44 answers

6 Year Old Daughter Wants to Wear Her Hair the Way She Wants

This probably seems trivial but I am looking at the whole picture ahead and want to get some advice now. My daughter has decided she no longer wants to wear headbands and bows but instead pull her right side of her hair up in a pony tail. Its hard to describe as she has all one length hair and she takes the one side and instead of pulling it back and putting the rubber band in she pulls it forward. Her small pony tail is in the middle of her head pretty much dangling straight down the front of her face. It looks funny, awful and somewhat unkept. She goes to a Catholic school and is expected to look presentable. It is not something that would cause anyone at the school to correct her especially since she is 6. Just embarassing to me. I tried to make her change it by doing it myself and trying to do it a little like she likes it without it looking so awful. She slides the band up when she is done to make it tighter and all the hairs stick out. After I finished with my version she started crying saying I took away her happiness. I felt like I broke her spirit it was awful so I took it out and let her do it. Then I was upset with myself wondering if I did the right thing. I think part of it is she wants to be independent which I dont want to discourage but at the same time I dont want a 6 year old to be too independent. Sometimes she is a very contrary child (like I was) and just wants to see how far she can control a situation. At this point it is trivial but I am afraid if I dont put my foot down now as a parent if in 5 years she wants to dress awful or wear green hair I will have already established a pattern. My husband thinks I am too soft and should just do her hair and forget it. He said she is a child and a child should not be making her own decisions and telling me how she wants it. I would love some advice as I was one of those people when I see a young person looking awful I would think why aren't those parents doing something but I see now how hard it is.

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thank you all so much for the advice. It is interesting how the advice varied exactly like
I was waivering to both sides. I think with all this advice I have been able to come up with a good decision that will work well with my daughter. I appreciate everyone taking the time out from their busy days to help me.
M.

Featured Answers

This is her way of expressing herself. I would let it go and allow her to do her own hair. It's one less thing you have to worry about when you're getting her ready for the day! It may bother you now, but that will wear off. Just brush it off and remember, it's just hair!!!!!

How about letting her "style" her hair on weekends and you do it for school. I would simply explain that the school has rules even about hair but that you would love to see her own hairstyles on weekends. Hair battles are hard. All 3 of my kids (5, 9, 11) have their own ideas about how they like their hair, none of which I particularly like. Fortunately, the stages don't generally last long.

If her hair is clean and not knotted, don't sweat the small stuff. Believe me, there are bigger things coming!

More Answers

I am sorry if this sounds harsh, not my intent. As a mother of 4(3 of them girls, one a boy with long hair) I know how frustrating this can be!
I finally learned that you really just have to RELAX! We must learn to pick and choose our battles, and this one is SOO not worth it! In a couple of years, she will be starting to experience mood swings, prepubscent, and she needs to know now, before that gets in the way, that you are ok with her making some decisions for herself. Let her find her own style, a sense of independence, with her hair, etc. Are you going to be completely controlling on clothes, etc when she is a teen? Start learning to let go now...set boundaries and overlook the rest! For example, my girls dresses/skirts must be below the knee...when they get one that isn't they wear it over leggings. I also don't allow shirts to go below the collar bone, if they do, they wear a tank top or something under it. I don't think it looks good half of the time, but they like it and it keeps them in bounds, so whatever! Save the battles for things that are FAR more important!

2 moms found this helpful

Hi M., I understand your feelings well. My daughter is strong willed and independent. It has not been easy and I have gotten frustrated many times. However, I have learned that part of the problem was in how I was viewing my daughter. I've learned to look as her personality as a good thing - she's spirited and she will go far in life. That doesn't mean I give in to her "demands." It just means that I set a roadmap of what I view as crucial to her learning respect of authority and I work on those things with her. I give her freedom in other areas because freedom is important to her personality. She respects me, she is polite, she respects other people, she respects hers and others' property, she is kind and generous. But when it comes to her "things," I let her pick out her clothes from a stack of clothes I choose, I let her decide how she wants to do her hair, and I let her be a little independent because it makes her thrive. Children who act out as teenagers are usually acting out over an emotional turmoil they are experiencing. Watch for that and be there for her when she needs you and you should be ok. I hope this helps! Only you know your daughter and whether she's being defiant or only trying to be herself!

2 moms found this helpful

My girl is 6 too. I think this is something to give in on. It isn't hurting her or anyone else and next week she will want something different. My mother always enforced her will on me for things such as this as well as everything else. It has impacted me, my confidence and ultimately my relationshiop with her. I think this is a case of picking your battles. You might also ask her where she got the idea for the style. It may be she thinks she is doing it like someone elses but if you show her how it is different, maybe she will adjust it. Then you will both be happy.

1 mom found this helpful

Don't sweat the samll stuff...Honestly...I would save the No's for really big things this way it establishes some boundaries. Don't ever squash her freedom of expression unless you know for sure it puts her into danger....if you tell her NO for these kinds of things now...then I can guaruntee she will be the teenager that rebels...I've personally seen it in friends of mine, who when got the opportunity, went wild in college, because they didn't know how to think for themselves. I taught for ten years and found that one of the most important lessons is that your children will teach you not the other way around. Besides...my mother always made comments about how i looked and dressed and it can give one quite a complex....let her have her happy place! Let her be her or she might have trouble later figuring that out!

1 mom found this helpful

Pick your battles. I have two daughters, 14 and 10 now, and I have no input into my 14 year old's fashion anymore. I say let her wear her hair how she wants to. In a few years, you will look back on this time and laugh. If the school has a problem, then together (you and the school) can explain to her how to fix the problem and compromise with her, when not in school she can wear her hair how she wants to. I work in a preschool and so many parents worry that their kids don't match, clothes are on backwards etc. I say, who cares. The kids got dressed by themselves. They have a great sense of accomplishment and in my humble opinion, there is nothing better than that. I truly believe that if the kids are clean and their clothes are clean and they are safe, that is all that matters. Who cares what others think???? If your child is a good child, that should be what matters, not what she looks like! I believe if more parents took that road (it is inside that counts, not outside), the world would be a better place. Your daughter will eventually grow out of this phase and move on to other phases. By supporting her, you will keep the lines of communication open, thus allowing you to carefully express your opinion.

I wish there was a magic solution to parenting!! It would be so much easier. Good luck and don't worry, this too shall pass.

1 mom found this helpful

If you think about it, there is not much in a six year olds life that she can control. If she wants to do her own hair and it makes her happy, why not who cares what other people think. I did the same thing to my mom when I was 6 and she finally gave in and let me, I am sure my hair looked awful at first, but I was so proud and soon enough I had learned how to french braid, and do twists and everything else just by doing it myself at 6. Why not give her a little independence and encourage her to be her own person rather than to look like everyone else? You could also set aside certain days that she is/is not allowed to do her hair to compromise. Just my thoughts, good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

I have a 5 yo who has always been very opinionated as to what she wears and how she does her hair and it does not always look presentable, to US. Her father used to have fights with her about it, but it just made it worse. Now if it is seasonably appropriate and it won't get her kicked out of school, we let her make her own choice and make her understand that it may not be accepted by all she runs into that day. Sometimes her creations make us cringe, but amazingly her friends think she looks wonderful and her teachers have seen it all. I just make sure they know that she dressed herself that morning and picked her outfit out (or hairstyle) special so they know who is responsible. The more you fight this ponytail thing the more she will want to do it. So instead of sweating the small stuff, just let her do her thing if it is reasonable. Trust me, eventually her friends will tell her if it is not in style and she will stop. Save the fight for the later battles of makeup, tattoos and revealing clothing.

1 mom found this helpful

I am surprised and a little saddened at how many people are saying that a child should not be making decisions! She is 6 for heaven's sake and has the mental capacity to make SOME of her own decisions. My daughter is 2 and she is allowed to make certain decisions but it is not a free for all. For instance, I do not ask what she wants for breakfast. I ask, do you want waffles or cereal? If a child is never allowed to make decisions, they will never learn how and will have a very difficult time deciding right from wrong, which college to attend, who to be friends with, etc. I agree that households need rules but unless there was already a how-to-wear-your-hair rule then it's going to be harder to implement. I think a bit of a compromise is acceptable. I would also suggest doing your best to not consider other people's view or opinion of your daughter or parenting style. Who cares what other people think?

1 mom found this helpful

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