Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old? I think this is a huge problem people don’t really talk about.
why do you think it's a "huge problem". Its actually normal and healthy.
Kids looking at porn is not healthy. Especially the type of violent porn that is being produced today. This is not the same thing as finding dad’s Playboy magazines. The stuff out there today can wreck a person’s sexual development.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not mad he had porn on his phone ! I’m mad he tried to hide it in the app!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old? I think this is a huge problem people don’t really talk about.
why do you think it's a "huge problem". Its actually normal and healthy.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly OP, this has been the issue with our teenage son since about age 14. Now 17. And no, I don’t really talk to other moms about it.
In my kids case, he’s been open to us about struggling with his sexuality. My guess is he’s bisexual. Maybe he’s gay and doesn’t want to admit it to himself.
This was an ongoing, every time we restricted, he found a way around it thing. We put on a blocker, he got around it. We took the phone, he got it back and the porn was back.
He’s working with a therapist who is a younger guy who specializes in adolescent boys. He’s says it’s really helpful, but he isn’t ready to talk to us about his sexuality yet. We’re here when he is. He recently told me maybe he could see himself having kids one day. Which tells me he can start to envision a healthy relationship with someone. And thats encouraging.
Otherwise great kid, BTW. No substances. Great grades and. SATs, nice person. Just this.
We try to model a healthy relationship and make it clear that sex is not like porn. Discuss consent and healthy relationships.
At 17, we are now loosening up on electronic restrictions, because we don’t have a choice.
I agree porn is a huge problem and unhealthy. But people saying it’s bad, so stop him need to realize how hard it is to stop a determined kid who needs a laptop for school, and that if you don’t deal with the reasons they want porn, content blocking isn’t enough.
If someone has other suggestions, I’m all ears.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let him keep his porn. Knock on the closed bedroom or bathroom door and wait to be invited in before entering. Let him have his sexual outlet.
To do otherwise disempowers him sexually and empowers teenage girls.
Porn on his phone is better than a manipulative substance abusing girlfriend who puts out.
Don’t be so gross. The kid is only 11!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let him keep his porn. Knock on the closed bedroom or bathroom door and wait to be invited in before entering. Let him have his sexual outlet.
To do otherwise disempowers him sexually and empowers teenage girls.
Porn on his phone is better than a manipulative substance abusing girlfriend who puts out.
Don’t be so gross. The kid is only 11!
If you give a kid their own phone/tablet/laptop, you can't really be surprised if they look up porn. Snooping through it invades their privacy and they'll just learn to use incognito mode or hide it. It's a rule that you can't really enforce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old? I think this is a huge problem people don’t really talk about.
why do you think it's a "huge problem". Its actually normal and healthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let him keep his porn. Knock on the closed bedroom or bathroom door and wait to be invited in before entering. Let him have his sexual outlet.
To do otherwise disempowers him sexually and empowers teenage girls.
Porn on his phone is better than a manipulative substance abusing girlfriend who puts out.
Don’t be so gross. The kid is only 11!
Anonymous wrote:Let him keep his porn. Knock on the closed bedroom or bathroom door and wait to be invited in before entering. Let him have his sexual outlet.
To do otherwise disempowers him sexually and empowers teenage girls.
Porn on his phone is better than a manipulative substance abusing girlfriend who puts out.