Anonymous wrote:Seriously? I definitely went to movies alone at that age
Don't make her be the dork whose mom
Chaperones. No one will want to invite her next time
\\Anonymous wrote:My 12 yo DD said a bunch of girls and boys from her class (6th grade) wanted to go to the movies Friday. I told her that was fine but because this situation was new to me I would have to talk with her father and think about if it was okay to go without an adult. I asked her what she would think if her brother and I went to the same movie but sat a couple rows back to chaparone. She wasn't pleased but seemed okay with it.
Thoughts as to whether I should chaparone or not? Also tips for chaperoning movie outings would be greatly appreciated.
Anonymous wrote:Seriously? I definitely went to movies alone at that age
Don't make her be the dork whose mom Chaperones. No one will want to invite her next time
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then it group that my weirds me out a bit. They could be rowdy and annoy others.
I've gone to movies alone since I was 16, and by alone I mean with no friends. Just me. I've had numerous creepy men sit right next to me through the years. And now that I take my young son with me, I've had men sit next to him too,for no apparent reason. Not in situations where the theater is even half full. I mean like when there are 10+ rows that are completely empty and some lone man decides to sit next to my kid.
So I'd at least have a conversation with her about that. If someone makes her feel uncomfortable, don't hesitate to move. You won't always be able to chaperone...
Interesting. I've never had that happen and I see a movie alone each week when DH is deployed.
Anonymous wrote:Then it group that my weirds me out a bit. They could be rowdy and annoy others.
I've gone to movies alone since I was 16, and by alone I mean with no friends. Just me. I've had numerous creepy men sit right next to me through the years. And now that I take my young son with me, I've had men sit next to him too,for no apparent reason. Not in situations where the theater is even half full. I mean like when there are 10+ rows that are completely empty and some lone man decides to sit next to my kid.
So I'd at least have a conversation with her about that. If someone makes her feel uncomfortable, don't hesitate to move. You won't always be able to chaperone...