Wrong. She is not too young to prevent pregnancy. She is not too young because she already had sex. OP ignore the idiots whose daughters will get pregnant. Yours won't because you are absolutely doing the right thing. Keep the communication open. Take her to as many doctors as you have to, get her informed. Make it so she's comfortable with her own body. |
+1000000000 |
+! |
LOL no that will not work. They will find a way. Hello teen pregnancy. OP you are doing the right thing. |
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I’m sorry OP this is tough. 16 would be much better. My mom took me to the OB gyn when I had just turned 17 and confided in her that I wanted birth control. I had a full appointment and drove myself. I thought she handled it well.
But this situation is a bit different. It’s a lot to give a 14 year old this level of trust. Even if you get her birth control, it all seems concerning. For perspective, men go to jail with catch a predator schemes with FBI agents pretending to be 14. What if she breaks up with this boyfriend and then gets another one who’s older and he gets slammed with a statutory rape situation? You want her trust but this is a lot... |
| So many people here on in denial about the fact that your 14 year old is having sex. She must really trust you if she asked for birth control, that’s a testament to how good a parent you are. Limiting contact with the boy will only make her sneak around and risk pregnancy—anyone who says otherwise is in denial. With that being said, I’d take her to an OB/GYN. The capital women’s care office I go to (in Silver Spring), has several docs who mention a specialty in adolescent care. I’d take her to someone like that. |
NP. That's not supposed to happen during a pelvic exam. |
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Womens Healthcare provider here.
This is what a sexually active teen girl needs HPV vaccine Yearly urine test for chlamyida and gonnorhea Plan B Contraception of her choice Planned Parenthood is a great place to go. Pediatrician or GYN is fine too. She does not need pelvic or pap, unless she is having problems. |
| She needs to be seeing a gynecologist for this, not a pediatrician. |
I had one gyno do that but she told me and asked first. |
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Why are letting a 14 yr old date in the first place?
This is what an 8th grader? |
Um, np but I see no reason why parents can’t do both. Fine to get her on an iud, but it’s also fine to say “we feel you’re too young for a bf and to take on the emotional maturity of this kind of relationship so we’ll not be condoning the relationship or sexual activity at this young age.” Sure, she may still find a way around it but no need to turn down the sheets and light romantic candles to play mood music in preparation for it as though you are totally on board with her new hobby. At 14!
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Insanity that this is normalized. |
Agree. Don’t give up on parenting with wise counsel in favor of chasing the reward of being her confidante through your “support.” This is one of those areas where all the adults in the room know that being sexually active at 14 rarely leads to positive things. Be loving but be honest, OP. Let her know you aee tree concerned but glad she came to you because you will help her prevent the things that can —to some extent—be prevented (like unwanted pregnancy) but there are still some things that you cannot shield her from (heartbreak, regret, hormonal surges released during sex that make her feel more attached to this boy, by biological design, that may confuse her when he is over the relationship and doesn’t feel those same attachments, etc.) You can’t do UN-ring this bell, OP, but not do you need to throw a party about it. Strike a balance of support and compassion. But keep the concern. |
This is good advice. |