Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Based on the responses on this thread those families with open, communicative relationships with their kids use these tools and It Is No Biggie Whatsoever because the lines of communication are wide open in the family.
Those families with very closed, cut off, non- communicative relationships with their kids can only think of findmy or other tracker as a surreptitious unhealthy stalking tool.
There can be too much communication in families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid goes to school in LA and there are weekly police advisories of incidents. Par for the course for a major city and I usually don’t pay any attention to the small ones. When there’s an ongoing incident though, I check on find my to see where my kid is relative to the incidents. If they went to college in the middle of cowtown USA, I’d probably never use the feature. Context matters.
Why? What do you intend to do with this information?
Why are you the one getting campus alerts from 3,000 miles away?
If there’s an armed robbery at the In and Out Burger two blocks from your adult daughter’s residence…. you do what, exactly, when your location tracker tells you your daughter is two blocks away? Have a reassuring conversation? Tell her to shut her blinds and stay away from windows?
Trying to understand how tracking your adult relatives using TWO surveillance domains is in fact helpful
Have you had a child on a campus where there is a lockdown because of an active shooter? I have, and ir f—king scary. Not a rando store two miles off campus. Shooter on campus. Parents who shrug while students are being shot at UVA and criticize parents who try to make certain their kid isn’t dead have something wrong with them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids share their location with everyone on Snapchat. They simply don't care if parents know their location.
I think this is another one of many generational differences. People who think it is creepy are probably old (or up to no good, lol).
+1. I’m 36 and I don’t location share. It’s just not something I’m used to doing and it feels weird. My SIL is 25 and location shares with family, friends etc. and it’s a normal part of her life.
I’m not against it, I do see that it’s a normal thing in a lot of families, especially with teen/ young adult kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have never tracked my kids - HS, college, and young adult. I prefer to parent, not stalk. I disagree with the posters saying tracking is not stalking. I've been with so many friends who pull out their phones to see where their kids are. It's creepy. Have some trust in your relationship with your kids.
I have friends whose kids are required to say (in 11th and 12th grade) "I'm going to xx's house" every time they leave their own home. To me that is FAR more controlling and creepy than having an in-case-of-emergency way of locating them.
"I'm going to xx's house" is general respect for people you live with. DH and I can locate each other on the phones, but we rarely if ever do - we just say where we're going. When I go out I tell the kids where I'm going and approximate when I'm getting back and I expect the same from them.
You do you. I consider that super controlling. I don't tell my husband everywhere I"m going. I'll say "I'm running errands, I'll be back at 5pm" but I would never tell him where. I give my kids the same courtesy. They tell us when they'll be back but I don't ask for details. I have "find my phone" in the event that I need to locate them.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are rising seniors in high school and we all track each other.
We give our kids an extremely long leash and don't require that they tell us their itinerary in advance or check in with us when they change locations. For example, one of mine was out yesterday from 10am to 12 midnight. The other was gone from noon to midnight. To my knowledge, they were at a succession of end-of-school parties (grad and otherwise) but I really have no idea.
We do track them so we can find them if needed in an emergency or far more likely it's a situation of "oh, I need someone to pick up XX (their younger sibling who is in 9th grade). Let me see where ZZ is right now and if they're close."
Anyway, I think parents who don't track (in high school) generally have a "tell me where you're going when you go out" policy. We don't. My kids are comfortable with being tracked because it comes with great freedom. And I don't say the next day, "Oh, I noticed you were XYZ, what were do doing there?" Also, you (as the parent) have to be comfortable with the set up too. If you're the type that will check in all day long "I wonder were they are now?" then it doesn't work. I rarely if ever check in on them. I can imagine we will still track them in college but I won't be the one saying "Hmm, it's 10am and they're in bed, shouldn't they be in class?" because that's just never been my default. I don't want to know their every move. Never have.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t use it myself for my college age kids bc it just seems too controlling almost stalkerish. But an acquaintance uses it on her college aged DC to track them daily and see where they are at all times. Seems a bit much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of the problem here is framing.
“Tracking my young adult child” sounds a lot worse than “Young adult child opted to share location.”
I think the point that many of us are making is that your adult child shouldn’t want to do that if they matured properly.
They also may not “mind” if you search for jobs for them or did their laundry. That also doesn’t make it healthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids share their location with everyone on Snapchat. They simply don't care if parents know their location.
I think this is another one of many generational differences. People who think it is creepy are probably old (or up to no good, lol).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid goes to school in LA and there are weekly police advisories of incidents. Par for the course for a major city and I usually don’t pay any attention to the small ones. When there’s an ongoing incident though, I check on find my to see where my kid is relative to the incidents. If they went to college in the middle of cowtown USA, I’d probably never use the feature. Context matters.
Why? What do you intend to do with this information?
Why are you the one getting campus alerts from 3,000 miles away?
If there’s an armed robbery at the In and Out Burger two blocks from your adult daughter’s residence…. you do what, exactly, when your location tracker tells you your daughter is two blocks away? Have a reassuring conversation? Tell her to shut her blinds and stay away from windows?
Trying to understand how tracking your adult relatives using TWO surveillance domains is in fact helpful
Have you had a child on a campus where there is a lockdown because of an active shooter? I have, and ir f—king scary. Not a rando store two miles off campus. Shooter on campus. Parents who shrug while students are being shot at UVA and criticize parents who try to make certain their kid isn’t dead have something wrong with them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid goes to school in LA and there are weekly police advisories of incidents. Par for the course for a major city and I usually don’t pay any attention to the small ones. When there’s an ongoing incident though, I check on find my to see where my kid is relative to the incidents. If they went to college in the middle of cowtown USA, I’d probably never use the feature. Context matters.
Why? What do you intend to do with this information?
Why are you the one getting campus alerts from 3,000 miles away?
If there’s an armed robbery at the In and Out Burger two blocks from your adult daughter’s residence…. you do what, exactly, when your location tracker tells you your daughter is two blocks away? Have a reassuring conversation? Tell her to shut her blinds and stay away from windows?
Trying to understand how tracking your adult relatives using TWO surveillance domains is in fact helpful
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I truly cannot believe the BS excuses for all of this tracking!
It's unhealthy and insane. My kids and my husband deserve privacy. I deserve privacy. We owe it to our kids to let them be independent adults ON THEIR OWN.
LOL, the righteousness. Google and Apple both know where you are, all the time.
You are rationalizing the fact that you’re tracking your adult children!
And You are literally losing it over something that has no consequence to you. It is a technology that my family chooses as a Form Of Communication
But you’re a boomer and have no clue what Im saying. Amiright??
It actually does have consequences to everyone. Every employer they have, every relationship they have. The levels of anxiety and depression.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I truly cannot believe the BS excuses for all of this tracking!
It's unhealthy and insane. My kids and my husband deserve privacy. I deserve privacy. We owe it to our kids to let them be independent adults ON THEIR OWN.
LOL, the righteousness. Google and Apple both know where you are, all the time.
You are rationalizing the fact that you’re tracking your adult children!
And You are literally losing it over something that has no consequence to you. It is a technology that my family chooses as a Form Of Communication
But you’re a boomer and have no clue what Im saying. Amiright??