I don't have a tween, or a daughter, but I've heard good things about New Moon Girls from friends that do. Also Kiki looks like it could be interesting.
Ah, if only Sassy were still around. That was the best darn magazine ever.
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Hi, ladies,
I'm coming to you all because there are so many healthy, well-rounded young women on this board. My 12-year-old daughter mentioned tonight that she might want to try makeup soon because her hormones might be kicking in. Yes, she uses phrases like that.
I was wondering if there are any magazines that cater to tween-age girls on the very cusp of womanhood. I think Seventeen would be too mature for her. She still thinks kissing in movies and TV shows is gross. She's getting anxious about her period and has been asking me about tampons and stuff. We have very open, honest talks about the physical aspects of growing up, but I'm sort of a fogey when it comes to letting her explore the emotional envelope here.
Those of you just out of your teens, help me out here. I want her to get good guidance through this stage. She's athletic and thoughtful and almost prudish when it comes to boys and such. She does not have much respect for "girly girls" who squeal when a ball comes hurtling at them in the gaga pit. She's stood up to friends in her circle who were bullying another friend -- she even took one of them to the principal's office. She's a rule-enforcer. I keep thinking one day she'll make a really great ACLU lawyer.
I want a magazine for her that respects her intelligence, but will guide her in stuff like makeup, healthy body image, and navigating middle school politics. Like Self, but for young teens. Can anyone recommend a magazine for her?
Thank you!
Roxy
Getting in touch with my inner try-athlete.
I don't have a tween, or a daughter, but I've heard good things about New Moon Girls from friends that do. Also Kiki looks like it could be interesting.
Ah, if only Sassy were still around. That was the best darn magazine ever.
Thanks, jdubble. Wow, I wish I'd had New Moon when I was a girl. Check out their sample issue: http://www.newmoon.com/magazine/samp...-June-2010.pdf.
I found these two, too:
http://www.girlzone.com/
http://www.discoverygirls.com/
This is a great start.
Thank you!
Roxy
Getting in touch with my inner try-athlete.
Roxy, I don't know of any magazines that fit what you're looking for, but just wanted to say that your daughter sounds like an awesome kid, and she's lucky to have your guidance.
Maybe another approach would be to look for magazines that are specific to her interests. For example, if SI for Women was still in publication, I'd recommend it. Amid ads for cosmetics and fashion (and women-specific sports equipment!), it also had articles about women who worked hard to achieve their goals, some of them even as a team! If there is a specific sport that she likes, there is probably a magazine for it. If she is interested in social justice issues, there are many magazines that focus on a range of those issues. I don't think they need to be age-specific. Nurturing her interests will go a long way towards building her self-confidence in the long term.
As for makeup -- when I was about that age my mother took me to a dept. store makeup counter to help me get ready for a piano recital. I was too clueless and awkward to figure it out through magazines (I had Sassy too. Didn't help). It was invaluable to have someone show me how to apply it, and to walk away with stuff that worked for my complexion, that I was comfortable wearing. I don't think experimenting with drug store brands would have saved money at that stage, since I had no idea what I was doing with blending and colors and probably would have wasted a lot of money buying stuff that didn't work for me.
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Roxy, my niece is 13 going on 26...I've given her a couple of really good American Girl books that she has liked and found useful. I noticed there is an American Girl magazine that has NO ADS and all sorts of interesting-looking topics. I found some info on wiki for you:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America...%28magazine%29
Here's some info about the books:
http://www.americangirl.com/corp/cor...on=about&id=16
I really appreciate their straightforward yet entertaining way of dealing with issues that we might not think are so important any more. But of course, remember when those things loomed huge in our lives.
My parents did not let me wear makeup until I was 15. Big Mistake. I would go in the bathroom first thing at school and smear on blue eyeshadow. I looked terrible! I would have much preferred to have gone to a department store with my mother or stepmother and gotten some decent products that were appropriate, and a lesson in proper application.
Here's the list of books. I gave my niece the Smart Girl's Guide to Money and the Smart Girl's Guide to Starting Middle School. I wish I had books like that way back when.
http://store.americangirl.com/agshop...id/246/uid/137
I agree, Tulip! My mother wouldn't let me wear makeup or do other things the rest of the girls were doing. Things I so desperately was wanting to try. I remember feeling like she didn't want me to grow up and it was a struggle all through adolescence. All the girls were shaving their legs in jr. high but my mother refused to let me do it. It was embarrassing for me and I remember the fights we had about it---and that was 40 years ago. Roxy, you are lucky to have such a special daughter and she is lucky to have you for a mom. Embrace these years and enjoy them with her.
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My mom sold Mary Kay products and yet never showed me how to apply make up. I too wish she would have taken me to a dept store or salon to learn how to do it. It's on my list of "must-do's" with my daughter as she grows up.
Those are some really great magazines! I am the librarian at a preK-8th grade school and have ordered some of the American Girl books for the girls to read. Sadly- some of them will never talk to their moms (or any adult woman) about these things and need to know answers.
Glad to know there are neat resources out there for them!!
I *loved* Sassy magazine!
I find it so sad that some parents want to ignore that their children are growing up by not talking about it/being in denial (my step-mom and dad were among them). I NEVER had "the talk" about puberty, sex, makeup, dating, etc. I used kleenex (embarrasing, yes) for the first 3 months of my periods because I knew I couldn't approach my parents. My best friend's mom hooked me up from then on out. They just ignored it and hoped I would figure it out on my own. Luckily I made good decisions, but a couple of my sisters- not so much.
Roxy (Limewave and others)- your daughters are increidbly lucky to have you!! I wish I'd had that growing up.
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I got this very series for her for Christmas. It's excellent, and she actually reads them (as opposed to the un-cracked novels collecting dust on her shelf - some of them are even signed). The Guide to Money is the one that's most frequently in her hands these days, and she's always making signs to sell beaded key chains and bracelets that she's made (from another kit she got for Christmas), and babysitting. Only there's no place for her to go to sell these things and we don't know anyone with very young children except for a neighbor two doors down, and I doubt they remember my name.
Plus, she's only 12. I didn't start babysitting until I was 16.
I subscribed to American Girl magazine for her a year or so ago. She read it, but didn't rave over it. I'm still waiting for her to get back to me on the others.
I'll see if she'd like to go to a real makeup counter to try out some makeup. I could use that myself. I've never done it, either.
As far as my parenting skills, thank you for the compliments, but I'm just trying to save her from the traumatic, embarrassing events of my own childhood. My mother referred to my girly bits as "down there," and our "talk" consisted of her coming into my room and saying, "You don't have any questions about, you know, down there, do you?"
Um, no. Not especially. And to this day I have questions. Thank goodness for Andrew Weil and Christianne Northrup.
Thank you all so much for the caring support.
Roxy
Getting in touch with my inner try-athlete.
FWIW, I started babysitting when I was 11. I didn't like it much. I think my last babysitting job was when I was 14. I don't have kids, and that probably has to do with the fact that I didn't like to babysit (among other things, of course).
My niece, on the other hand, loves babysitting. She went through a Red Cross babysitting course and got certified or something like that. She has a certificate and a card, and she made business cards with her credentials (certification, years of experience, references available!). She's 13 and has been babysitting since she was 10 or so. There are lots of kids in her neighborhood, and her parents seem to know all the other parents, so that helps.
She also makes paintings and painted blocks and sells them downtown, at festivals, and to her parents' friends. They are really great, and she even has gotten some commissions.
I might have to pick up that Money book for myself. It's not too late, is it?
It might be alot of fun to have a Girl's Makeup/Spa Day with your daughter! Make it fun and a learning experience for both of you. Have fun with it; you're lucky, as is your daughter.
I love the idea of her painting blocks and selling them. Gardening is really popular here in San Diego. I'll bet she could do decorative garden stones or something. I'll run that by her.
We could maybe get a booth at the swap meet to sell things. I've got a friend who does that every three months and makes a couple thousand dollars selling her ceramics (she's a real artist and does beautiful seasonal things) and garage sale-type things. I've donated to her cause as I was cleaning out stuff I'd ordinarily just drop off at Goodwill.
I love doing spa days with my daughter. We go get mani-pedis about twice a year, usually attached to some other big event like when we're about to take off on a cross-country road trip. I hadn't thought to do a makeup day with her because, honestly, I don't wear that much (a little powder, eyeliner and mascara, and sometimes I go wild and wear a rose-tinted lip gloss from Terra Tint), and she's never asked about it before.
This could be a learning experience for both of us.
Roxy
Getting in touch with my inner try-athlete.
Wow, it is hard for me to believe that some of you had parents who thought they could ignore puberty! Ah, it's kind of hard to ignore those changes. I guess I tried to raise my boys the way I was raised... talk about everything and anything. Although that didn't stop me from being a bit wild, it did put things in perspective for me, and I was much more level headed than a lot of my peers (well, and it was the late '60s/early '70s).
I don't have a daughter, but when I taught middle school, I could always tell the girls whose parents didn't raise princesses, but didn't ignore their feminine sides, either. It was refreshing.
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Roxy, you mentioned you tried American Girl magazine but she didn't rave about it. What about going back to it for a quick look with her? Or try a current issue?
You know how kids sometimes don't like something the first time around but 6 months or a year later, it's a whole new world. Just a thought.
It took my DD (11 y.o.) a while to start really liking the AG magazine, and now she looks forward to it and reads it cover to cover and tries some of the crafts and games. It wasn't until the second year of the subscription that she started liking it. I love their books as well--I need to get her the guide to starting middle school (that happy event is happening in the next couple of months for my daughter), and she's been reading The Care and Keeping of You pretty carefully recently, now that she's dealing with some hormonally induced issues of her own.
Another money making idea is weeding--my DD has a weeding job this summer that's perfect for a first job. It's only a couple of hours once a week, but it is enough to earn her a bit of money and (more importantly) get her in the habit of showing up on time, working diligently, and doing the work even when she'd rather be doing something else.
For makeup (not territory we've covered yet), I'd go with books instead of magazines, just because the purpose of magazines is to sell you stuff, while the purpose of books is to teach you stuff (and sell you the book, of course). When I was in middle school my best friend's mother was an Avon lady and she got me a book about makeup and how to apply it. I read it cover to cover and tried all of the suggestions (and then pretty much gave up on makeup entirely when I was about 25). I'm fairly certain my mother spent a lot of time rolling her eyes and not laughing in front of me as I experimented!