Anonymous wrote:When they can pay themselves (not being sarcastic).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all you saying, "when they can afford it," just know that your kid will go buy some crap and CVS and do tons of damage to their hair. I'd rather take her to the salon and have it done well.
My kid did this 😬 She certainly learned her lesson. Zero interest in coloring her hair ever again. Your natural shade is always going to be the most beautiful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD 12 has a very pretty hair color (auburn) and it’s pretty straight. Would you allow her to get highlights and a body wave/perm?
I am worried about opening Pandora’s box of expensive hair treatments.
Never
She can deal with those costs, damaged hair and roots when she’s working. Not me.
There are no roots if you do a partial highlight on your hair. The hair stylists treats your hair with special products that protect the hair from damage. At home hair treatments and the right shampoo and conditioner keep your hair in better shape than untreated hair. Where are you people from that you see all this damaged hair?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD 12 has a very pretty hair color (auburn) and it’s pretty straight. Would you allow her to get highlights and a body wave/perm?
I am worried about opening Pandora’s box of expensive hair treatments.
Never
She can deal with those costs, damaged hair and roots when she’s working. Not me.
Anonymous wrote:My DD 12 has a very pretty hair color (auburn) and it’s pretty straight. Would you allow her to get highlights and a body wave/perm?
I am worried about opening Pandora’s box of expensive hair treatments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all you saying, "when they can afford it," just know that your kid will go buy some crap and CVS and do tons of damage to their hair. I'd rather take her to the salon and have it done well.
My kid did this 😬 She certainly learned her lesson. Zero interest in coloring her hair ever again. Your natural shade is always going to be the most beautiful.
Anonymous wrote:For all you saying, "when they can afford it," just know that your kid will go buy some crap and CVS and do tons of damage to their hair. I'd rather take her to the salon and have it done well.
Anonymous wrote:For all you saying, "when they can afford it," just know that your kid will go buy some crap and CVS and do tons of damage to their hair. I'd rather take her to the salon and have it done well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all you saying, "when they can afford it," just know that your kid will go buy some crap and CVS and do tons of damage to their hair. I'd rather take her to the salon and have it done well.
Speaking only for myself, I would view that as a really good life lesson for her and will hopefully motivate her to work hard in school so she too can afford salon hair color when she’s an adult. Damaged hair will grow back but I don’t want my child growing up feeling like she’s entitled to expensive high-maintenance beauty routines.
+1. There was a mom on here last year lamenting paying for her daughter’s hair, nails, makeup, etc and she was soliciting advice on how to tell DD she was going to get cut off in college. As if somehow this made sense. If this is important to your child, I would encourage you to have her make a spreadsheet listing all of the extra beauty care she wants (not routine haircuts 3-6 months or shampoo) but makeup, mani/pedi, etc and costs so you can both see the yearly total and then figure out what is reasonable, what she will pay for, how she will pay for it, etc. I grew up with a lot of people who had zero financial discipline and financial awareness and that can lead to overconsumption and spending to keep up with others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all you saying, "when they can afford it," just know that your kid will go buy some crap and CVS and do tons of damage to their hair. I'd rather take her to the salon and have it done well.
Speaking only for myself, I would view that as a really good life lesson for her and will hopefully motivate her to work hard in school so she too can afford salon hair color when she’s an adult. Damaged hair will grow back but I don’t want my child growing up feeling like she’s entitled to expensive high-maintenance beauty routines.