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I am regularly called on to arbitrate in the on-going dispute between 8-year-old daughter and her mother about how many layers to wear when going outside in the cold. Mum* says "More", daughter says "I'm not cold".

From what age should you just let them get on with it?

(Is there ever an age when you shouldn't?)

*As one particularly self-aware father once said: "Put your coat on, I'm cold!"

Erwin
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Benjol
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    Let her choose that choice for a few times, then maybe stop? –  Mar 14 '16 at 18:49
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    For what it's worth, as a child, I was notorious for the "i'm not cold" argument. My parents had to finally concede that I meant it when I went to college in New York, as one of two people at the school who wore shorts and a t-shirt the entire winter. No frostbite. I started wearing warmer clothes when I started getting cold... around 28 years old. – Cort Ammon Mar 14 '16 at 21:25
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    You can also see the answers to this similar question that I asked. Most of these answers suggest allowing children a lot younger than 8 to decide whether to wear warm clothes http://parenting.stackexchange.com/questions/23646/at-what-age-can-a-child-be-responsible-for-deciding-whether-to-wear-warm-clothes – MiniMum Mar 15 '16 at 07:23
  • @anongoodnurse That's what my mother would always say to me when I was a kid. – kasperd Mar 15 '16 at 11:05
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    This is the first Stack Exchange post in six years that I'm on the network that I'm forwarding to the wife. – dotancohen Mar 15 '16 at 16:45
  • If there is reasonable chance of danger to their health, enforce your opinion. If there is little reasonable chance of danger, let them have their way. For example - my 17-year-old insists on wearing sandals when driving to gymnastics practice, even in sub-freezing winter weather. OK - little chance she'll get frostbitten in the car with the heater going. However, if the same kid wanted to wear sandals to go sledding I'd say it's Not Happening! I want them to learn to make good decisions and choices - and in order to do that they have to make their own choices, and live with the results. – Bob Jarvis - Слава Україні Mar 15 '16 at 16:49
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    Sweater, n. Garment worn by child when its mother is feeling chilly.”

    ― Ambrose Bierce, The Unabridged Devil's Dictionary

    – Ross Millikan Mar 16 '16 at 22:09
  • As i child I never got cold. I hated when my parents made me put on too many layers. Listen to you kid, unless there is a real danger of injury, let them get cold. They may not get cold at the same point that you do. – coteyr Mar 17 '16 at 01:50
  • Wait a second… 8 years old is already an age where the child can already take important decisions right. If she says that she's not cold, then she isn't cold, right? Or if she is, be it on her risk. – John Mar 19 '16 at 09:49
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    I would rather have my kid get cold and learn responsibility than worry about fighting with them over clothing. You may have to deal with some inconvenience, but that's what parenting is about. I routinely try to curb my wife's protectionism, because its a part of balanced parenting. Dads should definitely try to carve out areas like this where their influence is felt (barefoot in the store day, why not). – Ian Jul 14 '17 at 00:30