51 answers

Do You Think It Is Wrong to Dye Children's Hair?

A question earlier got me wondering, a few of the comments make me very curious as to others opinions. I was raised with a strict no dye policy, at age 12 i started dying my hair secretly. Ive loved dying it ever since. I decided recently to give my 7 year old daughter, thin blond highlights, it looks great on her! I will continue to work with current styles and let my daughter have this kind of treat now and again. After all how is it so different from ear peircings & haircuts. Ear peircings are permanent!. please no bashing here on either side i just wanted a general poll

** i dont mind differing opinions, im happy to see so far people not wanting to offend me,thats awesome. It started out that it was halloween and i bought a hair dye that claimed to be not permanent, i gave her highlights with it and it never washed out, i just kept it going. At first i felt the need to explain to everyone what happened , but they had just assumed it was the sun that did it because its so slight.****edited again*lol, i dye my hair, so retouching her little cenimeter strands is no biggie, and its mother -daughter time. oh also i dont use anything toxic, we use naturtint, no fumes. but even with typical hair dye, highlights are so slight i cant imagine them having that profound a smell.

Thanks again for your anwers this question blew up FAST!

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Well what i am mostly seeing is a "no". I figured as much, and it doesnt bother me. I assume That this taboo will soon be seen as not. It used to be bad to let girls wear pants and cut their hair. No one ever used to even think about piercing their babies ears. I do hold the the opinion that perming and blow drying and straitening would do much more damage than the highlights im talking about. Most people that disagreed with me were quite respectful. Id like to respond to the small amount that irked me a bit. No, i did not think my daughter needed it to be pretty, she wanted to go all blond for halloween, i refused but chose to let her get semi permanent streaks that lasted longer than we planned. I am not sending her the message that shes not good enough, she has high self esteem and we both view our hair as a mere accessory (its not who we are) and the way she has her hair does not make her look older like make up would, it looks like a tween who spent a little time at the beach. I would not let her wear makeup, mini skirts, or pants with writing on the butt. Highlights does not a woman make. But thanks for your concern.

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i knew a girl who's daughter had pink hair until she was in like, 2nd grade. Let them express themselves if they want.

3 moms found this helpful

I always have thought that my 5 year old would look so cool with pink hair. It would perfectly suit her coloring, and it is her favorite color.

She's not interested. Sigh. I guess she didn't get her mom's rebellious streak. I'm hoping that works in my favor when she's in HS.

3 moms found this helpful

No, I would not allow it. When my daughters are older, say at least 18 then it will be their decision. I would prefer to have them want a "pink" extension put into their hair. I saw my hairdresser do this for a little girl whose mom originally wanted her to highlight it pink, but she talked the mom out of it.

3 moms found this helpful

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Wow...just wow. Children have the most beautiful God given hair with gorgeous natural highlights. Not sure why ANYONE would want to mess with that. And not sure why anyone would want to send the message to their child that their hair SHOULD be messed with. Sad.

8 moms found this helpful

I guess I just feel like people want to make their kids little adults far too early. It seems to happen much more with girls than boys, and I think it's sad. Would it even occur to you to dye a son's hair? I also think it can have detrimental long-term effects. I don't get parents who think it's cute for their little girls to wear high heels, suggestive sayings on t-shirts, clothing that looks like something a 21 year old would wear to a nightclub, etc. To me -dying hair goes with that. I know ear-piercing has some cultural ties with some groups, but I think kids should be kids until they hit puberty. As far s haircuts -that's often for ease and most haircuts don't give a child a grown-up appearance.

Childhood is a very short time compared to the rest of our lives. I worry about what kind of message it sends to really young girls -you're not good enough or pretty enough the way you are -you need some "help" to look better. Your hair is okay, but it will look so much better with highlights or a different color all-together! Sure -maybe that's true, but I think she should wait until high school to find out. I don't even think such matters should enter into the head of a 7 or 8 year old girl.

8 moms found this helpful

funny that most respondents are assuming girls!
i let my boys do wacky things to their hair (mohawks before everybody had 'em, manic panic semi-permanent colors) from about 8 or so on. we all thought it was fun. i spent $80 for my elder to get his done a gorgeous deep blue for his homeschool prom. he looked amazing.
both my kids have beautiful hair, but they like to fardle about with it from time to time. i had a much harder time with my older boy's tatt when he turned 18. hair didn't faze me a bit.
:) khairete
S.

7 moms found this helpful

I think the issue is teaching your daughter that her physical appearance is not the most important thing. I think we have to be careful of the values we are teaching our girls. I wouldn't dye her hair OR buy her expensive designer clothes etc at that age because I would want to teach her that her personality and academics etc etc are more important. If she was a teen and begging me I might give in but I would hold off on this stuff as long as possible to try to teach her the value of just being herself. With all the woman getting plastic surgery and the teens girls with anorexia I would be afraid of sending the wrong message - that she isn't beautiful enough the way she is.

7 moms found this helpful

For my daughters 10th b'day my mom took her to the salon and had several streaks of pink put in the front of her hair. It looked AWESOME.

Here is what the stylist did - yes, they do have to bleach the strands. But, she started out not at the scalp, but down just a tiny bit so the bleach and the dye never touched her scalp (roots show quicker on dark hair, but you're going 'punk' anyway, so it doesn't matter). Then she did a semi-permanent gloss, which lasts about 10 shampoos / 2 weeks and fades over each wash. She gave my daughter a kit of a couple colors so that she could 'experiment'.

Here is what I told my daughter:
pink hair is OK self-expression. Drugs and sex are NOT. it's kind of like a mantra in our house.
She also knows that if we have to go somewhere that pink hair is not acceptable, she would have to style it so the pink doesn't show (although we haven't had any come up).

To me, her hair is an 'accessory' and she can style it however she wants. We did have the conversation that she will get 'looked at' and people will make decisions about you based on the fact that you have done non-traditional things with your hair.

in a sense my feeling is this.....
Dye your hair, rip your leggings, draw designs on your old worn-out non-school jeans, wear 70000000000 silly bands. Be who you are.
Speak respectfully, act responsibly, pick up after yourself (and others if they can't or won't). Try new foods, practice piano so that you can be proud of your accomplishments, study and try to learn all you can because others can't or won't. Clean your fish tank every week because your fish depends on you to live.
Don't get a tatoo until you are old enough to know if you want that for the rest of your life. don't kiss boys unless you know neither of you is kissing anyone else, choose your friends well enough that they won't get you into trouble with their choices and be strong enough to tell them you won't go along with everything they do.

hair color? DON'T CARE.

7 moms found this helpful

Yes I do think it is wrong. Who knows what the chemicals are doing to them.

6 moms found this helpful

I won't bash but just to answer your poll- I will say I wouldn't allow for my daughter to dye her hair. I agree it is probably no different than ear pericing but we are not allowing that until she is older either. This question did make me think about why I woudn't allow it and I think one of the main reasons is that the dye is damaging and I would like her hair to stay in it's natural healthy state for a long as possible. I stopped dying my hair 5 years ago and I'm so glad I did- it's so much healthier. I also think that dying her hair would give her an older look that I just don't think she needs to have. All that being said- this was just a poll and I'm not saying you are wrong.

6 moms found this helpful

Well, my opinion is that I would never do it for my 7 year-old. I'm not going to go so far as to say it is "wrong" but I would worry about the message you are sending to an impressionable little girl about not being okay (not being pretty enough etc) just the way she is. I think that girls are bombarded with that message from society starting at an incredibly young age and I wouldn't want my daughter to think that I, as her mother, agreed with it. I would want to raise a daughter who is comfortable in her own skin, and who doesn't feel like she needs makeup, highlights, jewelry, whatever to be beautiful. I'm not saying that isn't possible if you allow your daughter to highlight her hair, I'm just saying I probably wouldn't for the reasons I've stated. Just my opinion.

5 moms found this helpful

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