Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why it's courteous to tell people your plans.
Because when you care about people, if they don’t show up when they say they will, you want to be sure they are ok. Or if there was some kind of emergency, as you are people who care about each other, you’d have a rough idea where the person might be or how to locate them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you get rid of the tracking?
He despised it and honestly I didn’t love it either. I mainly got it to use that first year that he was driving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why it's courteous to tell people your plans.
Because when you care about people, if they don’t show up when they say they will, you want to be sure they are ok. Or if there was some kind of emergency, as you are people who care about each other, you’d have a rough idea where the person might be or how to locate them.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why it's courteous to tell people your plans.
Anonymous wrote:Do your seniors have a curfew?
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why it's courteous to tell people your plans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of Life 360 when he turned 17. I can find him via Find My Iphone if I REALLY need to by logging into his account.
But in terms of normal communication (text and calls) how long do you go without checking in or not knowing where they are? Boy or girl? (I do think there is a difference here.)
I don't have a senior right now, but I think my answer to this is 0 minutes as far as general whereabouts.
Even in the age before cell phones I was accountable for my whereabouts. I couldn't just leave the house and go no contact for several hours with no explanation. Did that mean my parents knew exactly where I was every moment? No. And I certainly got up to some stupid $H!t, but I definitely had to let them know if, say, I was going to a friend's house after the HS football game, or if a bunch of us were going out after our shift at work. I was expected to be home by curfew or communicate what was going on if not. (But I did sneak out all the time - haha!)
I fully intend for the same standard for my kids. But they ain't never gonna be able to sneak out of this house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously, where are they going in the pandemic? It is usually school, home, fast food place to pick up lunch, meeting BF/GF and shooting hoops with some friends. We all have location sharing so all of us know where we all are at any given moment.
We all are living in the same house. I can imagine if the children are living in split household that parents won't know where they are.
Right now...they are just working on college apps and school. Life is pretty grim right now. So, yes, next room, lights on, finger flying on the keyboard.
Pssst…kids this age are vaccinated and back to pretty much regular life.