Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some families allow this, some don't. Disregarding the occasional logistical reasons like late nights/snowstorms, etc., those who do allow it are just accepting of what is going on (i.e., sex). Also, age matters a lot. 14 vs. 18 is a very big difference.
Among those who don't (which are most, but not by the majority you'd think), I believe:
1) Some don't as a way to pretend that their teens do not have sex, even when they know they do. It's a "I'm not going to make it easy for you," which still signals that it's wrong and potentially dangerous but in a subtle way. It keeps the conversation shut down, which can be beneficial in the short-term (avoids the awkward!) but potentially negative long-term (teens don't feel it's okay to ask parents questions or share concerns, and/or lie).
2) Others don't because they truly believe it prevents teens from having sex. It doesn't generally, because obviously sex can take place anywhere (well, almost anywhere) at any time. So it's about control.
3) A third group doesn't actually care but doesn't allow it because they don't want to be judged.
Haha no. Those who do are just permissive and lack boundaries. They think they are somehow getting ahead of something or making it safer but really just effing their kids up same as those who allow drinking to practice
Anonymous wrote:Some families allow this, some don't. Disregarding the occasional logistical reasons like late nights/snowstorms, etc., those who do allow it are just accepting of what is going on (i.e., sex). Also, age matters a lot. 14 vs. 18 is a very big difference.
Among those who don't (which are most, but not by the majority you'd think), I believe:
1) Some don't as a way to pretend that their teens do not have sex, even when they know they do. It's a "I'm not going to make it easy for you," which still signals that it's wrong and potentially dangerous but in a subtle way. It keeps the conversation shut down, which can be beneficial in the short-term (avoids the awkward!) but potentially negative long-term (teens don't feel it's okay to ask parents questions or share concerns, and/or lie).
2) Others don't because they truly believe it prevents teens from having sex. It doesn't generally, because obviously sex can take place anywhere (well, almost anywhere) at any time. So it's about control.
3) A third group doesn't actually care but doesn't allow it because they don't want to be judged.
Anonymous wrote:I’m told that it is commonly accepted by parents that their teenagers will have sleepovers with their boyfriends or girlfriends. I completely floored by this concept and not sure if I should believe what I’m hearing. Is this really a thing these days where parents just go along with this or even enable it on summer trips?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some families allow this, some don't. Disregarding the occasional logistical reasons like late nights/snowstorms, etc., those who do allow it are just accepting of what is going on (i.e., sex). Also, age matters a lot. 14 vs. 18 is a very big difference.
Among those who don't (which are most, but not by the majority you'd think), I believe:
1) Some don't as a way to pretend that their teens do not have sex, even when they know they do. It's a "I'm not going to make it easy for you," which still signals that it's wrong and potentially dangerous but in a subtle way. It keeps the conversation shut down, which can be beneficial in the short-term (avoids the awkward!) but potentially negative long-term (teens don't feel it's okay to ask parents questions or share concerns, and/or lie).
2) Others don't because they truly believe it prevents teens from having sex. It doesn't generally, because obviously sex can take place anywhere (well, almost anywhere) at any time. So it's about control.
3) A third group doesn't actually care but doesn't allow it because they don't want to be judged.
Haha no. Those who do are just permissive and lack boundaries. They think they are somehow getting ahead of something or making it safer but really just effing their kids up same as those who allow drinking to practice
Anonymous wrote:I know quite a few parents who have allowed this. It's weird to me and not something that I'm ok with.
I recently had another mom ask me if we allow significant others to sleep over in high school as she was getting pressure from her son that "everyone he knows is doing it."
FYI--this is a wealthy, highly educated, mostly WASP crowd of parents.
Anonymous wrote:Some families allow this, some don't. Disregarding the occasional logistical reasons like late nights/snowstorms, etc., those who do allow it are just accepting of what is going on (i.e., sex). Also, age matters a lot. 14 vs. 18 is a very big difference.
Among those who don't (which are most, but not by the majority you'd think), I believe:
1) Some don't as a way to pretend that their teens do not have sex, even when they know they do. It's a "I'm not going to make it easy for you," which still signals that it's wrong and potentially dangerous but in a subtle way. It keeps the conversation shut down, which can be beneficial in the short-term (avoids the awkward!) but potentially negative long-term (teens don't feel it's okay to ask parents questions or share concerns, and/or lie).
2) Others don't because they truly believe it prevents teens from having sex. It doesn't generally, because obviously sex can take place anywhere (well, almost anywhere) at any time. So it's about control.
3) A third group doesn't actually care but doesn't allow it because they don't want to be judged.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t believe everything you hear. This is not common at all.
I let my DD have her boyfriend stay over but they are both 20 and in college. No way would I let this happen in HS. Pretty sure I’m an outlier.
We are non-White, non-Christian UMC immigrants from a moderately conservative society. My kids did not even have the time to date in HS. They dated in college, but, we were not told about it and we never asked. They knew that we would not approve of random BFs and GFs being paraded in front of us. They knew that they had to find people we would approve of and only come to us when they needed the permission to marry.
You sound like the parents of one of my friends (who slept around like crazy) and then married her DH without telling her parents. Crummy parents.