Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to not want DD(14) to have this T-Shirt

431 replies

SqueamishMum · 01/09/2020 11:56

Need a sanity check here (have name-changed so this isn't linked to other threads as I may be identifiable here)

A couple of weeks ago, DD(14) and I went to a thrift shop. I had given her some money to spend. She came up to me holding a T-Shirt balled up in her hands so I couldn't see the design, saying she was going to buy it.

Once she had bought it, she said to me "mum, you're not going to like this" and showed me the design on the T-Shirt. Basically it is a cartoon of someone getting their arm shredded in a blender with their eyes popping out. It is quite stylised and cartoony, but it is, in my opinion, gory (lots of cartoon blood).

I was unimpressed and said to her that I wasn't happy with her having it. She then said to me "oh well, too late to return it now" and swanned out of the shop.

I was pretty angry at her attitude and called her back. I went up to the counter with her and said she was to return it. The young woman behind the counter looked at the T-Shirt and said "really? I like it". I repeated that it was to be returned. She turned to my daughter and said "do you want to return it?". I said to her again that it was to be returned. My daughter was saying "it's my money!", but then relented and said she would return it.

The manager had to be called. The T-shirt was returned. My daughter went back into the shop to find something else to buy. I was feeling really angry, with my daughter for trying to get one over on me, but more with the attitude of the shop assistant undermining me, so I waited outside the shop.

My daughter came out with a couple of non-gory T-shirts and we left.

It has since transpired that the shop assistant, feeling sorry for my daughter, gave her the gory t-shirt free of charge.

My daughter confessed this to me, then said she had worn it out, and her dad really likes it, his girlfriend really likes it, her friend and her friend's mother really likes it. It's only me that doesn't like it. (Her dad btw utterly despises me and will take any opportunity to undermine me with her).

I personally feel it's really antisocial to wear a t-shirt like that out at the park (as DD has been doing) where there are small kids. It's a nasty image and it makes me feel squeamish every time I see it.

I've told DD that I don't want her wearing it around me. She said OK . This weekend she came back from her dad's wearing it. I told her to change and she said "it's fine, I'm only going to be wearing it upstairs where you can't see".

I'm not generally draconian about my daughter's style choices - I just find the image on this T-shirt inappropriate. However, it seems the shop assistant and other adults she's talked to about it since think I'm over the top.

I'm willing to accept that maybe I am being - but feel DD's testing boundaries on quite a few things atm. I'm generally a bit of a pushover and was trying to be less so this time.

Would be really interested to know what others think

Thanks

OP posts:
1950swallpaper · 01/09/2020 12:33

It's only a t shirt. Not a battle worth having by my standards!

WorraLiberty · 01/09/2020 12:33

I don't believe for a single second the OP is a pushover.

You don't go from being 'pushover' to 'control freak' over a cartoon t.shirt.

gnushoes · 01/09/2020 12:34

It's cartoon violence and not racist, sexist or aimed at anyone identifiable. She's 14. Pick your battles - this ain't one of them. And don't lose it in the wash - that's petty and childish.

ummnamechange · 01/09/2020 12:34

You asked to get the manager? Over a t-shirt purchase? More issues here than telling a 14 year old what she can and cant wear.

Are you in some weird American religious sect? Art thou Amish? Does the council of elders decide on control of teens?

Seriously. Let. It. Go. Dont destroy it, dont bleach it. part of adolescence is making your own decisions and bearing the consequences as well as establishing an identity and freedom to exercise this.

Make a big deal about it and the lass will be on the stately homes thread in 5 years explaining about why she is NC with the narcissistic and controlling DM

DopamineHits · 01/09/2020 12:34

Don't do what some are suggesting and ruin it to "win". I'm always baffled at how many "sledgehammer to crack a nut" approaches are advocated on here.

It's a t-shirt. It will fade on its own, get stained, get torn. It's temporary. Or you'll get used to it and stop giving her good reactions and she'll get bored and move on. Or someone she has a crush on will say it's gross and she won't want to wear it anymore. But anyway, the t-shirt will be a memory in five years. Unless you make it a battleground in which case she can find many more gory images on ebay, even literal murder scenes.

rorosemary · 01/09/2020 12:35

Sounds pretty mild to me. But then I was a punkrock chick with a nofx fuck sheep tshirt, bear bottle necklace and blue hair. Grew out of it and now only wear feminine dresses. She is a teen, let her experiment a bit. It's just a phase.

Fishfingersandwichplease · 01/09/2020 12:35

Sorry OP l think you need to pick your battles - couldn't get that worked up over a tshirt myself, and at her age l would be grateful if that is the only issue you have had!

MorningNinja · 01/09/2020 12:35

How embarrassing for you daughter and the people working in the shop. The way you handled that smacks of control and it sounds like you're stifling her identity.

Nomorepies · 01/09/2020 12:35

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ on the poster's request.

Nottherealslimshady · 01/09/2020 12:37

How controlling. She's 14, surely she's old enough to develop her own style. Dont see why people feel the need to run their household like a dictatorship.

ThePluckOfTheCoward · 01/09/2020 12:37

Jeez you behaved appallingly in the shop, I'd have been mortified if you were my mum and it would have dramatically changed my relationship with you.
You've massively overreacted.

Oh, the irony of that last statement.

TheNighthawk · 01/09/2020 12:37

I would be furious with the shop assistant.

I'd explain it to her, that she is free to disagree with you but it's a sign of maturity and respect towards her mother, to not flaunt something she knows you hate. I'd say my piece about why you don't like it, then ask her to at least leave it at her dad's place.

This.

The shop assistant was wholly out of order in undermining your authority. She showed utter disrespect for you as a parent and I would complain to the shop.

Likewise, your daughter is disrespecting you and your authority and it sounds as though your ExH is exploiting this.

I would make your feelings regarding your DDs disrespect clear; likewise the absolutely outrageous behaviour of the shop assistant, but to confiscate the t shirt outright would inflame matters.

Pinkmakeupbag · 01/09/2020 12:38

I'd be interested to see the t-shirt. But going by what you've said here I think you made a fuss over nothing.

I can't help thinking you will just make your daughter sneaky by forcing her to take the t-shirt back showing her up in the shop.

It seems like one of those things that just won't matter in 20 years.

Irelate · 01/09/2020 12:38

The "Oh well, too late now" would have set me off too OP. Personally, I couldn't care less about a gory t shirt, but the attitude would have bothered me. I've heard that line said by my daughter's friends who have got tattoos, nose piercings, etc.

If I'd had my wits about me I think I would have explained to her that "Oh well, too late now" is not acceptable and that the t-shirt is being put aside at home until she's a bit more mature.

SecretOfChange · 01/09/2020 12:38

Parents are not supposed to like their teenage kids clothes

@weallhavewings Grin

slightchill · 01/09/2020 12:39

All this fuss over a t-shirt? You do know that your underlying relationship with your dd is the most important thing that will keep her safe, and guide her through the difficult teen years, not strict rules? I know it's difficult, but believe me there will be many other more important issues that you will be forced to address before she leaves home.

If my dd bought that t-shirt, I would express my dislike of it (emphatically) and explain WHY but then it would be up to her at 17 yrs, to decided whether to wear it or not. I appreciate it is a tougher decision at 14 yrs and as your mother, you are still allowed your say, but honestly, in the grand scheme of things, a bad taste t-shirt is not worth all this drama. She is an individual after all and allowed her preferences even if they do not accord with yours.

I agree it was impolite of the shop assistant to undermine you though. And although I wouldn't destroy it or give the t-shirt away without dd's permission, I would perhaps let it linger in the laundry room between washes than absolutely necessary Wink

Catsup · 01/09/2020 12:39

At the point she went back into the shop to 'buy something else', I'd have bet my bottom dollar she was coming back out with the same shirt. I doubt the shop assistant gave it to her, she's just side stepping the fact she bought it twice with the excuse it was supposedly free.

Everysinglebloodytime · 01/09/2020 12:40

@ThePluckOfTheCoward

Jeez you behaved appallingly in the shop, I'd have been mortified if you were my mum and it would have dramatically changed my relationship with you. You've massively overreacted.

Oh, the irony of that last statement.

Can you imagine being 14 and your mother behaves like that? Passive aggressive jibes aside, I would find that very, very hard to get over.

Do you really think her reaction over a cartoon tshirt was acceptable?

slightchill · 01/09/2020 12:40

linger longer that should have said!

LittleRed53 · 01/09/2020 12:40

I'd say no, explain why, and it would go in the bin, end of. None of this 'she can wear it as long as she's somewhere else or you can't see it'.

At 14 she is still a minor and under your parental authority. It's in no way abusive to stop her wearing one particular t shirt. If she feels that strongly about it, she can wear stuff like that when she's 18, has her own home and doesn't need to answer to you anymore.

I know some will say I'm draconian, but I don't care. Like I said, it's not abusive and you have understandable reasons for disliking the thing.

Scruffymac · 01/09/2020 12:40

I actually think her attitude in the shop is quite justifiable--you're entitrely in the wrong here. It's a cartoon tshirt, she's a child not a doll let her wear what she wants.

Schoolisback1973 · 01/09/2020 12:40

I'd be pissed with everyone for undermining you but you need to let this one go.
It is certainly a problem that your DD feels comfortable going against your wishes then boasting about it.

GabsAlot · 01/09/2020 12:42

thin id be more annoyed with the shop assistant its not up to them to undermine you like that

if it really happened you should go back and complain

letsgomaths · 01/09/2020 12:43

If you confiscate or destroy this T-shirt, she will buy other similarly "offensive" clothes; only this time, she won't tell you about them. She'll also never hand them in for washing, if they are going to be destroyed.

domesticslattern · 01/09/2020 12:43

Is it this one?
www.rarerecords.com.au/store/clothing/shirts/white-the-itchy-scratchy-show-t-shirt/
I wouldn't like it but I would shrug and get on with it. My mother didn't like my T-shirts either and it just hardened my resolve tbh.

Swipe left for the next trending thread