We follow our teens on social media. But when other parents ask, we say no, we do not. It's not their damn business how we parent. |
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My young teen doesn't have a cell phone and is not on social media. When he is, I will not friend him. However, there will be many reminders of how to use social media and I reserve the right to spot check every now and then. |
Why do you lie? Are you somehow embarrassed about being involved like this? |
| NP here needing advice after reading all this. My freshman does not have instagram and has;t asked for it. However, she does talk about feeling left out a bit in general. I thought of encouraging her to join social media but wonder now if it would just make things worse, |
My teen is admittedly younger, 14, so my experience may change but I think it is actually even more important for parents of older teens to know what they are putting out there. These are kids applying to colleges, internships, and jobs where people will form impressions in part based on social media posts. I think a rule that anything that you wouldn't want your parent to see is a good metric for what a teen should post. If a parent wouldn't like it, neither will a college or employer. |
| Luckily my teen in not into social media. He's just not interested. I'm sure he would let me follow him though, he's an open book. |
Not at all. Our family business is not out there to be judged. Period. Maybe yours is, that is your business. |
| I must be the only parent that does not need to know every gory detail of my kids lives. My parents certainly did not. I let them have some space. Their grads are good, they play sports, they stay out of trouble, they are respectful, and they babysit part time for extra money. As far as I'm concerned, I don't need to worry about every single indiscretion and they can spend some time figuring some things out on their own by trial and error. |
I'm the person you quoted, I missed the part that the kid in question was 16. I don't follow my 17 year old on anything and I don't care to. I agree, the younger ages need more monitoring and as they earn your trust it's OK to let it go. |
Most of us don't. |
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Mine is 16 and I don't follow her because I am not on social media. I have complete access to her phone every night but as she has gotten older, I rarely check.
She is looking at colleges and not in the party or mean girl scene at all. Not saying she won't make some mistakes but we aren't talking about huge issues I need to be concerned with. She knows my rules. If the 3 P's are okay with it, then it is okay. Parents, Police, Principal. And the poster about the fake accounts is right. The more up their a$$ you are, the more likely they have secret accounts. |
We have an agreement. I follow, and stay silent. She pretends she's forgotten that I follow. The only thing I've given her a hard time about, is being associated with people who use the N-word. |
+1 It is the parents who have punk kids, who assume every other kid is a punk. Try communicating with your own child. |
+1 Kids today are one, no ten, steps ahead of their parents - especially the helicopter parents. |
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I (or a friend/aunt/gparent) followed my sons in middle school. We slowly stopped following them in HS.
I do not follow my 18 yo. Actually, i might still follow him on Twitter, I don't really check it. IDK. If he did something crazy I might start checking in. |