Anonymous wrote:What is Finsta?
Anonymous wrote:She doesn't have a choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if they create accounts at school using their friends cell phones and won't let you follow them?
That's why it is important to address communication and trust issues from the time your kids are very young. You can't go back and start over when you find out your kid is lying to you at age 16.
When we address these issues, we try to distill every incident down to this basic tenet of trust. This isn't about phones or social media; this is about lying. Every time a kid betrays that, they take a couple of steps back. If you lie, I can't trust you. If I can't trust you, you can't have the car, you can't go to someone's house that we don't know, you can't be unsupervised at home, etc. If we CAN trust you, you'll have more liberties, more freedom, etc., because we have more confidence that you are making good decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no "let."
+1,000,000.
I wonder how many of these commenters have older teens. I felt this way when my DD was in early teens, but now that she is older, I see how things change and how parents need to adjust things. It's an issue of respect and trust when they get close to adulthood. Big difference between 13 and 17!!
Anonymous wrote:What if they create accounts at school using their friends cell phones and won't let you follow them?
Anonymous wrote:Who pays for the phone?
Honestly though, if you start it young, you will fairly quickly become disinterested. We very seldom look at any of our kids' social media stuff, we NEVER post comments, and we don't discuss anything that we do occasionally see. I think they've sort of forgotten that we lurk out there occasionally. We also don't draw attention to anything that might be edgy; we just let it go and would only intervene if we saw something that really threatened their safety or well-being.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no "let."
This was my exact first thought, verbatim.
Either he lets you follow him or he loses his phone (or gets a flip phone with no internet capability), and the family computer/iPad has controls that don’t allow these sites/apps.
Anonymous wrote:+1Anonymous wrote:There is no "let."
When my oldest was in middle school facebook was all the rage for kids his age. He decided not to get a facebook because he didn't want me following him (there was no option). Fine by me, to this day he never got facebook.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no "let."
This was my exact first thought, verbatim.
Either he lets you follow him or he loses his phone (or gets a flip phone with no internet capability), and the family computer/iPad has controls that don’t allow these sites/apps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm really torn about it. I have monitored him since he was 13. Initially his account was logged in on my phone and I saw everything. Eventually when I saw he used it responsibility, I logged out and followed. It has been only the past month that he blocked me from seeing stories. He is really starting to come into his own and expecting more privacy. He is almost 17....on the verge of adulthood. He's an excellent student, and if more of a nerd socially than a partier. My sense is that it is time to start letting go. It's hard, but I do trust him to not do something stupid based on his past behavior on social media. I knew many here would disagree, but I thought it would start a dialogue about when it is time to loosen the strings.
+1. This is how I'm going. Originally I monitored but now that DS has proven to be responsible on-line and in teen life in general, I'm lightening up. I will check things again when it's college application time, to make sure nothing is there that may be questionable. He also knows that at any time, out of the blue, his father or I may ask him to bring everything up so we can see it.