You passed up on a teaching moment. She's a kid, and kids are by nature morons sometimes. You felt something, your feelings were hurt... you should have told her how her words hurt you. You yourself admit you've changed in the appearance department. Although her remarks were insensitive, you can't fault her for noticing. You had an opportunity to teach her something about sensitivity vs hurtful. She might have felt bad, she might have continued to be an AH. Now you'll never know, and her parents attitude might explain hers.
My Niece Commented on My Body and Still Expected a Shopping Trip With Me
Sometimes, even someone we love can say something so careless that it takes the fun out of a potentially perfect day. One of our readers reached out for advice after a weird interaction with her teenage niece. What was supposed to be a fun shopping trip had to end before it even began.
Here’s what she shared with us:
Hi Bright Side!
I’ve always loved spending time with my brother’s daughter. Even though she’s thirteen now and has her own friends and interests, we’ve stayed close. I take her for lunch, we have movie nights, and I really treasure our one-on-one time together.
Side note, during the last couple of months, I’ve been struggling with how I look. I’ve recently been through a bad breakup. Let’s just say it hasn’t left me feeling — and looking — my best.
I wasn’t in the mood to hit the gym, and haven’t been taking good care of my diet as I used to. My niece always used to have a way to make me feel better when I was in a bad mood.
That’s why I was so excited about our shopping day. Problem is, my niece commented on my body right before we were about to leave. She looked me up and down and said, “Ew, is that your outfit? It’s sooo ugly.”
When I asked her what was wrong, she pointed at me and said, “It doesn’t look right on your arms.” Her words broke me. Probably because I always saw her as a sweet girl who’d never say such a thing.
She noticed I was upset, but rolled her eyes at me. Then she gave a quick “sorry,” then asked if we were still going. I said no. And she flipped out.
She said she’d been looking forward to this trip all week, texting her friends, making a list of stores to hit, and now I’d ruined everything. She started crying, saying I was too harsh. Apparently, me looking like that would have ruined the pictures we were supposed to take together.
When I told my brother and sister-in-law what happened, to my surprise, they brushed it off, too. My brother even laughed and said, “As long as she apologized, it’s fine. She’s just a kid. You don’t need to punish her over one comment.”
My sister-in-law even alluded to the fact that my niece was just looking out for me. She’d noticed I wasn’t looking my best lately, and maybe just wanted to give me a nudge. I’m sorry, but I don’t agree with that.
I don’t think she’s just a kid anymore. And her apology was in no way sincere. I feel that words matter, especially when they come so casually. Give me a nudge? For what? Who does she think she is?
Still, now I can’t help but wonder either: am I being too harsh? Should I have just accepted the quick apology and moved on? Or is setting this boundary the right thing to do? I’d really appreciate some advice.
Thanks for sharing your story! It is truly a difficult situation, but we’re hopeful there are ways for you and your niece to come out of this having an even stronger bond.
Here’s our list of tips we believe might help patch up the relationship:
- Explain why it hurt. Even teens need to understand that words matter. Have a calm conversation, telling her that making fun of their outfit can feel very personal, especially to someone who loves and supports her.
- Stay consistent. If you decided to cancel the trip, follow through. Boundaries show that disrespectful behavior has real consequences, even if it wasn’t meant to be “serious.”


I'm sorry...... this ADULT is upset because her CHILD niece..... did what children and Teens do making a comment on her clothes..... instead of the CHILD intuitively knowing she was supposed to act as the ADULT's emotional support accessory......
Maybe Auntie Dearest should get some therapy and stop blaming a CHILD for her toxic insecurities
Sorry did you not know that children and teenagers are real live people? And did you know that real live people's actions have consequences and they should be taught that fact? Or did you miss that update?
Should she learn those consequences as an adult?
No because it will be to late to learn that as adult so definitely need to teach to children
The issue is that little trol doll has never been taught manners, respect, concern for others or tact. If she had, she wouldn't be a c*nt in training.
How rude to say such a thing to a stranger!
She obviously loves her niece who shouldn't be talking to her Aunt like that - who has been so kind and generous to her.
What right has a 13 year old kid got telling an adult that her clothes aren't suitable. For some photos to show her mates and all and sundry on some social media wedsite.
If not liking someone's outfit equates to them not being dressed appropriately, no middle aged person is dressed appropriately in a 13 yr olds eyes and no 13 yr old is dressed appropriately in a middle aged woman's eye. Execution of a hard truth takes tact that all 13 yr olds and most adults, yourself included, lack. The girl was almost as rude as you. Lack of self awareness is deafening in this comment
Please get mental help, this behavior is not normal. Praying you get better soon
i hope you don't have kids or influence on any nieces or nephews. If it can't be fixed in 5 seconds you don't comment on it. Spinach in teeth? Yes. Flabby arms? No. "People", and I'm being generous with that word, like you deserve to sit at home and cry into their 3rd glass of wine wondering why you're single and noone answers your texts. Perhaps read an article on human decorum. I'll give you a minute to look that word up because it's obvious no one ever taught you how to behave socially. Grow up.
You must be a kid. Because your words lack th emotional maturity of an adult.
Wow you're a horrible person! I hope it makes you feel better but I would really suggest some therapy and maybe learn how to mature and be an adult.
- Model a better apology. Let her see what a sincere apology looks like, one that acknowledges the harm caused and offers to do better.
- Give her a path to repair. When you do reconnect, encourage her to talk with you honestly. Let her know you appreciate her company, but you need mutual respect to continue spending time together.
If you think this story is complicated, check out this next letter from another reader, who shares the reason why she chose to ban her niece from her house, and then faced the consequences.
Comments
Give some grace. Those familiar know the rude, disrespectful, eye rolls of teens trying to navigate hormones. Their lucky to survive to see adult hood.
When someone apologizes, accept it. Don't say " it wasn't sincere enough." If you can read minds, great; but I'll venture you can't. It's not worth destroying your relationship with a kid. That doesn't mean that it's okay. You can still say "I accept your apology but I'm pretty bummed now. We'll go out another day. Next time watch the snark."
This person is old enough not to be rude, period.
While i agree the kid was definitely disrespectful and needed a talking to, this grown adult got upset because a thirteen year old said her arms look weird. Hahaha im sorry, what???

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