AITAH for not getting my hair highlighted?

A grown woman with a stable job and her own home flew with her parents to visit family, opting for comfy sweats and her natural dark blonde hair—no highlights, no fuss.

Her dad exploded, ranting about how people “used to dress up” for flights with pride, calling her outfit sloppy and her hair “dirty dishwater blonde.” He insisted a woman’s hair is her top asset for landing a man, and she’s got “loser mentality” for not maximizing looks despite achievements like homeownership.

‘AITAH for not getting my hair highlighted?’

The trip sparked the blowup over appearance standards:

So my parents & I are flying to see family for the week, and I am dressed in a t-shirt and grey sweatpants. Because I want to be comfy… I...

Well, apparently that has been something that has irked my dad for a long time. He said that people in the old days used to have pride, and they used...

Like my mom was telling me that she used to have to wear pantyhose to fly. My dad said ‘how are you going to meet a man if you show...

The hair critique hit harder:

Now for what sparked this: my hair is a dark blonde, and has not been highlighted in forever. My folks have long called it ‘dirty dishwater blonde’ and they want...

My dad says hair for a woman is her first impression, her best asset. I tried saying that I think I have better assets than just my hair, like a...

(Which I do own.) My dad says that’s loser mentality to stop at that. He said only winners see the bigger picture. He says I need to do it to...

This reeks of outdated gender norms: reducing women to ornamental “assets” for male approval, ignoring individuality, health, or accomplishments. Dad’s nostalgia for “dressing up” era ignores modern travel realities—comfort rules airports now.

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Beauty standards evolve; natural hair trends celebrate authenticity over bleach damage. Psychologist Dr. Carol Gilligan’s work on relational ethics highlights how such comments undermine self-worth, pressuring conformity over joy.

Healthy response: Validate feelings (“I hear you value tradition”), assert boundaries (“My body, my choice—topic closed”), and redirect (“Let’s focus on family time”). Low contact if criticism persists protects mental health—success isn’t measured by highlights or husbands.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

The community was unanimous in calling the dad toxic and misogynistic, fully supporting her right to choose comfort and natural looks over his outdated demands:

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A large group raged against the sexist mindset, viewing women as needing men and prioritizing superficial “assets”:

MrsCakeakaJane − Tell him if he wants to find a man then he has your full support and he has a safe space to come out when he's ready. honestly...

InternalPercentage60 − your dad thinks a woman needs a man or you’re nothing without a man. CLEARLY he has the loser mentality NTA

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saravog − This is misogyny at its finest

wanna_be_green8 − How does your mother feel about her husband thinking her biggest asset is her hair. Not her personality, warmth or accomplishments, but hair. Our biggest asset's actually come...

miss_amanders − Any boyfriend you have that your dad approves of, dump him. Your dad will approve absolute s__t boyfriends with this mentality.

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Many emphasized her independence (house, job) making his advice irrelevant, urging distance or shutdowns:

JSungStudios − I’m sorry but how are you in the stage in life where you own a house with a stable job and still asking whether or not it’s okay...

Opening_Band_8643 − How old are you? I’m assuming you are not a teenager as you said you own your own home and have a stable job.

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Regardless of how old you are, you don’t have to listen to this absolute crap. Sorry to say but your dad is a piece of work. I’d keep my distance...

None of his opinions were asked for or appreciated. He needs to know this.

notyouravgnuisance − Your parents are really shallow. It's wild they talk down on your natural hair color (which comes from their genes btw). And SO MANY PEOPLE wear sweats on...

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For comfort. People who dress up for a plane ride seem kinda desperate for attention imo. And literally no one cares. And who is trying to find a partner randomly...

Like really, who? Your self image should not be affected by what they think, they are obviously lost in "the good old days" but you don't have to be.

And you have no obligation to follow their rules or suggestions if you're grown. And no one needs a mate. That's a choice. Which is also yours.

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You have your act together, I would be REALLY picky about who I let in my life. You are NTAH but sounds like your parents consistently are. I would have...

Or just not talking to them much at all. Sounds like an indication of some much bigger issues with both of them and I wouldn't want that in my life.

Practical_Barracuda3 − No, you're not the a__hole. I dunno what decade your parents emerged from (seriously, I'm trying to wrack my brain for an era when public air travel wasn't...

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but those are some wild comments to be making about anyone, let alone their own child.

Several defended natural hair and shared stories or clever retorts:

Initial_Physics_3861 − NTA, ever. Us dark blonds need to kick that "dirty blond" mentality OUT the door. I prefer to think of it as a dark honey colour. Like buckwheat...

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TootsNYC − oh. my. god. I did an internship in NYC in the early 1980s, when women were still wearing sneakers with their dresses for their commute, and changing into...

So I rapidly adopted that practice, because it kept my good shoes from getting dirty and worn out on the sidewalks.

This got mentioned at some lunch I was at w/ my mentor and a bunch of executives at his level. One of these older guys said, "But that's not attractive...

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Airplane flights are not a place to meet the man of your dreams. And the man of YOUR dreams is a guy who will not judge you for wearing comfy...

I also was very firm that I would be only myself (perhaps a more intense version of myself) on dates or when meeting guys (through friends, not on the street),...

And I don't want to date some guy who is disappointed that the real me is different from the persona or appearance I put on. Dating, etc. ,

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is not like marketing—you're not trying to attract a LOT of men, or even MOST men. You want to attract the guy who sees you for yourself. Taylor Swift has...

DazzlingPoint6437 − Damn, absolutely NTA. He thinks he’s helping but he doesn’t realize how f’ing TOXIC that is. But he’s from a different era and playing by different rules.

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So go back to HIS parents’ era: “dad, only floosies dye their hair. Do want men to think I’m loose? What’s gotten into you? I certainly don’t want to attract...

My hair is how God made it and if it’s good enough for Him, it’s good enough for any man worthy of being my husband! ” And, most people dress...

But, considering the company you’re in, maybe leggings and a long sweater/tunic would help keep the peace. Or, find & share articles on the dangers of synthetic fabrics if a...

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Wear natural fibers for safety. And you’re an adult. It’s time to get comfortable doing your own thing, even if it means disappointing your parents. Good luck!

Cool_Relative7359 − NTA. Your dad is weird. Tell him next time "why? I already own a home, have a job, I don't actually need a husband. Besides, you and mom...

I've tried to be nice and tell you I'm not interested politely, but now I'm setting a boundary. Comments about my appearance or finding a partner are off limits.

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I will exit the conversation without explanation if you bring either of those things up from now on" (You don't have to actually believe any of this, you just need...

Ok-Dealer4350 − I’m with the rest shutting the conversation down. I didn’t discuss my dating with my parents and if I did have dates it shocked them.

My mother kept saying I was an extrovert but for an extrovert I sure didn’t have a lot of dates. Not an extrovert for sure. I was busy working, getting...

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Having your own home, etc is great. My husband talks with our daughter about her social life. I rather talk about her house and garden. He then puts words in...

I want her to be happy in her place, have vacations, do things. I think the funny response about if OP’s father wants to find a man is a great...

A few went aggressive or humorous in retaliation ideas:

CatJarmansPants − Your 'father' would look good with a broken face. ... Perhaps a swift reply of 'oh, so could spend my life with a fat/ugly/thick/choose-as-appropriate dogshit slide like yourself?...

Zero doubt: Dad’s stuck in toxic 1950s mode—women as decorated prizes. Natural hair and sweats? Power move for comfort and self-love.

These throwback lectures sting—ever clapped back at “dress for men” nonsense? Or embraced “mousy” hair and snagged someone great anyway? How do you shut down parental appearance policing? Let’s hear it!

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