Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know couples that location share for logistical purposes, and it seems to work well for them. Neither I or DH have every expressed interest in doing so with each other, but I don't think he's have a strong reaction if I were to suggest it. I just don't need someone knowing where I am at every moment of my life. I'm not doing anything shady, I just enjoy autonomy.
This. I drop by Baskin-Robbins a little more often than I would like anyone to know. It's okay to want to keep a bit of privacy.
Anonymous wrote:Also, why wouldn't you want your spouse to be able to know where you are?
Literally, any answer I can think of is suspect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't currently, nor does my husband with me. But if that was his reaction? I'd be going through is phone TODAY. That response is suspicious AF.
Op here. I did, didn’t find anything.
How do you go through someone's phone? I don't have my husband's password nor he mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend's family all track each other and are proud to speak about how helpful it is but she also flipped out when her own parents retired and wanted to be in the tracking group because she didnt want them to know what her family was doing every moment. It was interesting to see her "over my dead body" reaction when she is such a big proponent of tracking.
Why is it weird? She doesn't want people outside of her household having their location. That sounds fine. No one is saying that everyone should share their location with everyone they come across. Your spouse and children are presumably closer to you than the starbucks barista or grandparents you see twice a year.
But why would it matter if they had her location? They would only check if it they needed to because of arriving / leaving or for safety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't currently, nor does my husband with me. But if that was his reaction? I'd be going through is phone TODAY. That response is suspicious AF.
Op here. I did, didn’t find anything.
So now what?
Tell us how your marriage is otherwise then …
I mean, I guess he could have a burner phone but then why would he not want to share his location on the “clean” one? 🤔
As to how I was able to go through his phone, we share the same passcode. That’s why I thought nothing about this location sharing request! We’ve never had trust issues before. In my mind, it was to make logistics easier and simpler and not some huge ask or philosophical thing about trust and surveillance.
Our marriage in general is pretty good. We hardly ever fight, still have frequent sex l, still say I love you several times a day, etc. I think the reason why I’m feeling so upset about this is because we hardly ever fight and so I’m not used to this unsettled feeling.
At the end of the fight, I was still being pretty frosty and he wanted us to agree that it was a difference in perspective leading to misunderstanding and miscommunication. We use location sharing with our kids differently - I use it for logistics, he does use it to check up on them and make sure they are where they said there are. So that’s why he felt insulted when I asked. He thought I was implying that we think he is untrustworthy and up to shady stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend's family all track each other and are proud to speak about how helpful it is but she also flipped out when her own parents retired and wanted to be in the tracking group because she didnt want them to know what her family was doing every moment. It was interesting to see her "over my dead body" reaction when she is such a big proponent of tracking.
Maybe because she knew her parents would not use it in the sprirt in which it is intended. Perhaps, again, you anti-location-sharing people don't understand - the problem isn't the techology, it's the relationship and how it's used. It sounds like you believe once you share your location with your spouse and children, you must be willing to share your location with any family member. But that is not how these things work, because again, it is driven by the relationship and nature of the use.
So you are saying then she doesn't trust her parents and they don't have a good relationship? Maybe her parents just want to check they are home before dropping over. Or maybe the woman is bringing the kids to her parents for the afternoon and the parents just want to see when she left the house. All innocent, not an issue of a bad relationship. Normal and healthy to have each others locations so you don't have to bother them with a text and can easily check to get a sense of their plans and to make your own plans. According to most posters on here it would be extremely rare and unusual and a sign of mental illness to use it for any purpose other than innocent good so I don't really see why you wouldn't share it broadly.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I should also add that a lot of this has to do with his mistrust of the “surveillance state.” He has some philosophical thing against it, which I said was dumb considering I am your wife not the government. He said he just doesn’t want to be tracked 24/7. I said I have no intention or desire to do that and around and around we went.
It ended with him agreeing to share and me removing it because I don’t want to make him feel uncomfortable.
I think I am going to take a couple steps back emotionally and see what he does - whether he matches my energy or not. If he doesn’t meant to share his location? Ok fine, I will never ask where he is ir what he is up to again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't currently, nor does my husband with me. But if that was his reaction? I'd be going through is phone TODAY. That response is suspicious AF.
Op here. I did, didn’t find anything.
How do you go through someone's phone? I don't have my husband's password nor he mine.