Rules about dating (14 years old)

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. Most middle schoolers who are not allowed to date, join after school clubs and make-out in school - I do hear them making friend plans like mall, pool, outdoor shopping area, etc… and the boys meet them there.

You can try but kids will always try harder and be sneakier.


Just because kids try to break the rules or get around rules doesn't mean they shouldn't exist in the first place.

No parent is 100% successful in preventing their kids from doing things, but it's our job to put up barriers and get in their way. You don't abdicate setting expectations because it's not guaranteed to have a 100% success rate.


+1000 (NP)
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I do not allow it or encourage it. A 14-year-old is not in a position to "date" anyone. If they're a boy, they don't have the resources to take a girl out on dates and I'm certainly not footing the bill for his romantic life.

It's fine to like and have romantic feelings for someone, but I don't think it's healthy for kids at this age to have entangled, adult-like, exclusive relationships that come with all of the obligations and rollercoasters that come with engaging in those things. Not to mention the physical ramifications such as pregnancy and STDs.

I think I might not encourage it but would be tolerable of a 17 or 18 year old starting to do that stuff, but definitely not a 14 year old. They're an absolute mental and emotional mess and I've seen too many toxic and destructive boyfriend-girlfriend entanglements to encourage that for my kids at that age.

This!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I mean, these cautionary tales speak for themselves! Wow. And yet we parents who say “not yet” to teenage dating are somehow the unreasonable ones?

Raising kids well isn't easy at times. I'd rather be out of touch than have my dc go through what sone of these po's kids went through. Boys, especially, aren't emotionally mature enough at 13, 14, and 15 to navigate relationships while also dealing woth the raging hormones of puberty. I have no qualms about forbidding dating for my young teen.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If you allow it, keep strict supervision over them. It's not just sex or emotions, now. It's social media too.

My son was 14 and a brand new freshman when a girl asked for his snap and then they started "dating." She definitely was the person pushing the relationship to each new level. I knew he was not emotionally mature enough for any of this. But I took it as an opportunity to talk him through it, and to try to ensure he was being both respectful and safe. It only lasted a couple of months and I watched them like a hawk at my house. I had just gotten permission to go back to work after COVID, which I was dying to do. I hate working at home. But stayed home because of this new relationship of his. It only lasted a couple of months, and he broke up with her because they really had nothing in common. I walked him through that, too. No ghosting. Face to face. They are both great people but there really isn't much in common. Nobody's fault, etc.

She got really upset. And started spreading rumors on social media about him that were categorically untrue because I had been there almost every step of the way. They weren't horrific rumors, but they weren't true, and this social media revenge can be the new reality of relationships gone wrong.


Ick on the mama’s boy syndrome. The evil pursuant female against the poor innocent boy. Please stop on your cluelessness
Anonymous
Y'all are stupid, they are dating virtually and sending each other pictures and video chatting. I hate to be the one to break it to you but that's how they date now.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Y'all are stupid, they are dating virtually and sending each other pictures and video chatting. I hate to be the one to break it to you but that's how they date now.


Agree with this and that is why I let my 14yr old have friends over of both sexes and I also let her go to the mall and other locations in groups. I much rather have her learn in person friendships and boundaries then the kids whose parents think the are innocent sitting at home all weekend looking at porn and asking girls for nudes or they will spread rumors about them. No thanks!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean, these cautionary tales speak for themselves! Wow. And yet we parents who say “not yet” to teenage dating are somehow the unreasonable ones?

Raising kids well isn't easy at times. I'd rather be out of touch than have my dc go through what sone of these po's kids went through. Boys, especially, aren't emotionally mature enough at 13, 14, and 15 to navigate relationships while also dealing woth the raging hormones of puberty. I have no qualms about forbidding dating for my young teen.


So you are okay with him staying at home looking at porn as his way of understanding how relationships work at 13-15yrs old.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean, these cautionary tales speak for themselves! Wow. And yet we parents who say “not yet” to teenage dating are somehow the unreasonable ones?

Raising kids well isn't easy at times. I'd rather be out of touch than have my dc go through what sone of these po's kids went through. Boys, especially, aren't emotionally mature enough at 13, 14, and 15 to navigate relationships while also dealing woth the raging hormones of puberty. I have no qualms about forbidding dating for my young teen.


So you are okay with him staying at home looking at porn as his way of understanding how relationships work at 13-15yrs old.

Actually, kids first education about relationships starts with observing how their parents treat each other.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. Most middle schoolers who are not allowed to date, join after school clubs and make-out in school - I do hear them making friend plans like mall, pool, outdoor shopping area, etc… and the boys meet them there.

You can try but kids will always try harder and be sneakier.


Or they don’t join clubs, tell their parents they’re walking to a shopping center with friends and hook up at the park/HS. I mean you arlington middle school kids.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean, these cautionary tales speak for themselves! Wow. And yet we parents who say “not yet” to teenage dating are somehow the unreasonable ones?

Raising kids well isn't easy at times. I'd rather be out of touch than have my dc go through what sone of these po's kids went through. Boys, especially, aren't emotionally mature enough at 13, 14, and 15 to navigate relationships while also dealing woth the raging hormones of puberty. I have no qualms about forbidding dating for my young teen.


So you are okay with him staying at home looking at porn as his way of understanding how relationships work at 13-15yrs old.

Actually, kids first education about relationships starts with observing how their parents treat each other.


LOL - ok
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I mean, these cautionary tales speak for themselves! Wow. And yet we parents who say “not yet” to teenage dating are somehow the unreasonable ones?


💯

Anonymous
The point is the HARD line. Being those parents who say absolutely not and then are clueless that your kids are going behind your back without your knowledge because you forced their hand. And now they don't have you to talk to about their crushes and potential innocent relationships. And then they get all of their advice online or with their friends or the people they are sneaking around with.

Unless your kid has no electronic device and doesn't go out with friends without you, there are always chances they are "dating" Not knowing makes it a lot less safer in my option. So I am not a hard line no type of mom. I listen to my kids and see what they have to say.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean, these cautionary tales speak for themselves! Wow. And yet we parents who say “not yet” to teenage dating are somehow the unreasonable ones?

Raising kids well isn't easy at times. I'd rather be out of touch than have my dc go through what sone of these po's kids went through. Boys, especially, aren't emotionally mature enough at 13, 14, and 15 to navigate relationships while also dealing woth the raging hormones of puberty. I have no qualms about forbidding dating for my young teen.


So you are okay with him staying at home looking at porn as his way of understanding how relationships work at 13-15yrs old.

Actually, kids first education about relationships starts with observing how their parents treat each other.


LOL - ok

Nothing funny about growing up seeing abuse, cheating, disrespect, fighting or, conversely, a partnership, respect, love, kindness, support, etc. I witnessed many of the first set and, at 14, got into a relationship with an older boy who went on to abuse and then stalk me. Parents have a great influence on their children and what they believe is acceptable in a relationship.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The point is the HARD line. Being those parents who say absolutely not and then are clueless that your kids are going behind your back without your knowledge because you forced their hand. And now they don't have you to talk to about their crushes and potential innocent relationships. And then they get all of their advice online or with their friends or the people they are sneaking around with.

Unless your kid has no electronic device and doesn't go out with friends without you, there are always chances they are "dating" Not knowing makes it a lot less safer in my option. So I am not a hard line no type of mom. I listen to my kids and see what they have to say.


Why is it so difficult for you and others to understand that there are parents who have close, healthy relationships with their young teens? There are families who communicate. This fantasy of a 14 yo running amok with some secret sex life is absurd to those of us who actually talk to our kids daily. We look at them, we pay attention and we sure as shot notice when sonething's...off. This is the hard work of parenting: you don't give up in the home stretch. You teens need you more than ever BECAUSE they are not known for their good judgement and impulse control. Talk to your kiids, people , and LOOK at them when you do so.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The point is the HARD line. Being those parents who say absolutely not and then are clueless that your kids are going behind your back without your knowledge because you forced their hand. And now they don't have you to talk to about their crushes and potential innocent relationships. And then they get all of their advice online or with their friends or the people they are sneaking around with.

Unless your kid has no electronic device and doesn't go out with friends without you, there are always chances they are "dating" Not knowing makes it a lot less safer in my option. So I am not a hard line no type of mom. I listen to my kids and see what they have to say.


+1.
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