Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless the boy's presence is actually HARMFUL to the baby (like he is abusive, an addict, etc.) he can go to court and get equal custody of the baby.
The girl can't just "cut him out."
Most of the time the boy cuts himself out. Some of the responses here are treating that as a benefit of being a #boymom - he can just cut and run; his life isn't ruined! And once that happens, yes, it is pretty easy to keep his parents away from the baby.
Of course it's not mandatory that the story plays out like that, but it's what usually happens if you look around at the world. And since we're starting from the premise that our kid (who we taught about safe sex and being responsible) is about to be a teen parent, I think it behooves us to look at the real world instead of arguing that things could be different for MY teen parent!
Anonymous wrote:Boy. I would supply him with condoms and tell him to use one every time he decides he doesn't want to have a baby. Not completely foolproof, but it would help.
Anonymous wrote:
This is terrible but the boy has it way easier. He has so many more options at every step of the way. He’s not the one going through pregnancy, so his body and routine stays the same. He can walk away or not. Once the girl decides to keep the pregnancy her options are done.
Anonymous wrote:Boy. I would supply him with condoms and tell him to use one every time he decides he doesn't want to have a baby. Not completely foolproof, but it would help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless the boy's presence is actually HARMFUL to the baby (like he is abusive, an addict, etc.) he can go to court and get equal custody of the baby.
The girl can't just "cut him out."
Sure she can. I've seen it happen many times.
Anonymous wrote:Boy. I would supply him with condoms and tell him to use one every time he decides he doesn't want to have a baby. Not completely foolproof, but it would help.
Anonymous wrote:Unless the boy's presence is actually HARMFUL to the baby (like he is abusive, an addict, etc.) he can go to court and get equal custody of the baby.
The girl can't just "cut him out."
Anonymous wrote:Unless the boy's presence is actually HARMFUL to the baby (like he is abusive, an addict, etc.) he can go to court and get equal custody of the baby.
The girl can't just "cut him out."