Anonymous wrote:So this is your main beef?
“Yesterday, I found something she said about how Larla (one of the excluded children) doesn't have instagram or tiktok because if she got it, she wouldn't have any followers.”
Honestly, that comment is just run of the mill girl chatter and certainly not something I’d intervene over.
I’ll also say it’s normal for all kids to have different group chats. It’s not exclusionary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So this is your main beef?
“Yesterday, I found something she said about how Larla (one of the excluded children) doesn't have instagram or tiktok because if she got it, she wouldn't have any followers.”
Honestly, that comment is just run of the mill girl chatter and certainly not something I’d intervene over.
I’ll also say it’s normal for all kids to have different group chats. It’s not exclusionary.
Do you think that girl would appreciate that if she saw it? OP is lucky this hasn’t blown up in her daughter’s face yet, but it will. And no, that kind of comment isn’t exactly normal in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:The sending pictures is particularly harmful and dangerous.
I'd have a blunt conversation about this. Have her imagine that these texts were printed out and plastered all over the school. How would she feel? How would her friends feel? Would she proud of this?
Teen girls might pick each other apart, but putting it in writing like this is absolutely a horrible idea. She might feel annoyed with one girl, say something mean in person, and everyone would forget the next day. On a text thread? That lives FOREVER. She needs to understand it.
I'm not sure what I'd do for "punishment" but I'd absolutely make sure she knows that if I am paying for her plan, I better not ever see trash talk from her on that phone again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So this is your main beef?
“Yesterday, I found something she said about how Larla (one of the excluded children) doesn't have instagram or tiktok because if she got it, she wouldn't have any followers.”
Honestly, that comment is just run of the mill girl chatter and certainly not something I’d intervene over.
I’ll also say it’s normal for all kids to have different group chats. It’s not exclusionary.
This is OP. I'm not really sure what you mean by "beef." Of course it's normal for a kid to be part of different chats; that's not my problem. What isn't okay is the mean comments and making fun, which in my mind isn't just chatter. Thanks for the input, though.
Anonymous wrote:So this is your main beef?
“Yesterday, I found something she said about how Larla (one of the excluded children) doesn't have instagram or tiktok because if she got it, she wouldn't have any followers.”
Honestly, that comment is just run of the mill girl chatter and certainly not something I’d intervene over.
I’ll also say it’s normal for all kids to have different group chats. It’s not exclusionary.
Anonymous wrote:We've talked about how phone content generally can end up anywhere, get disseminated, repeated, about bullying and cyber bullying, not to mention all the scam risks with strangers online. I think sometimes it's best to have that discussion without tying it to the child's behavior specifically, because soon enough you're not going to be monitoring your dd's every online move. Some of it is can also be hidden/deleted instantly. How is she as a kid in person? Does she talk meanly about other kids?
Anonymous wrote:The sending pictures is particularly harmful and dangerous.
I'd have a blunt conversation about this. Have her imagine that these texts were printed out and plastered all over the school. How would she feel? How would her friends feel? Would she proud of this?
Teen girls might pick each other apart, but putting it in writing like this is absolutely a horrible idea. She might feel annoyed with one girl, say something mean in person, and everyone would forget the next day. On a text thread? That lives FOREVER. She needs to understand it.
I'm not sure what I'd do for "punishment" but I'd absolutely make sure she knows that if I am paying for her plan, I better not ever see trash talk from her on that phone again.
+1 When my kids got phones I let them know that I would be checking their phones anytime I felt like it (within reason, I wasn't checking them after a certain age). It's not too late to set that expectation now, especially with what you discovered.Anonymous wrote:Who pays for the phone? Your daughter shouldn’t have some expectation of privacy that her shit stirring messages wouldn’t be read. You better read them first before some parent screen shots it and sends to the school for bullying.
Anonymous wrote:So this is your main beef?
“Yesterday, I found something she said about how Larla (one of the excluded children) doesn't have instagram or tiktok because if she got it, she wouldn't have any followers.”
Honestly, that comment is just run of the mill girl chatter and certainly not something I’d intervene over.
I’ll also say it’s normal for all kids to have different group chats. It’s not exclusionary.
Anonymous wrote:So this is your main beef?
“Yesterday, I found something she said about how Larla (one of the excluded children) doesn't have instagram or tiktok because if she got it, she wouldn't have any followers.”
Honestly, that comment is just run of the mill girl chatter and certainly not something I’d intervene over.
I’ll also say it’s normal for all kids to have different group chats. It’s not exclusionary.
Anonymous wrote:Be blunt, I checked your phone and your behavior isn't ok and you are losing your phone for a week.
Anonymous wrote:Who pays for the phone? Your daughter shouldn’t have some expectation of privacy that her shit stirring messages wouldn’t be read. You better read them first before some parent screen shots it and sends to the school for bullying.