Anonymous wrote:Incredible timing on this post…like others, I never initiate but will accept their requests. Just now my daughter’s boyfriend of 6 months just sent me a request from his private account. He’s with our family a lot so it’s not too unexpected but I am a bit hesitant to accept it. Open to other’s thoughts on this.
Anonymous wrote:No. I am involved in a sport and that is against our SafeSport rules, so I figure it’s probably a good rule to follow in life.
Anonymous wrote:I follow and am followed by several of my 14yo DD's friends on Instagram. These are also kids I know in person, have over for sleepovers, drive around to the mall, etc.
My personal rules are:
1) I don't initiate requests, only accept them and follow back.
2) I don't talk to their parents about stuff I see on Instagram - I would break this rule for a safety issue, but I have not encountered any safety issues
3) I don't share anything on my own account that would be embarrassing for my daughter beyond the usual mom-cringe factor - e.g., no naked baby pictures, no naked me pictures, etc.
Other than that, it kind of feels like the kid equivalent of when I was a teenager and had certain friends whose parents I liked more than my own/other parents. I'm well aware that there are other Instagram accounts (I also have other Instagram accounts) and that I'm not getting the complete picture, but I think it's a positive sign that they want to be connected and share ANYTHING. If it's part of a broader teenager scam to make parents think they're sweet, so be it. I still think their cute little photo ops at the mall are cute.
Anonymous wrote:I follow and am followed by several of my 14yo DD's friends on Instagram. These are also kids I know in person, have over for sleepovers, drive around to the mall, etc.
My personal rules are:
1) I don't initiate requests, only accept them and follow back.
2) I don't talk to their parents about stuff I see on Instagram - I would break this rule for a safety issue, but I have not encountered any safety issues
3) I don't share anything on my own account that would be embarrassing for my daughter beyond the usual mom-cringe factor - e.g., no naked baby pictures, no naked me pictures, etc.
Other than that, it kind of feels like the kid equivalent of when I was a teenager and had certain friends whose parents I liked more than my own/other parents. I'm well aware that there are other Instagram accounts (I also have other Instagram accounts) and that I'm not getting the complete picture, but I think it's a positive sign that they want to be connected and share ANYTHING. If it's part of a broader teenager scam to make parents think they're sweet, so be it. I still think their cute little photo ops at the mall are cute.
Anonymous wrote:Totally creepy to follow.
What reason would there be for this other than for an over-the-top nosy/competitive parent, the weird desperate need-to-be-the-cool parent (still creepy nosy), or more unsavory scenario? It's inappropriate to follow minors and I also agree with the volunteer stance mentioned by a pp - if only for the parent's protection.
Anonymous wrote:No, I would not be friends on social media with my child's friend.