Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is an adult. You should NOT tell your husband/her dad. Not his business.
Would you give the same advice to man to keep secrets from his wife about her daughter?
Anonymous wrote:She is an adult. You should NOT tell your husband/her dad. Not his business.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm glad I posted here because it literally did not occur to me that she did not practice safe sex and use a condom in addition to her birth control. The thought never even crossed my mind. Genuinely thought that was such a part of the discourse it was standard practice. I grew up in the AIDS era, had a relative die from AIDS, condom usage was non negotiable in my dating days.
I am naive. I guess I thought the foreplay would be enough to result in STI.
So I said to her, wait, you told me you were being safe, are you saying you did not use a condom? And she said "I am being safe! But I just wanted to so much we just went ahead." OMG. She has always had impulse control issues (documented in her neuropsych / 504 plan) and now I am just stunned at her poor decision making, though I shouldn't be. I had a lot to say about ALWAYS using a condom, taking control of her body and her choices, how LUCKY she was that it was something easily caught and resolved.
So thank you to the person who pointed out it was unlikely a condom was used.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the kind of thing I'd tell my husband, but he's pretty mellow and would just be like "Okay, we need to hug her, then go over what medications she's supposed to take and remind her to finish the course even if she feels better, we need to tell her to tell the boy to get checked, etc."
Yes, OP, she should definitely stop telling her friends.
Same here. My husband and I tell each other everything parenting wise unless a kid specifically asks us not to. So since she doesn’t care I would tell. But he wouldn’t over react.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t share this with my husband. She can tell him if she wants to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is this in tweens? Shouldn't this be in Adult Children, because she's y'know, an adult?
Please don't tell other people her personal medical issues. If she wants to tell him, she can. She didn't need to tell you, don't make her regret it by spreading it around.
I thought about putting it in adult children, but this is Tweens AND Teens, and I carefully labeled it as older teen (18) in the subject line. And she lives at home, so it didn't seem quite right for adult children.
Thanks all, good advice. The other thing I did say was while this is easily handled there are other things that aren't and she interrupted me, "I know! I'm being careful!"
I am a very private person; she is not. I do agree if she wants to tell her dad she can, and I think I'll leave it at that. She's already told 6 of her friends.![]()
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I did tell her this morning she might want to consider discretion - not being shamed, or hiding, but just keeping her private business private.
Anonymous wrote:This is her story to tell OP not yours.
She confided in you. Do not blow this.