Anonymous wrote:Are they having sex?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I was the other mother, I would be freaked out too, but it wouldn't be for the gay reason--gay or straight, it's the issue of sexual activity being injected at such a young age.
I know many people would say sexual activity at 15 is not young but I'd be trying to delay it for a little while. I think it's great that you want to get together with the other mom to discuss it--try to figure out if it's the sexual activity reason or the gay reason or both.
Who said anything about sexual activity? OP says that OP's daughter said that they were dating. Does dating automatically mean having sex? If OP's daughter were "dating" a boy, would you assume that they were having sex?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I was the other mother, I would be freaked out too, but it wouldn't be for the gay reason--gay or straight, it's the issue of sexual activity being injected at such a young age.
I know many people would say sexual activity at 15 is not young but I'd be trying to delay it for a little while. I think it's great that you want to get together with the other mom to discuss it--try to figure out if it's the sexual activity reason or the gay reason or both.
Who said anything about sexual activity? OP says that OP's daughter said that they were dating. Does dating automatically mean having sex? If OP's daughter were "dating" a boy, would you assume that they were having sex?
Anonymous wrote:If I was the other mother, I would be freaked out too, but it wouldn't be for the gay reason--gay or straight, it's the issue of sexual activity being injected at such a young age.
I know many people would say sexual activity at 15 is not young but I'd be trying to delay it for a little while. I think it's great that you want to get together with the other mom to discuss it--try to figure out if it's the sexual activity reason or the gay reason or both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 15 yo DD informed me that she and her best friend are now dating. I was very supportive, told her I love and respect her and happy she found someone who cares about her and vice versa. I said this type of relationship is different, and I would need to figure out things like setting boundaries - it might very well mean no more sleepovers, for example.
The other mom, however, texted my DD while we were talking and said her daughter will not be coming over to our house ever again and took away the phone and laptop. She told my daughter that they could be friends, but there would be no "dating" - her quotes. My daughter was in tears and I was speechless. Please give me advice - I am thinking about inviting the mom to lunch to discuss. I like her daughter and cherish the girls' friendship. I too am not thrilled about the changed dynamics, but I want to be supportive and think, whether it is a girl or boy, you can't tell your kids who to love, and if they are gay, you can't change them by denying the relationship! And let me be clear, I'm not thrilled because I think it is risky to turn a BFF friendship into a romantic one, not because it is a same-sex one.
I would be confused also and not by the gay part. Obviously the sleepover issue is changing- any GF relegated to FR or guest room just as if any GF was a BF. Sad that DD's first GF is her best friend because if they break up it's a double loss. How long have they been best friends or is this a newer best friend that was really a girl DD was dating during part of the best friend period?
Anonymous wrote:My 15 yo DD informed me that she and her best friend are now dating. I was very supportive, told her I love and respect her and happy she found someone who cares about her and vice versa. I said this type of relationship is different, and I would need to figure out things like setting boundaries - it might very well mean no more sleepovers, for example.
The other mom, however, texted my DD while we were talking and said her daughter will not be coming over to our house ever again and took away the phone and laptop. She told my daughter that they could be friends, but there would be no "dating" - her quotes. My daughter was in tears and I was speechless. Please give me advice - I am thinking about inviting the mom to lunch to discuss. I like her daughter and cherish the girls' friendship. I too am not thrilled about the changed dynamics, but I want to be supportive and think, whether it is a girl or boy, you can't tell your kids who to love, and if they are gay, you can't change them by denying the relationship! And let me be clear, I'm not thrilled because I think it is risky to turn a BFF friendship into a romantic one, not because it is a same-sex one.