At an appropriate age, sure. I little squirming is good for them - also which things like this with your parents makes you consider them a little more then with you friends. Discomfort is not a bad thing sometimes. |
I remember my parents letting my 13 yo sister choose Clockwork Orange for family movie night (I was 15) - talk about uncomfortable, my mother bolted approx. 30 seconds into it, by father was a trooper and watched the whole movie with use and even discussed it. |
| My 11 year old watches GOT. |
| Yes of course. She will be going off to college in less than a year…. |
Not pp but I would if he was a "long" time boyfriend. My niece began dating this boy in HS who was 17 at the time. They had sex about a year later for the first time and are still dating - she is almost 17 now and he is 19. He has slept in her house and has come to my house as well with the whole family. Just this weekend they were over and I put them together in the same room without anyone else. Her mother was here as well, and so her grandmother and grandfather. |
No. I'm a mom of two boys and I just don't think I'll ever find it necessary to make them (or me) squirm through a show like that together. I remember watching Officer and Gentleman with my dad and feeling absolutely mortified by the love making scenes in that movie because he was there. If possible, he was even more mortified than I was because I was there. We had never seen that movie before and neither of us were expecting those scenes. Ugh. No. Do not do that to your kids.
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Not sure it's a gender thing. I'm 28 years old and felt super uncomfortable when I watched one episode with my mom (though we do talk about the major plot points together). Just too damn weird to be watching that much sex with a parent! |
17 year olds can go to R-rated movies on their own legally. 17-year olds usually can't smoke pot without breaking the law. |
That's just sad. |
Yep. It's not right to watch that stuff with a parent. Weird. |
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We don't get HBO, so not really an issue.
When we did get HBO (promo through the cable company) we (H and I) watched a few episodes because we'd both read the books and liked them. I stomached maybe 3 episodes before I couldn't handle seeing the violence portrayed on the tv. That said, if we did still get HBO I'd let my 17 year old make her own decision on the show only tempered by the fact that we have one tv and you have to have a majority vote to watch a show if more than one person wants to watch tv. I recall my parents and their very strict approach to tv and how angry I was and how stupid I thought it was. And I binge watched tv in college because I was finally able to watch as much as I wanted when I wanted and what I wanted. (They forbid everything from MTV to the Simpsons and how much time, if at all I could watch tv up until the day I left for college at 19.) |
I would also let them do this if they were in a long-term committed relationship. |
| I love got. I don't think it's great for a kid but if they want to I wouldn't stop them because Of the reasons others have said. |
+1. I don't watch this show. If my 17 year old was watching it, I might start, so we could talk about it. But I wouldn't put any restrictions on what a 17 year old can watch on TV, as long as it's legal. |
| At 17 she can buy a ticket to any movie she wants to see in the theater right? So yeah, she gets to choose her tv watching. |