Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:hell to the no
My kid would be:
She will return
All by herself
And she would take a Dave Ramsey course on the weekends
![]()
dramatic much
It doesn't sound like OP had a discussion with her DD about what's allowed and how to spend money. So I'd start there.
That's an interesting take.
How about the fact that this kid has zero money of her own and going into a store, automatically thinks $400 is a perfectly acceptable amount to spend. Sounds like she thinks it's Monopoly money.
It sounds like she was allowed to use the card for dinner, etc? The OP seemed to think spending $100 at Sephora would have been fine but spending $400 was way too much and I don’t see how the kid would have known that without being told. That’s a pretty fine line.
Seriously? Man, some of y'all have low LOW expectations of your kid's intelligence/common sense.
My daughter is two years younger than OP's daughter, and I will occasionally give her my credit card if she's going out with friends and the activity will require money (mostly bc I never have cash on me). Like last night she and her friends went to a HS soccer game and I gave her my CC with the direction that she was free to use it if she and her friends wanted to walk to get dinner afterwards...it did not even cross my mind to instruct her that by "dinner" I meant a $20 for pizza and a drink at &pizza or something...not a $100 three course meal at some sit down restaurant on Bethesda Row. Because common sense.
Anonymous wrote:Make that fool return then
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand when parents give their children access to their credit or debit cards and then get upset when they use them unwisely.
Right. I mean 16-year-olds are impulsive. And dumb. This is on OP.
Anonymous wrote:I'm wondering if there is an underlying insecurity that prompted this? Is she breaking out? Or does she feel less pretty than her friends? My daughter went through a period where she felt especially insecure about her looks and spent lots of money on skincare products - she said she wanted "that shiny, perfect, rich girl look." Ironically all of the K-beauty products made her skin so much worse.
So my advice is to talk it out rather than approach it punitively. Then come to an agreement about which products to return.
Anonymous wrote:Is your daughter an autist?
hilarious!Anonymous wrote:Importantly, did she get a bag or two?
Anonymous wrote:My kids have Apple Pay linked to parent cards. Many of their friends do too. I don’t think that’s the issue. The issue is that OP’s DD thought this meant carte Blanche spending for her. Apple Pay must be given with limitations.
Anonymous wrote:I'm wondering if there is an underlying insecurity that prompted this? Is she breaking out? Or does she feel less pretty than her friends? My daughter went through a period where she felt especially insecure about her looks and spent lots of money on skincare products - she said she wanted "that shiny, perfect, rich girl look." Ironically all of the K-beauty products made her skin so much worse.
So my advice is to talk it out rather than approach it punitively. Then come to an agreement about which products to return.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand when parents give their children access to their credit or debit cards and then get upset when they use them unwisely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also OP, I would really try to separate the “morality” of whether $400 is “too much” for skincare. If I wanted to, I would drop that much on skincare. I’ll probably spend more than that on lasers and Botox this fall. The language about what is “ridiculous” and what is “appropriate” and all of that imo is really unhelpful. What matters is the numbers. She needs to get a handle on her numbers and manage them how she wants. That means her whole personal financial picture, her goals (savings for a car? College? Anything like that on the horizon) and her income. Imo it’s fine if it’s an allowance from you and also fine if it includes a car, college spending money, whatever! The important thing is that you lay it all out and she has the knowledge to know how blowing $400 at Sephora is going to fit in her plan and her means.
Whether or not drunk elephant is “worth it” is really a separate conversation imo. Buying $20 of Suave is a problem if you don’t have $20 in the budget for it. Buying $600 eye cream might be fine if it’s in the budget.
There are virtually no circumstances under which $600 eye cream should be in the budget for a teenager.
Anonymous wrote:Also OP, I would really try to separate the “morality” of whether $400 is “too much” for skincare. If I wanted to, I would drop that much on skincare. I’ll probably spend more than that on lasers and Botox this fall. The language about what is “ridiculous” and what is “appropriate” and all of that imo is really unhelpful. What matters is the numbers. She needs to get a handle on her numbers and manage them how she wants. That means her whole personal financial picture, her goals (savings for a car? College? Anything like that on the horizon) and her income. Imo it’s fine if it’s an allowance from you and also fine if it includes a car, college spending money, whatever! The important thing is that you lay it all out and she has the knowledge to know how blowing $400 at Sephora is going to fit in her plan and her means.
Whether or not drunk elephant is “worth it” is really a separate conversation imo. Buying $20 of Suave is a problem if you don’t have $20 in the budget for it. Buying $600 eye cream might be fine if it’s in the budget.
Anonymous wrote:Have her work it off. Explain how much you’re paying her per hour and how many hours it would take to earn enough to pay for it.