Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most college kids would probably just order them from Amazon anyway. Tell your kid to set up a recurring delivery if you’re concerned about their capability to keep condoms around.
Or you could do this for your kid if they’re willing to tell you how many they need.
Holy moly. Land the helicopter
Nothing says "landed the helicopter" like raising a grandchild for a college student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most college kids would probably just order them from Amazon anyway. Tell your kid to set up a recurring delivery if you’re concerned about their capability to keep condoms around.
Or you could do this for your kid if they’re willing to tell you how many they need.
Holy moly. Land the helicopter
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like a hopeful teenager. Don't worry, you are going off to college for real very soon.
Huh? Are you not aware of what’s happening at orientation?
The same thing as the rest of the year. Pack condoms and plan b for the whole year, not specifically orientation.
Should DD be sent with condoms or is that for the men to bring?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most college kids would probably just order them from Amazon anyway. Tell your kid to set up a recurring delivery if you’re concerned about their capability to keep condoms around.
Or you could do this for your kid if they’re willing to tell you how many they need.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“We” need to pack protection? Are you planning on going to college too?
Your supervision ends when your kid is installed in their dorm room. What happens after that is up to them — that’s kind of the point.
Look, this is a serious issue. Do you really not ensure that your kid has packed condoms? Your daughter can’t be sure men will be responsible enough to bring protection. Better safe than sorry.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Most college kids would probably just order them from Amazon anyway. Tell your kid to set up a recurring delivery if you’re concerned about their capability to keep condoms around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you think your kids are unable to walk into a drug store and purchase condoms, walk them into the store, locate the condoms (or ask the pharmacist for an aisle suggestion), look thru the varieties and make a purchase decision. A parent’s job is to TEACH vs handling every.single. thing for them. What’s next? “Mom, I am out of condoms, can you order some more?”
Are you in denial that most college students are having sex?
NP. Not sure how you could have possibly gotten that from what they said. Their point was that if there's any friction for college kids being able to buy condoms — lack of knowledge, discomfort asking a store employee about where the condoms are, lack of confidence about what kind to buy — that part of the parent's job is to remove that friction before the student goes off to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you think your kids are unable to walk into a drug store and purchase condoms, walk them into the store, locate the condoms (or ask the pharmacist for an aisle suggestion), look thru the varieties and make a purchase decision. A parent’s job is to TEACH vs handling every.single. thing for them. What’s next? “Mom, I am out of condoms, can you order some more?”
Are you in denial that most college students are having sex?
Anonymous wrote:If you think your kids are unable to walk into a drug store and purchase condoms, walk them into the store, locate the condoms (or ask the pharmacist for an aisle suggestion), look thru the varieties and make a purchase decision. A parent’s job is to TEACH vs handling every.single. thing for them. What’s next? “Mom, I am out of condoms, can you order some more?”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“We” need to pack protection? Are you planning on going to college too?
Your supervision ends when your kid is installed in their dorm room. What happens after that is up to them — that’s kind of the point.
Look, this is a serious issue. Do you really not ensure that your kid has packed condoms? Your daughter can’t be sure men will be responsible enough to bring protection. Better safe than sorry.
Anonymous wrote:If you haven’t prepared your daughter for safe sex, good choices, being careful about alcohol, throwing some Trojans and Plan B into her carryon isn’t enough. Have those talks. And yes, have her prepared for orientation and beyond.