a jerk, I think I’m long-term acquaintances with 2 particular moms who don’t like that DD and I are not exactly like them at this stage, even if DD is further away from those big physical and emotional upheavals than their DDs at this stage. I hate the comments I get periodically but we are all mothers to only girls so I know my context is way more limited than that of many parents here.
Anonymous wrote:Something’s gone really wrong when 10 year olds are announcing their bisexuality.
Anonymous wrote:Stay strong OP! I have a fourth grader too and Sephora, TikTok, etc. are definitely a thing. It seems to be kids whose parents are desperate for their kid to fit in. I’ve said no to a phone and watch and will hold firm on that for as long as I can. If I have my way she will never be on TikTok. We all know it gives girls body image issues and ideas about suicide and cutting so it is beyond me why any parent with 1/2 a brain would allow this and I have zero respect for parents who do.