Anonymous wrote:My 15 and 17 years old have their phones in the rooms all night. The 15 year old is never on it past 11, and the 17 year old is usually done with it around 12:30 (I can see their screen time reports). That feels reasonable to me. They’re learning to self-regulate.
Anonymous wrote:It's really frustrating OP but trust me, you aren't the only ones. Kids are like this. They'll know *one* kid who is up texting until 2 am and then complain that "everyone" gets to keep their phones in their room and "everyone" else's parents let them text whenever they want.
It's always the same. And your kid isn't even intentionally lying, their perspective is just skewed. They do this all throughout childhood and adolescents. Everyone else has treats in their lunch. Everyone else gets to watch more TV. Everyone else gets to stay home alone. Everyone else has a phone. Everyone else wears makeup. Everyone else gets to go to this party with no parents present. And on and on.
Stay strong. It's not everyone! Lots of us are holding the same lines you are.
Anonymous wrote:Um, accepting your premise that other people are the problem.
What is your plan for how to parent your child in light of that reality?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:11:30 is very generous. Good for you, OP.
Those of us who care about keeping our kids healthy, safe and engaged with the world are setting and reinforcing boundaries.
Wait, am I tracking that the assertion here is that because I don't have the same specific rule about this specific thing as you, I therefore do not care about keeping my kid safe healthy and engaged with the world?
I love how parents like you show themselves - “I’m tryyying and feel hurt because you have rules.” Then you will live on this thread and tell OP and rational people like me that we are unkind. 😭
Anonymous wrote:News flash: not all families are going to have the same rules.
I don't take my teen's phone at night, as long as he gets up in the morning without complaint, keeps his grades up, stays engaged in activities like sports or theater, and seems to have healthy friendships.
But I'm strict in other ways that the take-the-phone parents aren't. And believe me, I hear just as much from my teen about what your teen is allowed to do, as you hear from your teen about mine having his phone at night.
Kids will selectively notice when other kids have more leeway. You just have to stick by your rules and accept that other households will do things differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:11:30 is very generous. Good for you, OP.
Those of us who care about keeping our kids healthy, safe and engaged with the world are setting and reinforcing boundaries.
Wait, am I tracking that the assertion here is that because I don't have the same specific rule about this specific thing as you, I therefore do not care about keeping my kid safe healthy and engaged with the world?
Anonymous wrote:How old are we talking here, OP?