Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not about being seen in what you actually sleep in. Everybody should at least own a set or two of pajama bottoms to keep in the drawer for when needed. All three of ours sleep naked (DD17, DS15, DS12) but have many sets of pjs for loungewear around the house.
Wow, all three and even the girl? I have one who does and says his friends do too. What pray-tell is with this generation’s attraction to sleeping bareass naked?
?Anonymous wrote:Too cold for this nonsense
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah… I feel like every day is pajama day now.
There's truth in this
OP, your kid doesn't have to wear pajamas. He can say he sleeps in his clothes. Nobody cares.
My kids stopped participating in pajama day when they finished at daycare.
He doesn’t even need to say anything. If a peer were to press him for what he wears to bed (which is kind of getting too personal anyway), he should just tell the truth with confidence. Honestly, I would think it more unusual for males that age and older to prefer full formal pajama sets to just t-shirt and shorts, underwear only, or even totally nude. To each his own, which is easier said than done at that age, I suppose.
Anonymous wrote:Ive always found pajama day odd, even in preschool my sons were like, why are people in their pajamas at school. Its ok to just skip it.
Anonymous wrote:Every day is basically PJ day. No, my kid does not wear what she actually slept in to school.
It's the look in the pic a PP posted.
When I tell my kids to dress up for something, they put on jeans. I tell them jeans is not considered dressed up and that it is too casual and they look at me like I have two heads.
Anonymous wrote:The phenomenon of kids wearing pjs to school on a regular basis is mostly a product of post-COVID lockdown. Back when pajama days started to become popular, kids wore more normal day clothes like jeans, sweaters, skirts, etc. So, OP, originally it really was a unique day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not about being seen in what you actually sleep in. Everybody should at least own a set or two of pajama bottoms to keep in the drawer for when needed. All three of ours sleep naked (DD17, DS15, DS12) but have many sets of pjs for loungewear around the house.
Wow, all three and even the girl? I have one who does and says his friends do too. What pray-tell is with this generation’s attraction to sleeping bareass naked?[/quo
I was wondering the same thing but I guess comfort and a good night's sleep are the most important things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah… I feel like every day is pajama day now.
There's truth in this
OP, your kid doesn't have to wear pajamas. He can say he sleeps in his clothes. Nobody cares.
My kids stopped participating in pajama day when they finished at daycare.
He doesn’t even need to say anything. If a peer were to press him for what he wears to bed (which is kind of getting too personal anyway), he should just tell the truth with confidence. Honestly, I would think it more unusual for males that age and older to prefer full formal pajama sets to just t-shirt and shorts, underwear only, or even totally nude. To each his own, which is easier said than done at that age, I suppose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not about being seen in what you actually sleep in. Everybody should at least own a set or two of pajama bottoms to keep in the drawer for when needed. All three of ours sleep naked (DD17, DS15, DS12) but have many sets of pjs for loungewear around the house.
Wow, all three and even the girl? I have one who does and says his friends do too. What pray-tell is with this generation’s attraction to sleeping bareass naked?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not about being seen in what you actually sleep in. Everybody should at least own a set or two of pajama bottoms to keep in the drawer for when needed. All three of ours sleep naked (DD17, DS15, DS12) but have many sets of pjs for loungewear around the house.
Wow, all three and even the girl? I have one who does and says his friends do too. What pray-tell is with this generation’s attraction to sleeping bareass naked?
Anonymous wrote:It’s not about being seen in what you actually sleep in. Everybody should at least own a set or two of pajama bottoms to keep in the drawer for when needed. All three of ours sleep naked (DD17, DS15, DS12) but have many sets of pjs for loungewear around the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah… I feel like every day is pajama day now.
There's truth in this
OP, your kid doesn't have to wear pajamas. He can say he sleeps in his clothes. Nobody cares.
My kids stopped participating in pajama day when they finished at daycare.
He doesn’t even need to say anything. If a peer were to press him for what he wears to bed (which is kind of getting too personal anyway), he should just tell the truth with confidence. Honestly, I would think it more unusual for males that age and older to prefer full formal pajama sets to just t-shirt and shorts, underwear only, or even totally nude. To each his own, which is easier said than done at that age, I suppose.
Yeah both my teen sons (14 and 16) are nude sleepers and it's not something they are embarrassed about, not that they walk around telling everyone, but it's not some big secret either.