Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should. Parents who allow them in HS are basically permissive and lazy.
OP here. Guilty as charged! I'm both permissive and lazy. And I think sleepovers are great for social development and they make my kid happy. If encouraging close friendship and connection is a crime, I'm guilty!
Thank you for sharing. It sounds like she had wonderful time. One little girl who loves to chat once told me : sleepover= sleep is over
Knowing that, I think sleepovers are overrated when sleep in necessary. Maybe have them in the summer when there is no school
If your kid can't bounce back from one day of less sleep, then that is on you. I think too many mommies plan every move their kids make and leave them useless, anxious, and depressed with no autonomy.
You sound like a hard core supporter of sleepovers to the point that you felt obligated to attack. Achievers don’t enjoy catching a cold or loosing sleep. Different kind of people. Where did you learn about hate?
Achievers are that way bc they are born that way and are nurtured throughout childhood.
It’s funny bc I have an achiever and everything she does is big - including socially. She’s definitely a “sleep is for the weak” person and her homebody friends tend to lack energy and imagination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It’s often a cover for getting drunk, sneaking out, staying out all night, or having sex. That’s gotta be obvious to people thought right??
I just don’t see how people think this. Don’t you all have tracking on your kids? I check where my kids are all the time. They’d cut their arm off before they left their phone so I’m pretty confident I know where they are and they aren’t out carousing.
The tracker doesn’t tell me if my kids are drinking or having sex. And easily they could leave their phone at a location and pretend to be sleeping.
And….? As parents we can’t prevent everything.
It’s not like I am going to allow my kids to do that, but it’s normal teen behavior. Better to be doing that than sitting in their room alone playing video games and sending nudes to randoms on Snapchat to get their kicks. It’s funny when people act like if they just turn the screws harder on their kids, instead of being out drinking they will be in their room studying and writing their first novel. Lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should. Parents who allow them in HS are basically permissive and lazy.
OP here. Guilty as charged! I'm both permissive and lazy. And I think sleepovers are great for social development and they make my kid happy. If encouraging close friendship and connection is a crime, I'm guilty!
Thank you for sharing. It sounds like she had wonderful time. One little girl who loves to chat once told me : sleepover= sleep is over
Knowing that, I think sleepovers are overrated when sleep in necessary. Maybe have them in the summer when there is no school
If your kid can't bounce back from one day of less sleep, then that is on you. I think too many mommies plan every move their kids make and leave them useless, anxious, and depressed with no autonomy.
You sound like a hard core supporter of sleepovers to the point that you felt obligated to attack. Achievers don’t enjoy catching a cold or loosing sleep. Different kind of people. Where did you learn about hate?
Achievers are that way bc they are born that way and are nurtured throughout childhood.
It’s funny bc I have an achiever and everything she does is big - including socially. She’s definitely a “sleep is for the weak” person and her homebody friends tend to lack energy and imagination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It’s often a cover for getting drunk, sneaking out, staying out all night, or having sex. That’s gotta be obvious to people thought right??
I just don’t see how people think this. Don’t you all have tracking on your kids? I check where my kids are all the time. They’d cut their arm off before they left their phone so I’m pretty confident I know where they are and they aren’t out carousing.
The tracker doesn’t tell me if my kids are drinking or having sex. And easily they could leave their phone at a location and pretend to be sleeping.
And….? As parents we can’t prevent everything.
It’s not like I am going to allow my kids to do that, but it’s normal teen behavior. Better to be doing that than sitting in their room alone playing video games and sending nudes to randoms on Snapchat to get their kicks. It’s funny when people act like if they just turn the screws harder on their kids, instead of being out drinking they will be in their room studying and writing their first novel. Lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should. Parents who allow them in HS are basically permissive and lazy.
OP here. Guilty as charged! I'm both permissive and lazy. And I think sleepovers are great for social development and they make my kid happy. If encouraging close friendship and connection is a crime, I'm guilty!
Thank you for sharing. It sounds like she had wonderful time. One little girl who loves to chat once told me : sleepover= sleep is over
Knowing that, I think sleepovers are overrated when sleep in necessary. Maybe have them in the summer when there is no school
If your kid can't bounce back from one day of less sleep, then that is on you. I think too many mommies plan every move their kids make and leave them useless, anxious, and depressed with no autonomy.
You sound like a hard core supporter of sleepovers to the point that you felt obligated to attack. Achievers don’t enjoy catching a cold or loosing sleep. Different kind of people. Where did you learn about hate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It’s often a cover for getting drunk, sneaking out, staying out all night, or having sex. That’s gotta be obvious to people thought right??
I just don’t see how people think this. Don’t you all have tracking on your kids? I check where my kids are all the time. They’d cut their arm off before they left their phone so I’m pretty confident I know where they are and they aren’t out carousing.
The tracker doesn’t tell me if my kids are drinking or having sex. And easily they could leave their phone at a location and pretend to be sleeping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should. Parents who allow them in HS are basically permissive and lazy.
OP here. Guilty as charged! I'm both permissive and lazy. And I think sleepovers are great for social development and they make my kid happy. If encouraging close friendship and connection is a crime, I'm guilty!
Thank you for sharing. It sounds like she had wonderful time. One little girl who loves to chat once told me : sleepover= sleep is over
Knowing that, I think sleepovers are overrated when sleep in necessary. Maybe have them in the summer when there is no school
If your kid can't bounce back from one day of less sleep, then that is on you. I think too many mommies plan every move their kids make and leave them useless, anxious, and depressed with no autonomy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should. Parents who allow them in HS are basically permissive and lazy.
OP here. Guilty as charged! I'm both permissive and lazy. And I think sleepovers are great for social development and they make my kid happy. If encouraging close friendship and connection is a crime, I'm guilty!
Thank you for sharing. It sounds like she had wonderful time. One little girl who loves to chat once told me : sleepover= sleep is over
Knowing that, I think sleepovers are overrated when sleep in necessary. Maybe have them in the summer when there is no school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It’s often a cover for getting drunk, sneaking out, staying out all night, or having sex. That’s gotta be obvious to people thought right??
I just don’t see how people think this. Don’t you all have tracking on your kids? I check where my kids are all the time. They’d cut their arm off before they left their phone so I’m pretty confident I know where they are and they aren’t out carousing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should. Parents who allow them in HS are basically permissive and lazy.
OP here. Guilty as charged! I'm both permissive and lazy. And I think sleepovers are great for social development and they make my kid happy. If encouraging close friendship and connection is a crime, I'm guilty!
Anonymous wrote:Try to avoid them. Nothing good happens at a HS sleepover
Anonymous wrote:Mine did with his best friend.