Anonymous wrote:So easy to judge but you also don't know what the parents' constraints are. Maybe they had another (younger) child they needed to pick up from elsewhere (maybe somewhere less safe)? So yes, in a vacuum, I would have waited around. But the one thing I've learned from parenting is not to judge because there are so many factors involved in everyone's decisions and you don't know half of them.
Anonymous wrote:I would have waited. But, for me, the age isn't the biggest factor. It think it's polite. I have a friend who doesn't drive and when I drop her off at home, I don't pull away from her home until I see she's unlocked the front door and is walking into her home. When I was younger/single, my girlfriends and I would call each other when we got home, just to make sure we got home.
Anonymous wrote:She's 12 people. She can stand in front of a movie theater alone. She can make short walks to the store to pick something up. She can be outside alone. You do not need to constantly fear a12 year old being kidnapped. This is the way you fail to teach confidence and competence.
It would have been polite to ask if her mom was on the way and for all you know the mom did ask. But thats not a safety issue.
I'm pretty shocked by the paranoia here.
Anonymous wrote:I dropped DD (7th grade but not 13 until June) at the movies to see Cinderella with a friend. I made sure they hooked up before I drove away.
I was in the parking lot reading when the movie let out but was reading a book. When I looked at the theater, DD was standing there by herself looking at her phone. Her friend had already been picked up as they probably parked at the curb instead of in a spot like me, and they drove away.
I was kind of surprised that they (the parents) didn't make sure my DD was picked up or at least confirmed I was on my way.
Miss-communication happens at this age when young teens are starting to plan going out only with friends.
I would have waited until the friend (even though she had a phone) touched base with her parents before driving away.... or am I too much of a helicopter?
Anonymous wrote:We had a car pool where the parents left my 13 y o DD at a game in a shady neighborhood 30 miles from our house. They said to her: We have plans. Would you mind? Of course she said no (what else would she say?) After they left she called us -- obviously, we do not car pool with them again. So I would think carefully about what kind of parents you are dealing with when you let your young DD go out. Some parents are just not -- the ones you want to driving your DD.
Anonymous wrote:I would have waited, and always waited. Phone can go dead, parents could have a flat tire, etc.