Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any 27-year-old that would date a high school senior has something deeply wrong with them. Absolutely not okay.
Ok . But, don’t you think this situation is different on some level?
Anonymous wrote:Any 27-year-old that would date a high school senior has something deeply wrong with them. Absolutely not okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Queer woman and mom here: I would not be happy about this. Such a huge age gap at those ages and what kind of 27-year-old dates a high school student?! When I was a first-year in grad school I dated a first-year college student and that felt like a big gap (and didn't last). That said, it's so challenging when you disapprove of a relationship. You don't want your daughter to double down just because you say no. I guess I would want to meet the woman just to understand who I was dealing with.
Assuming the older woman seems just immature but not dangerous, I guess I would just tell my kid all the rules we have are still in force while she is in high school and living in my home, ask her opened-ended questions about what her friends think of this situation, encourage her to be future thinking about college, etc., keep having all the conversations we have been having for years about healthy relationships, red flags, how to get out of uncomfortable situations, and consent. Chances are one or both of them will get tired of the weirdness of the situation and limitations on their relationship.
If the older woman seemed like bad news, honestly, I would gather all my old d*ke friends and we would go to her place and have a conversation about how the relationship couldn't continue. But I wouldn't do that unless I thought it was a dangerous situation for my kid.
Another queer woman cosigning this.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have kids, but I remember what worked for me at that age.
Let your daughter know that you disapprove, use a gentle, polite but firm tone about it. Lay out the reasons why you are concerned. But don't lay down the law and try to prevent her from meeting the woman, tell her instead that you will let her take the right decision. Tell her you are there for her anytime she needs to. Let your conversation convey care more than disapproval. Its a strange age, late teens - you are chafing against parental control, but you still want to know they care. Even if she continues to date her, your words will stay with her and she will know in the back of her head to look out for herself.
Meet the woman, but not at home. I know its the pandemic, but it is getting warm outside, so may be at an outdoor coffee shop. Anywhere you can assess her character easily - your turf, but not your home. Be no-nonsense, but never rude. Get her to talk, more than talking yourself. If you have a gay/lesbian friend you trust, and understands your parental concern - tag them along. The community is small, and if she had any sense, she would preferably know enough to avoid the potential reputational risk.
Good luck and strength to you!
Anonymous wrote:Your teen daughter is behind preyed upon and exploited by a much older adult, OP.
This is not OK.
Anonymous wrote:Queer woman and mom here: I would not be happy about this. Such a huge age gap at those ages and what kind of 27-year-old dates a high school student?! When I was a first-year in grad school I dated a first-year college student and that felt like a big gap (and didn't last). That said, it's so challenging when you disapprove of a relationship. You don't want your daughter to double down just because you say no. I guess I would want to meet the woman just to understand who I was dealing with.
Assuming the older woman seems just immature but not dangerous, I guess I would just tell my kid all the rules we have are still in force while she is in high school and living in my home, ask her opened-ended questions about what her friends think of this situation, encourage her to be future thinking about college, etc., keep having all the conversations we have been having for years about healthy relationships, red flags, how to get out of uncomfortable situations, and consent. Chances are one or both of them will get tired of the weirdness of the situation and limitations on their relationship.
If the older woman seemed like bad news, honestly, I would gather all my old d*ke friends and we would go to her place and have a conversation about how the relationship couldn't continue. But I wouldn't do that unless I thought it was a dangerous situation for my kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she still in high school?
Yes she's a senior