You sound like the serial rapist who lures kids to his basement. What you have written sounds like the koolaid sex traffickers give to neglected youth. |
Are you a troll inCel sex-trafficker?
No, you do not let your kids go away from you with people you do not know. Also, we teach them not to get roofied or be in shady circumstances. |
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Your own biological kid or just some orphan you adopted?
Watch "catfish" on youtube. |
Your anxiety is insane. I hope you don’t have kids. |
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No way. And this is a good time to teach your young adult safety for when you don’t have a say.
In this situation in the future, they should do all the things others mentioned to make sure they are who they are. First meeting should be in a public space. She should take a friend with her (you should go now since she’s a minor). Make sure someone knows where she is and when she is supposed to be back to her room. Just rolling up to Boston with a bunch of randoms she met on the internet is insane!! |
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My DD has online friends from Kpop fan groups. We were in California and she wanted to go meet up with a couple and go to K-town. I let her. She took pics, they looked like nice girls. I'm glad I trusted her. She was 18 BTW.
Can she tell you any more deets about the online friends? |
+1. Assuming you have a kid that is mature enough to navigate travel alone, at a bare minimum I would need to "meet" these people on a zoom so I could see they are actual people - I assume they are also teenagers? Also, I would want their contact/parents contact info in the event of an emergency. Also lots of expectations around keeping me informed about itinerary and plans and frequent check-ins. Then, maybe..... |
No, I would go with her. |
They could all be 1 old man. No way. |
I thought OP had already met the friends via zoom? And they were meeting for an event which I assume means a public space, etc. I mean, if I were OP, I would still fly up with the DD just to be available in a extremely unlikely event anything went wrong but I would definitely let DD spend the day hanging out with her friends in public without her mother hovering. |
| Slightly different scenario, but a few weeks after she turned 16 my DD went off for a week long training program with a student run environmental group in the middle of the country that I had never heard of. All of her contact with them was online. She organized the whole thing herself, was getting picked up by one of the student trainers and shuttled to their site, navigating Transfers at various airports, etc. I’ll be honest the whole thing made me nervous. But when she came home and talked about what it was like to figure this all out on her own, she said “I felt like my own person“ and it was actually a pretty powerful experience. It really opened my eyes to the value of lengthening the leash when you can, even though it can feel scary as a parent. |
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Nope. I wouldn’t even support this trip if they were a young adult. Zero chance for a teen.
Online friends? Travel to meet in a city? Nope |
I am absolutely flabbergasted that OP would even consider this. |
Young adults??? Hell no. |
+1 no way |