Anonymous wrote:Dating. Weird.
Marriage. Not weird.
I have nothing to hide and could careless
Anonymous wrote:Dating. Weird.
Marriage. Not weird.
I have nothing to hide and could careless
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never: I am divorced in my 40s. I made my boyfriend at 23 return a cell phone for my birthday. I did not want to be accessible to anyone 24/7. Of course, now we are not where I am going is my privacy. No one is tracking me 24/7. No way in hell.
I’m one of the pp’s above who has device location sharing turned on with my husband. It’s not like we “track” each other 24/7. Honestly I think we both forget that it’s even enabled most of the time. But every once in a while, I’ll see if he’s left the office so I don’t need to bug him / text him about whether he’s left yet. The main use case for us is for travel, especially since we don’t need to be glued at the hip. I might spend an afternoon shopping in a town while he goes snorkeling, but it’s nice to know I could find him in an emergency. We don’t track and zero trust issues.
That is weird. Why do you need to know if he has left the office? People did not used to have cell phones. They were better off.
When I am deciding whether or not to start bedtime myself or wait for my husband so we can tag team it, it is really helpful. With three kids under 6, I will wait the extra few minutes to start if I know he is five minutes away. I don’t want him texting while driving, so location sharing is a better way to stay in touch.
You must be in your 30s. I think this is nuts. Bedtime routine starts whether he is home or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never: I am divorced in my 40s. I made my boyfriend at 23 return a cell phone for my birthday. I did not want to be accessible to anyone 24/7. Of course, now we are not where I am going is my privacy. No one is tracking me 24/7. No way in hell.
I’m one of the pp’s above who has device location sharing turned on with my husband. It’s not like we “track” each other 24/7. Honestly I think we both forget that it’s even enabled most of the time. But every once in a while, I’ll see if he’s left the office so I don’t need to bug him / text him about whether he’s left yet. The main use case for us is for travel, especially since we don’t need to be glued at the hip. I might spend an afternoon shopping in a town while he goes snorkeling, but it’s nice to know I could find him in an emergency. We don’t track and zero trust issues.
That is weird. Why do you need to know if he has left the office? People did not used to have cell phones. They were better off.
DP, but my husband leaves the office at a Different time every day, I like to know when to start dinner.
Our family uses an app, we check on the kids as needed and really dinner is the only time I pay attention to where my husband is.
I do talk to the kids about dating/friendships and sharing location on Snapchat. I do not think that should be a normal part of teen/young adult relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never: I am divorced in my 40s. I made my boyfriend at 23 return a cell phone for my birthday. I did not want to be accessible to anyone 24/7. Of course, now we are not where I am going is my privacy. No one is tracking me 24/7. No way in hell.
I’m one of the pp’s above who has device location sharing turned on with my husband. It’s not like we “track” each other 24/7. Honestly I think we both forget that it’s even enabled most of the time. But every once in a while, I’ll see if he’s left the office so I don’t need to bug him / text him about whether he’s left yet. The main use case for us is for travel, especially since we don’t need to be glued at the hip. I might spend an afternoon shopping in a town while he goes snorkeling, but it’s nice to know I could find him in an emergency. We don’t track and zero trust issues.
That is weird. Why do you need to know if he has left the office? People did not used to have cell phones. They were better off.
When I am deciding whether or not to start bedtime myself or wait for my husband so we can tag team it, it is really helpful. With three kids under 6, I will wait the extra few minutes to start if I know he is five minutes away. I don’t want him texting while driving, so location sharing is a better way to stay in touch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never: I am divorced in my 40s. I made my boyfriend at 23 return a cell phone for my birthday. I did not want to be accessible to anyone 24/7. Of course, now we are not where I am going is my privacy. No one is tracking me 24/7. No way in hell.
I’m one of the pp’s above who has device location sharing turned on with my husband. It’s not like we “track” each other 24/7. Honestly I think we both forget that it’s even enabled most of the time. But every once in a while, I’ll see if he’s left the office so I don’t need to bug him / text him about whether he’s left yet. The main use case for us is for travel, especially since we don’t need to be glued at the hip. I might spend an afternoon shopping in a town while he goes snorkeling, but it’s nice to know I could find him in an emergency. We don’t track and zero trust issues.
That is weird. Why do you need to know if he has left the office? People did not used to have cell phones. They were better off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never: I am divorced in my 40s. I made my boyfriend at 23 return a cell phone for my birthday. I did not want to be accessible to anyone 24/7. Of course, now we are not where I am going is my privacy. No one is tracking me 24/7. No way in hell.
I’m one of the pp’s above who has device location sharing turned on with my husband. It’s not like we “track” each other 24/7. Honestly I think we both forget that it’s even enabled most of the time. But every once in a while, I’ll see if he’s left the office so I don’t need to bug him / text him about whether he’s left yet. The main use case for us is for travel, especially since we don’t need to be glued at the hip. I might spend an afternoon shopping in a town while he goes snorkeling, but it’s nice to know I could find him in an emergency. We don’t track and zero trust issues.
That is weird. Why do you need to know if he has left the office? People did not used to have cell phones. They were better off.