Anonymous wrote:You need to parent and talk to your child about this ..
Anonymous wrote:My granddaughter is 17 and she turned off her life 360. Should I let it slide or pursue it
Anonymous wrote:Ok so I found out there are hacks to freeze life 360 so it looks like a teen is in one location but isn’t. It used to be just turning off cellular data so your location doesn’t refresh, but now it seems like offloading the app works too. Is there anyway to make it reliable to parents or do I download another tracker app and hide it on their phone?
Has anyone had success with another app? I am also thinking of Find my iPhone - with a parent lock but wasn’t sure if there were ways to get around it.
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised how many people track their kids. I haven't really thought about it. I was the "bad" kid growing up but I am not sure my parents tracking me would have changed anything.
In get the anxiety about not knowing for sure where your kids are but when does it stop? If you feed the anxiety now won't It just continue when kids are in college or out of college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My teen will fight if I try to take phone away after asking for it multiple times. She can call police and say I hit her. What to do???
Call her bluff. It’s mot illegal to hit your kid. It is illegal, however, to file a false police report
Anonymous wrote:I really love all the support and judgemental comments. I have a 16 year old who frequently leaves the house without permission. We are great supportive parents who want their teens to have freedom but also follow the rules. She disables the location sharing on this app which is why I hate this app. They should include a feature that keeps them from disabling the location sharing. Some of us with troubled teens need this app!
Anonymous wrote:Ok so I found out there are hacks to freeze life 360 so it looks like a teen is in one location but isn’t. It used to be just turning off cellular data so your location doesn’t refresh, but now it seems like offloading the app works too. Is there anyway to make it reliable to parents or do I download another tracker app and hide it on their phone?
Has anyone had success with another app? I am also thinking of Find my iPhone - with a parent lock but wasn’t sure if there were ways to get around it.
Anonymous wrote:I really love all the support and judgemental comments. I have a 16 year old who frequently leaves the house without permission. We are great supportive parents who want their teens to have freedom but also follow the rules. She disables the location sharing on this app which is why I hate this app. They should include a feature that keeps them from disabling the location sharing. Some of us with troubled teens need this app!
Anonymous wrote:I personally have done work around for Find my, where I switch the location to my iPad rather than phone so it looks like I’m at home. Easy to do and no one is the wiser, UNLESS they check the “device” find my, then it would be obvious where I really am
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently the people commenting either don't have teen children or have kids who sit inside on a device. Some people have teens who are out riding bikes, skateboards and scooters ALL DAY! ITS LIFE FOR THEM! So yes, parents with active children and children who go out a lot need Life360. Perfect parents and perfect children....just wait! That or they have no friends and sit inside with Mommy and Daddy all day!
Why do you need Life360? Isn’t find your iPhone enough
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously stop tracking your kid. People parented for thousands of years without doing this.
My kid is 14 so no
They don’t drive so your tracking their walking?
Are you kidding pp
Tracking whether they are sneaking out. Or really at a friends house. Or really at a sleepover, or really studying at home (if you are elsewhere)
Some teens lie and sneak. I have 3 of them and 1 is trying to break the rules every darn day. So I get it.
So let me get this straight. You did such a poor job raising your child to this point they engage in these behaviors? And you haven’t learned from your past mistakes and want to hover still?
Glad you have a great kid! It’s easy to judge when you do. I have multiple kids. One is harder and a rule breaker and the other two wouldn’t dream of it - it’s not always parenting.
Disagree.
It’s 99% parenting.
The problem is in thinking that you can parent different children in the same way/method and it will “take” for each kid in the same way.
It may not.
So you try something else.
But at the heart of it is establishing boundaries in a way that they internalize so that they are partners with you on holding the line.
Not the PP but I 100% disagree with you. I couldn't for the life of my understand why 1 of my 4 kids was so different. Defiant, impulsive, risk taker, etc... Beyond a late ADHD diagnosis (because they aren't hyper or lack focus and have good grades) we went even further and did a neurosych eval and received multiple diagnosis. Brains aren't all wired the same, each individual has a personality even as a baby, and personal things that have happened to them (bullying, exclusion, poor teacher, terrible coach, etc...) absolutely play into who they are. Kids and teens are NOT robots that just cater to the exact needs to a specific parenting.