Anonymous wrote:OP, your mistake was giving so much unnecessary context. The question here should be:
"Would you want to know where your 20yo DD is and how to reach her if she was traveling internationally?"
The consensus answer to this would almost certainly be "yes." You can ask your daughter to let you know more details, in case there is an emergency and you need to reach her and don't want to rely on her cell service. She is free to say no.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah…the only reason you are being a little nuts is because your kid is still in college and you feel like you still have control.
In two years, imagine your kid could easily just go on a trip like this and you might not even know it happened until after the fact.
BTW…funny how you mention famous and Big Law…unless your friend’s parent is Judge Judy or on the Supreme Court…or is the Morgan & Morgan guy on TV…there is no famous BigLaw person.
Anonymous wrote:Seriously, you need to let go. At this age I spent the summer traveling through Europe by train, staying in hostels and my parents had no way of reaching me or knowing where I was the whole time. I’m guessing that you already track your daughter’s phone so you will know where she is. But yes, the week before departure, it would be appropriate for your daughter to ask for contact info for her family in case of emergency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are being super weird
Agree. And I hope “J”’s parents’ house manager sees this.
Also, the “DD” is so incredibly grating. Stop writing that. One “D” is enough. She is your daughter. If everyone gets a screenplay initial, just use one “D.”
Anonymous wrote:You could have asked this question without all the high-profile family details. Reasonable to ask your adult child for some itinerary basics.
Anonymous wrote:Just ask her to share her location on her phone with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, At age 20 it would not be normal for friends parents to reach out to you about travel plans. Honestly, it would be weird and belittling.
Have your daughter ask the name of the place they will be staying.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Your daughter can say: "My parents have asked how to reach me if there is an emergency while we're on vacation. Can you please provide the name of the property and a phone number just in case?"
That's not weird, that's just common sense.
Anonymous wrote:All you all are ridiculous. College kids stay with friends all the time, even internationally, without knowing their exact home address, and land lines are an artifact. Just demand that she give you emergency contact phone information there other than her friend, under the theory that both of them could be victimized simultaneously. And establish some kind of check in schedule, which the failure to observe would trigger you calling the emergency contact number.
She is 20 years old, old enough to be sent to war, for chrissakes. Should the USMC call mommy and tell her the address of the jump zone?
Anonymous wrote:I would be very uncomfortable with one of my adult kids going on a vacation to a foreign country if I had no idea where they’re staying. I think it’s a very reasonable request to know that, for safety reasons.