ITA
And, to your question, bolded above, even though it may have been rhetorical....
I think the answer is obvious. There is no true and valid reason to draw lines in the sand and control other people when the issue does not affect one personally at all. It is control and overinvolvement.
Hey, let's let our kids do whatever they want, because if we, as their
parent(s) give an opinion, say, "No", or disagree with something they want to do, it means we are control freaks. Give me a break.
In my world, parents are suppose to be in charge, not the kids. That doesn't mean that there shouldn't be room for discussions and compromises, though. But, in the end, the parent should have the final say. When that child turns 18 and moves out, they can make their own decisions.
If parents let their kids make all the decisions regarding themselves, do you realize what kind of chaos this world would be in? Parents aren't just responsible for making decisons for their kids that affect other people, but decisions that affect that child, too.
As for the arm hair removal: I tried using chemicals to remove my leg hair once and I got the worst rash ever. I also tried waxing a few years later, and ended up with blisters and another terrible rash (yes, I found out just how sensitive my skin really is).
The OP
was under the impression that if her dd shaved her arm hair, it would grow back darker, and thick and stubbly. Not to mention, she posted a recent picture of her dd's arm, and you can hardly see any hair at all. Maybe she didn't think it was necessary because of that, too? So, I don't think it was a case of her being a control freak over this. Maybe if her dd's hair WAS really dark and hairy, and she knew that kids were making fun of her, and she knew that the hair wouldn't grow back darker and stubbly (ie look worse than before); and that her dd wouldn't have to continue to shave/remove the arm hair every few weeks for the rest of her life because of doing it once, maybe she would have felt differently.
Maybe she was thinking she was doing her daughter a favor, with all good intentions, by not letting her shave the hair off.
The fact remains, she told her dd, "No", and she did it anyway. Using a chemical instead of a razor was a way of manipulating the situation to get what she wants. Does anyone (I'm aging myself here, lol) remember the Brady Bunch episode where Greg was grounded from using the car? I think he drove another car, then told his parent's, "you didn't say I couldn't drive
ANY OTHER car...you said I couldn't drive
OUR car". Something like that, but same situation.
Some of the opionions I read on here remind me of the TV shows, "Trading Spouses" and "Wife Swap".