Anonymous wrote:DS wishes he had a lock. A few months ago I walked in and saw him with an erection. Talk about shocking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My tween has a lock. She’s only used it once and we read her the riot act. Hadn’t done it since, closed door us enough to ensure privacy.
I clearly lack imagination, but what is inherently wrong with using a lock? If she’s doing drugs behind a locked door, I would think the issue would be the drugs, not the lock.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My tween has a lock. She’s only used it once and we read her the riot act. Hadn’t done it since, closed door us enough to ensure privacy.
I clearly lack imagination, but what is inherently wrong with using a lock? If she’s doing drugs behind a locked door, I would think the issue would be the drugs, not the lock.
Anonymous wrote:My tween has a lock. She’s only used it once and we read her the riot act. Hadn’t done it since, closed door us enough to ensure privacy.
Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one with siblings that try to annoy and barge in on other siblings? My oldest uses a lock every day so the younger siblings don’t bust in while he’s doing homework, reading, etc. I always used to lock my door to keep my brother out too when I was growing up. No locks on bathrooms is a pet peeve of mine..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes! A privacy doorknob “locks,” but you can just pop it open with a Bobby pin, an Allen wrench, whatever. Or it will have a little thing you can turn with a dime or a fingernail. It keeps out siblings and people who forget to knock.
It would be super weird to have bedrooms without a privacy knob. Bathrooms and bedrooms all have privacy knobs.
Same here. Their doors lock but it's not like they're dead bolts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do your kids bedroom doors have locks? I need to replace the upstairs doorknobs and would really rather they didn't have locks, but am I denying them privacy that they're somehow entitled to?
Nope. No locks. But you can give them privacy by not entering without their permission and knocking etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do your kids bedroom doors have locks? I need to replace the upstairs doorknobs and would really rather they didn't have locks, but am I denying them privacy that they're somehow entitled to?
Nope. No locks. But you can give them privacy by not entering without their permission and knocking etc.
Anonymous wrote:Yes! A privacy doorknob “locks,” but you can just pop it open with a Bobby pin, an Allen wrench, whatever. Or it will have a little thing you can turn with a dime or a fingernail. It keeps out siblings and people who forget to knock.
It would be super weird to have bedrooms without a privacy knob. Bathrooms and bedrooms all have privacy knobs.