bluesaturn
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2007
- Messages
- 1,539
Along these lines - I buy soap, shampoo etc. for the house. My 12 year old daughter is starting to get more particular about some of these items - she wants products that are made for frizzy or dry hair - which often cost a lot more that the stuff I have been buying. How do you decide which products you are willing to buy and how much you are willing to spend? She does get a weekly allowance and she is paying for texting on her phone out of her allowance because she is the only one in the family to use texting.
Is her hair frizzy? I would be somewhat lenient about things like hair and skin during those early teen years. The fact is, their hair and skin are changing. They can't use the same stuff they used as kids, and sometimes it takes awhile to figure out what works with their skin. And what works might suddenly change too. I think that's part of the "gimmes" in the toiletry aisles for teens, they are trying to figure out how to deal with their acne, dry skin, frizzy hair, etc.
To head off the trying 17 different shampoos to find the one that works, you could ask a stylist you trust what kind of drugstore products would work with your daughter's hair. Honestly even the salon products aren't that bad of a deal. They come in huge bottles that last forever (for me), and they frequently go on sale at Ulta.