And I’m sure when Elizabeth wants to do that and Elly says no, all the Elly haters will condemn her and say she’s ruining the kid’s life by insisting that life is ‘all about Elly’….
And maybe if every American/Candadian had listen to this message 20-30 years ago, we would not have the over-65% children born out of wedlock problem we have now….and so many other problems that stem from this, like people in their 20’s acting like teenagers, in their 30’s acting like they are in their 20’s,
When he was a teenager, my brother wanted to shave half his head and dye the other half green. Our barber threw down her scissors and said she refused to do something so out-of-style. And that was the end of that.
My parents saved a lot of aggravation by sending their kids to parochial schools with uniforms and a dress code. Mom didn’t have to tell my sisters they couldn’t wear their skirts too short, or my brothers they couldn’t grow their hair too long, the nuns did it for her. The dress codes were easier by the time I was in high school. I don’t think they allowed piercing other than ears, but they gave up trying to get the guys to cut their hair short or telling them only girls could have earrings. Although I’m pretty sure purple, pink or green hair was still banned.
Templo S.U.D. over 8 years ago
Oh, the horrors.
Argythree over 8 years ago
And I’m sure when Elizabeth wants to do that and Elly says no, all the Elly haters will condemn her and say she’s ruining the kid’s life by insisting that life is ‘all about Elly’….
alviebird over 8 years ago
Well, there you go. That’s why not.
Last Rose Of Summer Premium Member over 8 years ago
Where can you even buy nylons anymore?
legaleagle48 over 8 years ago
You just HAD to ask, didn’t you, Elly?
Can't Sleep over 8 years ago
But Lizzie – that was for St. Patrick’s Day.
tripwire45 over 8 years ago
What’s wrong with some parents?
kaystari Premium Member over 8 years ago
And maybe if every American/Candadian had listen to this message 20-30 years ago, we would not have the over-65% children born out of wedlock problem we have now….and so many other problems that stem from this, like people in their 20’s acting like teenagers, in their 30’s acting like they are in their 20’s,
NeedaChuckle Premium Member over 8 years ago
There was a woman in my office who dyed her hair black for Halloween. Then she found out it was not a temporary dye. Took months before it grew out.
summerdog86 over 8 years ago
What ever happened to, “I’m your mother and I say no, live with it.”
mourdac Premium Member over 8 years ago
Obviously before the age of tats and piercings.
chaosinabox over 8 years ago
When he was a teenager, my brother wanted to shave half his head and dye the other half green. Our barber threw down her scissors and said she refused to do something so out-of-style. And that was the end of that.
grammy6 over 8 years ago
I think Elly should get her daughter a tutor. That way she won’t have to compete with that girl.
hippogriff over 8 years ago
Jo ClearWe tried that with our daughter, age four. She considered it for a moment, and decided she would.
Asharah over 8 years ago
My parents saved a lot of aggravation by sending their kids to parochial schools with uniforms and a dress code. Mom didn’t have to tell my sisters they couldn’t wear their skirts too short, or my brothers they couldn’t grow their hair too long, the nuns did it for her. The dress codes were easier by the time I was in high school. I don’t think they allowed piercing other than ears, but they gave up trying to get the guys to cut their hair short or telling them only girls could have earrings. Although I’m pretty sure purple, pink or green hair was still banned.
amaryllis2 Premium Member over 8 years ago
Hair is the most harmless way for a teenager to rebel. Let them enjoy it. They’ll get over it—just like you did.
alviebird over 8 years ago