Anonymous wrote:The sex is not important to us as parents. I was pointing out that it existed and probably will into the future. She is an extremely together kid. She is very advanced with GPA, motivation, SAT, Extra Curricular, sports. She has played Varsity for the last two year on two sports and she has been team Captain for those 2 sports for the last 2 years. This guts her as she loves him. She will need to learn how to deal with loss. This experience will help her in the future and hopefully a therapist will help her deal with it. She is anything but emotionally fragile...which is the interesting part. But the relationship is also not a clean break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most junior boys are having sex....
No, the average age of first sexual intercourse for males in the US is currently just under 18. So "most" happens older.
Anonymous wrote:I have a young freshman daughter who wants to date a Junior. When I was 15 I dated an 18 y/o, but know that it was NOT ideal (in hindsight, of course). I'm curious what other parents think?
Dating before sophomore year is so risky. I wish we hadn’t allowed our child to date, it has been a disaster. Children this young are not equipped emotionally to date particularly for children who are already sensitive and/or have mental illness.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We did and TRUELY wish we did not. They dated 1.5 years. He just broke up with her 2 days before Valentines Day. He is leaving to go to college in California and she is beyond devastated. She is screaming and crying. She starts therapy next week. They still remain "Best Friends" which does NO GOOD! Yes they slept together. We like the boy a lot. However, the age difference is huge and he is moving on. He explained it and she is in denial. Yes they will go to Prom and such.....but her heart is broken.
Wow, he's being pretty cruel to drag this out. Death by a thousand paper cuts. Please encourage her to make a clean break.
+1
If she's "screaming and crying" now, imagine what prom night will be like. And be assured, the past tense of "they slept together" will be very much present tense--do you really think she isn't going to say yes to prom night/farewell sex? Are you OK with that, and all the emotion and pressure involved? Wow. Of course, if you say no to prom, you're a villain to her and she'll have sex with him anyway.
I really would ask that therapist if it's a good idea for a girl this emotionally fragile to go to prom with the guy whose departure she already can't handle. It sounds like a recipe for devastating her further, not giving her closure.
To OP: This is why teens who are younger shouldn't start dating. Not ready for all the emotional drama or for letting go. I know a lot of families where there is no dating until age 16 or junior year. It's somewhat arbitrary and doesn't guarantee no drama but it's better than kids dating at 13 or 14.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We did and TRUELY wish we did not. They dated 1.5 years. He just broke up with her 2 days before Valentines Day. He is leaving to go to college in California and she is beyond devastated. She is screaming and crying. She starts therapy next week. They still remain "Best Friends" which does NO GOOD! Yes they slept together. We like the boy a lot. However, the age difference is huge and he is moving on. He explained it and she is in denial. Yes they will go to Prom and such.....but her heart is broken.
Wow, he's being pretty cruel to drag this out. Death by a thousand paper cuts. Please encourage her to make a clean break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 15 year old freshman dates a junior. He's 17. He doesn't drive, they see each other at sports practices and at school. I've never thought twice about it, and I'm a strict type parent I think it depends on the kids involved. I met the boy early on and I am a big fan. He's a sweet guy and kind to my daughter. Not sleeping together or spending much time alone together, so perhaps my feelings would change if that changed. It's not a factor right now.
This doesn't sound like dating
Anonymous wrote:I have a young freshman daughter who wants to date a Junior. When I was 15 I dated an 18 y/o, but know that it was NOT ideal (in hindsight, of course). I'm curious what other parents think?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By 15/16 most of my son’s crowd (social, athletic) was having sex.
I don't think your experience is universal. This certainly was not the case junior year for my very popular, athlete son and he actually had a semi-serious (also junior) girlfriend. It was much more common to start senior year or college for his crowd.
Anonymous wrote:By 15/16 most of my son’s crowd (social, athletic) was having sex.
Anonymous wrote:The sex is not important to us as parents. I was pointing out that it existed and probably will into the future. She is an extremely together kid.[i] She is very advanced with GPA, motivation, SAT, Extra Curricular, sports. She has played Varsity for the last two year on two sports and she has been team Captain for those 2 sports for the last 2 years. This guts her as she loves him. She will need to learn how to deal with loss. This experience will help her in the future and hopefully a therapist will help her deal with it. She is anything but emotionally fragile...which is the interesting part. But the relationship is also not a clean break.
Anonymous wrote:That is the most natural age difference for dating in high school. Did you go to high school?