Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently I'm the outlier here. First, skipping school is not ok in my house. Second, lying about your whereabouts is also a huge problem - whether it's lying by omission or lying outright. I'd also be concerned about the fact that she seems to have no street smarts or situational awareness. They intended to go into DC but ended up in Arlington AND she didn't have enough money to get back. At 14, plenty of kids don't think about things like this but that's what makes this stunt all more problematic. Fortunately she was *only* in Arlington and could call you and nothing happened, but these are the types of situations that can go wrong quickly under different circumstances.
I'd ground her for 2 weeks, remove social media apps/block content, no screens, and put a tracker on her phone. The tracker would stay on indefinitely.
I agree. I'm really surprised by the responses here.
Anonymous wrote:She probably figured it was NBD.
In the mind of an autonomous- seeking 14 yr old who feels invisible and doesnt have the mindset to be a forward thinker, she probably figured school is a big nothing burger during the shortened Thanksgiving week, other kids were skipping too, it's "just" the bookstore/not a rap concert, She reached out to you as a trusted source for help when in need, etc.
I'm not necessarily condoning it, but it really helps to put it into the context and perspective of a 14 yr old.
I actually think it's brilliant she could navigate metro, opt for a bookstore to hang out, and know that she can call me anytime for help no matter what.
If she's ordinarily a good kid, just talk it through with her. The skipping school part is a bit frowny, but otherwise emphasize you trust her not to repeat this w/o touching base with you again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"She's so grown up now she gets to get herself to the grocery store and do the weekly shopping for the family."
Seriously. She made a bad decision. So what? Is this her first time she's done something stupid? All teens are stupid, their brains are regrowing. At least she's also shown you that she is capable of getting around town. She has some maturity to go with that stupidity. Why not start with a discussion about why she did it? Maybe she'll suggest a consequence worse than what you would.
But she's clearly NOT capable. They ended up in the wrong place and she didn't have enough money to pay the return fare.
This.
If she thinks she’s such a big girl and street Saavy, drive her butt to a corner in south east, kick her out the car, park a block away and see how long she lasts before she’s scared straight and comes running back begging to go home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"She's so grown up now she gets to get herself to the grocery store and do the weekly shopping for the family."
Seriously. She made a bad decision. So what? Is this her first time she's done something stupid? All teens are stupid, their brains are regrowing. At least she's also shown you that she is capable of getting around town. She has some maturity to go with that stupidity. Why not start with a discussion about why she did it? Maybe she'll suggest a consequence worse than what you would.
But she's clearly NOT capable. They ended up in the wrong place and she didn't have enough money to pay the return fare.
Anonymous wrote:I’m strict but I don’t think this is a big deal. Ground her and make her do extra chores. And sure, Life360
Anonymous wrote:Apparently I'm the outlier here. First, skipping school is not ok in my house. Second, lying about your whereabouts is also a huge problem - whether it's lying by omission or lying outright. I'd also be concerned about the fact that she seems to have no street smarts or situational awareness. They intended to go into DC but ended up in Arlington AND she didn't have enough money to get back. At 14, plenty of kids don't think about things like this but that's what makes this stunt all more problematic. Fortunately she was *only* in Arlington and could call you and nothing happened, but these are the types of situations that can go wrong quickly under different circumstances.
I'd ground her for 2 weeks, remove social media apps/block content, no screens, and put a tracker on her phone. The tracker would stay on indefinitely.
Anonymous wrote:"She's so grown up now she gets to get herself to the grocery store and do the weekly shopping for the family."
Seriously. She made a bad decision. So what? Is this her first time she's done something stupid? All teens are stupid, their brains are regrowing. At least she's also shown you that she is capable of getting around town. She has some maturity to go with that stupidity. Why not start with a discussion about why she did it? Maybe she'll suggest a consequence worse than what you would.
Anonymous wrote:The skipping school part is what concerns me more than anything else. At 14? Is that 8th grade? I would never have considered doing that - particularly at that age. Is this the first time this has happened or have there been other times? There would definitely be consequences in our house.