Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not the mother of a teen Mom (thank goodness), but I had my first child at 15.
How responsible is she in general? If she is a good mother, I would allow the dance. Being a mother does not have to equal social isolation. I would allow maybe one outing a week, with reasonable expectations on when to come home. No school night outings (is she in school?), unless it is school related (football game, homecoming, etc).
Is she still involved with the child's father?
Also very helpful! What is reasonable curfew for a 15 yo teen mom on a non school night?
Ny limitation on what the activity should be?
Anonymous wrote:Not the mother of a teen Mom (thank goodness), but I had my first child at 15.
How responsible is she in general? If she is a good mother, I would allow the dance. Being a mother does not have to equal social isolation. I would allow maybe one outing a week, with reasonable expectations on when to come home. No school night outings (is she in school?), unless it is school related (football game, homecoming, etc).
Is she still involved with the child's father?
Anonymous wrote:So I became a single Mom in grad school, definitely not the same as high school, BUT my social life was virtually non-existant.
As a custodian, I would be concerned that social activities could take away from school work as well as land the teen Mom with another baby. If she has "free" time it should be for things like sports, academic clubs, volunteering, college prep and very little "social" activities. At one month post partum, that is an absolute no. Also if she wants someone (you?) to "babysit" she needs to pay money. She must learn that a baby isn't a dog. Once she leaves your custody she would not have that help. If anything she should use the "babysitting" time to study and NOT party. If you want to reward her, she gets good grades and then she earns something like babysitting for homecoming. Until then set up very strict boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with PP, you shouldn't seek to put any actual boundaries on socialization itself, just on your responsibilities with regard to the baby. Set up very clear guidelines for what you are willing to do and how much notice you need. Something like "I am willing to watch the baby once a month for up to 3 hours, and I need at least a week's notice to make sure I have time in my schedule." Decide this limit for yourself so that its an amount you feel comfortable with and won't feel taken advantage of.
If the teen can find other suitable childcare for social events, then that is her choice and I don't think you should judge her for it.