Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone for posting about your own experiences. It's very helpful to hear about the range of experiences you all have had. Sounds like DD and I are both right: coed sleepovers are not uncommon, and much of the time they are strictly platonic, but sometimes they are not, and sometimes situations arise that I would definitely want to protect my child from.
Of course it all comes down to who the individual kid and her friends are, who is hosting/supervising, etc. In this case, we really don't know the hosts well, nor do we know every kid who is going to be there, so we've said "no." DD will be in college in 9 months and we've talked about the fact that these decisions will be hers to make in the future. But for now, my gut tells me there are too many unknowns here.
Anonymous wrote:If your kid is 17, zhe is having sex if zhe wants too, don't fool yourself. Not your business.
Anonymous wrote:I graduated from high school in 2002. We had lots of coed sleepovers. It wasn't a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:We had a few if them growing up. We'd go to friends' summer houses and all sleep in sleeping bags (1 person per bag) and stay up all night talking. There weren't any couples in my group of friends and no one ever did anything but talk and laugh. Occasionally a parent would remind us that it was late.![]()
Now in my 40's I don't have a problem with that kind of bonding and if DS asked to do something similar it would be okay. Not everything is about sex. You know your kid. Trust or don't but when they go to college you aren't going to have a camera, a parent, and a microphone telling them what to do and not do in the dorm room.
Anonymous wrote:She's 17. If she's gonna have sex, she's gonna have sex. But I'm guessing she's not gonna have it in front of all her friends.
Time to snip those apron strings, Mom.
Anonymous wrote:Coed sleepover?
Reminds me of NFTY.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD did one after senior prom. At the house of a girl with very strict parents (who were home) so I didn't worry about it. But as a general rule not a good idea.
Parents weren't that strict. What exactly is the point of a sleepover though and who does one in high school at that?