| Case and point why 14-year-olds shouldn’t have social media. |
You misread the post. She said 14 year old, not 4 year old. |
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"Case and point why 14-year-olds shouldn’t have social media."
Yeah, it's much better for them to get burned by social media at 18 or 19 during their first year at college when everyone thinks they know better. |
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I didn’t read all the responses, but is there a chance she is just saying what she thinks her peers want her to say and it is all bark?
I would focus on the importance of a clean online image and how it can be used against her. Then I would her an appointment to go on the pill. Then i would make sure to keep things open between you so she can come to you but not lax enough that she thinks she can walk all over you. |
I also think this is possibly just peer talk. Although maybe she should change her peer group if that is the case. I would also make a gyno appointment for her and maybe use some of PP's scared straight ideas. Good luck OP. |
You will receive "privacy" when you buy the phone and pay the monthly charge. |
Which for most kids is after college..WOW! You can't talk to the doctor or the bank for them anymore but you still think it is fine to read thorugh their social media. I guess that would be incentive for them to take over payments from you. |
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Come ON, people, young girls don’t talk this way. You know who talks this way? Pervy middle aged guys who are having fantasies. Go look at Porn Hub - half of the videos are fantasies of older dudes ‘doing’ young teens in nasty ways.
This was written by a middle aged-60+ year old pervert guy. |
Oh, okay. A Hollywood movie says the daughter is probably just kidding.
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I generally support this but at the very minimum, heavily controlled social media (i.e. no need to be on ALL social media platforms). But, the problem is that the genie is out of the bottle and what does OP do next. Mine are 11/9/2 so I have no idea. First blush would be to be punitive but I think that would just drive her 14 YO to resentment and who knows what. I think banning of social media is a start and having a conversation with the girl is paramount. A REAL convo - not a chastising one. She needs to have an adult sex conversation on this topic. |
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This child needs a therapist or pastoral counselor but she's not all that unusual. Sexual precociousness is almost a prerequisite for popularity these days. She's reading the social cues correctly. The question she needs to ask herself: is it worth it?
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Mine are both under 10 and I'm really, really dreading the transition out of the My Little Pony and Disney Princess years... But anyway, teenagers are going to resent you no matter what you do or do not do. That part I remember very well! |
"The school found out" because the boy told his friends and they told their friends and soon everyone knew, which is a point well worth emphasizing to teenage girls. |
So I remember my high school GF, senior year, telling me that back in freshman year all the girls had talked about which boys had great bodies and which ones they wanted to F, and I was all "wait, what now?" (especially about myself being on the list). I had no clue! |
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Op you are handling this great. I worked at a middle school and there was so much cell phone drama with instagram, snapchat... SM used for bullying was worse with girls in middle school than boys but there were boys posting very racist stuff and incredibly vulgar things. There were also inappropriate pictures sent which then were passed around. As everything is forever these days, anytime those pictures surfaced again, the original boys who had them would be interviewed by police all over again. Having sex was outlier behavior (at least for the middle school I worked at) but taking half clothed selfies was more common. Their brains are just not fully developed and they really don't understand both that the pictures stay around forever and that any kids who receive it can be charged with having child pornography.
I do not allow my middle schooler to have instagram or snapchat and we do monitor his phone but not as often as we should be. This is a good reminder that even when you think you don't need to, you should be vigilant. At the school I worked at some parents didn't monitor because they didn't have a grasp on the technologies, or they trusted their kids when their kids were not really ready for that trust, or they were just incredibly naive. |