I Won’t Let My Daughter Become a ‘Sephora Kid,’ Obsessed With Makeup

  • I do not want my young daughter to become “Safura Kid” who is a victim of makeup.
  • I am educating her young man about the dangers of the beauty industry and how she can harm her skin.
  • I am also teaching it that beauty is not connected to makeup, and the filters look perfect to people.

I like the scandal. I love how I feel in the morning before I start my day or evening as a special invitation. I like it so much that I once laid the foundation of a beauty brand that was once sold in target and Nordstrome.

But when my daughter, now in the fairy, becomes a tone and asks me to buy her skin or makeup products, I will refuse it until she takes age.

“Cephara Kids” is a name for General Z and General Alpha Kids, who is so obsessed with the scanner that the retailers of the beauty are complaining about children, which is causing devastation at their stores, and preventing summer camp Twins from hiding Scach Care.

Many mothers set the rules for scanner products whose children can buy their children, but I don’t think children should use makeup or scanner until they are older. Why is it here

I want to understand my daughter is not the synonym of makeup beauty

My young daughter has begun to tell me that she wants to wear my makeup to look beautiful. I tell him that the purpose of makeup is not to like you, not beautiful. I try to emphasize that she’s already beautiful.

It is great to like makeup, but I don’t want to be bigger thinking that she is not so good and that some products will magically “better” it.

We have social media responsible for this belief. Younger children engage with social media filters and AI modifications – all of them can easily make the skin flawless.

Studies now show that the growing use of social media is associated with high rates of anxiety, depression and low self -esteem in adolescents.

I hope I will refrain from some of this as my daughter grows in teen, so I’m teaching her now.

I am teaching my daughter that if she looks on the screen, the method of telling it is real or fake. When we look at the contents together, we talk about which filters were used and how to explain that a video is all or part AI.

I hope that it is so stuck in it that whenever she sees beautifully affected on social media, she will wonder if she has used filters or AI to make herself look perfect.

She would be very young to wear a lot of products

When he is in the middle, my daughter will not need the components of collagen, because the youth’s skin is already heavy, oxidative damage will be very later.

If she asks what brand I recommend, I would say, “Leave it”, because plaining the bushes will damage her skin obstruction, which will cause irritation and peeling.

When she looks at the trend of viral acne, I want her to ask her, “Is that right for me?”

Currently, clinical products that are for aging skin – such as retinol, peptides, and vitamin C – are trending. But these products can do more harm to the skin of youth than good.

The work excess of beauty is a real problem that needs to be avoided

I am excessively, but I am trying to teach my daughter a better purchase hygiene. She will learn that she does not need four cleansers in the morning and seven mascaras in her bathroom cabinet.

I want to refrain from chasing the shopping dopamine rush or falling for a “rfomo” (lost fear of being lost).

Makeup and scanner products are also incredibly useless. When she looks at the scanner product, I hope she will look at the individual parts that should be thrown out and place in the landfill: plastic bottle and hat, dropper and pump.

Before you think that I am an outlet in the beauty industry, even the CEO of Cephara agrees with me, saying that young people need only three products.

I am not against the scandal or beauty. I just want my daughter’s first beauty counter to be appropriate for the experience of age-guided by knowledge, strength and confidence. In doing so, I hope she never call herself a “cipora child”.