Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm really torn about it. I have monitored him since he was 13. Initially his account was logged in on my phone and I saw everything. Eventually when I saw he used it responsibility, I logged out and followed. It has been only the past month that he blocked me from seeing stories. He is really starting to come into his own and expecting more privacy. He is almost 17....on the verge of adulthood. He's an excellent student, and if more of a nerd socially than a partier. My sense is that it is time to start letting go. It's hard, but I do trust him to not do something stupid based on his past behavior on social media. I knew many here would disagree, but I thought it would start a dialogue about when it is time to loosen the strings.
In a year he could legally marry and join the military. It's fine for him to have social media you don't follow and not unusual for that to be his preference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm really torn about it. I have monitored him since he was 13. Initially his account was logged in on my phone and I saw everything. Eventually when I saw he used it responsibility, I logged out and followed. It has been only the past month that he blocked me from seeing stories. He is really starting to come into his own and expecting more privacy. He is almost 17....on the verge of adulthood. He's an excellent student, and if more of a nerd socially than a partier. My sense is that it is time to start letting go. It's hard, but I do trust him to not do something stupid based on his past behavior on social media. I knew many here would disagree, but I thought it would start a dialogue about when it is time to loosen the strings.
In a year he could legally marry and join the military. It's fine for him to have social media you don't follow and not unusual for that to be his preference.
My friends daughter just had a complete breakdown at college and has been home for the entire week, not sure how she's handling not being in class. She goes to Duke and is a very smart girl. However, I've known her for 12 years and her mother has always micromanaged her. Jer mom even called her student advisor asking about a medical waiver and the SA advised tjr mom to have the daughter woek this out. My friend was incensed. From school to social media she has hovered over her (especially social media!). I feel like the daughter never learned to make mistakes or even cope with life in the slightest in her own. Now she's away at school (or was) and simply cannot hendle herself without mom holding her hand.
I think many parents these days are severely stunting their kids growth and causing them a hige disservice. When will these kiss be able to launch, or will many of them never launch?
I think monitoring your 16, nearly 17yr olds social media is very dysfunctional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm really torn about it. I have monitored him since he was 13. Initially his account was logged in on my phone and I saw everything. Eventually when I saw he used it responsibility, I logged out and followed. It has been only the past month that he blocked me from seeing stories. He is really starting to come into his own and expecting more privacy. He is almost 17....on the verge of adulthood. He's an excellent student, and if more of a nerd socially than a partier. My sense is that it is time to start letting go. It's hard, but I do trust him to not do something stupid based on his past behavior on social media. I knew many here would disagree, but I thought it would start a dialogue about when it is time to loosen the strings.
In a year he could legally marry and join the military. It's fine for him to have social media you don't follow and not unusual for that to be his preference.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm really torn about it. I have monitored him since he was 13. Initially his account was logged in on my phone and I saw everything. Eventually when I saw he used it responsibility, I logged out and followed. It has been only the past month that he blocked me from seeing stories. He is really starting to come into his own and expecting more privacy. He is almost 17....on the verge of adulthood. He's an excellent student, and if more of a nerd socially than a partier. My sense is that it is time to start letting go. It's hard, but I do trust him to not do something stupid based on his past behavior on social media. I knew many here would disagree, but I thought it would start a dialogue about when it is time to loosen the strings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I must be the only parent that does not need to know every gory detail of my kids lives. My parents certainly did not. I let them have some space. Their grads are good, they play sports, they stay out of trouble, they are respectful, and they babysit part time for extra money. As far as I'm concerned, I don't need to worry about every single indiscretion and they can spend some time figuring some things out on their own by trial and error.
Most of us don't.
+1
It is the parents who have punk kids, who assume every other kid is a punk. Try communicating with your own child.