Anonymous wrote:I hope you've already talked to your teen about peer pressure and how you would like him/her to handle it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I said "I would be really pissed if my straight daughter (or son) went to a sleepover unknowingly and was subjected to bi sexual peer pressure", I was not suggesting the parent needs to disclose her daughters sexual orientation but that the parent needs to set the rules and her daughter needs to understand, and respect, the rules and the boundaries of others by not putting bi sexual peer pressure on another ever. In other words, it is all about sexual behavior and inappropriate sexual behavior should not be tolerated
I guess I'm not seeing the distinction between "bi sexual peer pressure" and "sexual peer pressure".
Anonymous wrote:When I said "I would be really pissed if my straight daughter (or son) went to a sleepover unknowingly and was subjected to bi sexual peer pressure", I was not suggesting the parent needs to disclose her daughters sexual orientation but that the parent needs to set the rules and her daughter needs to understand, and respect, the rules and the boundaries of others by not putting bi sexual peer pressure on another ever. In other words, it is all about sexual behavior and inappropriate sexual behavior should not be tolerated
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are okay with your kid having sex then have the sleepover. If you are not, then no.
I'm not ok with DC having sex with either gender, but with so many bi girls now, how do parents handle it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OK. No experience here with parenting a bi kid. I will say as a young teen I went to sleepovers with girls and one of the girls ended up being bi (which was confirmed later). There was never any pressure for me to do anything and to my knowledge no one ever engaged in bi sexual activity although I will say, knowing what I know now, and looking back on things the "option was openly on the table". This was a long time ago and things are different now. Kids seem to push the boundaries more. My first thought when I saw this post was do the other parent's know but mine didn't. If I thought there would be sexual interaction then absolutely not but if it was just a bunch of girls and some happened to be bi, ehh..., you know your kid and their friends best. I do think there is a parental obligation here to set the rules, and a responsibility on your daughter to know and respect boundaries. I would be really pissed if my straight daughter (or son) went to a sleepover unknowingly and was subjected to bi sexual peer pressure.
Let's transfer that thought to the locker room. There will be gay and bi kids in the locker room with your straight kids. Guaranteed. Should the parents of those gay and bi kids have to disclose to the parents of the straight kids?
The issue here is not -- gay and bi kids, the horror! The issue is inappropriate sexual behavior. There shouldn't be inappropriate sexual behavior, by any kids (or adults), of any sexual orientation, in any setting.
Agreed!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OK. No experience here with parenting a bi kid. I will say as a young teen I went to sleepovers with girls and one of the girls ended up being bi (which was confirmed later). There was never any pressure for me to do anything and to my knowledge no one ever engaged in bi sexual activity although I will say, knowing what I know now, and looking back on things the "option was openly on the table". This was a long time ago and things are different now. Kids seem to push the boundaries more. My first thought when I saw this post was do the other parent's know but mine didn't. If I thought there would be sexual interaction then absolutely not but if it was just a bunch of girls and some happened to be bi, ehh..., you know your kid and their friends best. I do think there is a parental obligation here to set the rules, and a responsibility on your daughter to know and respect boundaries. I would be really pissed if my straight daughter (or son) went to a sleepover unknowingly and was subjected to bi sexual peer pressure.
Let's transfer that thought to the locker room. There will be gay and bi kids in the locker room with your straight kids. Guaranteed. Should the parents of those gay and bi kids have to disclose to the parents of the straight kids?
The issue here is not -- gay and bi kids, the horror! The issue is inappropriate sexual behavior. There shouldn't be inappropriate sexual behavior, by any kids (or adults), of any sexual orientation, in any setting.
Anonymous wrote:
OK. No experience here with parenting a bi kid. I will say as a young teen I went to sleepovers with girls and one of the girls ended up being bi (which was confirmed later). There was never any pressure for me to do anything and to my knowledge no one ever engaged in bi sexual activity although I will say, knowing what I know now, and looking back on things the "option was openly on the table". This was a long time ago and things are different now. Kids seem to push the boundaries more. My first thought when I saw this post was do the other parent's know but mine didn't. If I thought there would be sexual interaction then absolutely not but if it was just a bunch of girls and some happened to be bi, ehh..., you know your kid and their friends best. I do think there is a parental obligation here to set the rules, and a responsibility on your daughter to know and respect boundaries. I would be really pissed if my straight daughter (or son) went to a sleepover unknowingly and was subjected to bi sexual peer pressure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a spin off from the previous thread about gay or bi teens. I have 2 DD who are under the age of 10, so this isn't an issue for me. But it seems to be rather trendy for teen girls to say that their bi. If one of my daughters ever said she was bi, I would be very supportive of her, but I wouldn't allow her to have sleepovers with girls for the same reasons I wouldn't allow them with boys. However, the idea of not letting my daughter have sleepovers with her friends seems very sad to me. Wondering how parents who are in this situation handle it.
Interesting question…just want to point out that there's something else there that's tricky. And that is the obligation to tell the other parent. Let's say my DD is lesbian and wants a sleepover. (Ok I agree with you for same reasons as you stated and wouldn't do it) but if I were going to do it, the other parent and kid needs to know this. But it might still be private info for your kid.
Anyways if my kid was doing a sleepover with anyone who might be interested sexually in my kid, I'd want to know.
Anonymous wrote:I am more wondering in an intellectual way if I have any obligation to communicate with the parents of girls who invite her for sleepovers or she wants to invite. I mean platonic friends, not girlfriends.
Anonymous wrote:Most of the reason to be afraid of teen sex is pregnancy...seems like if you're still worried about sex this way then you just don't want her to enjoy herself.
Anonymous wrote:We don't allow sleepovers for our kids either. There are way too many potential pitfalls that could arise to make it worth it for the socialization. If you consider the pros/ cons, we just can't find the pros. As for a high schooler and sleeping over - I want to see them face to face each night and know what condition they are in.