Anonymous wrote:she can't use an old iphone without being on someone's plan. Plans need to be paid for, and have user agreements. Whose paying for her plan?
Oh, and show her this:
https://www.aclu.org/blog/juvenile-justice/minnesota-prosecutor-charges-sexting-teenage-girl-child-pornography
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would call the police and have her arrested. If she sent nude photos of herself to an underage child then she is now a sex offender and she has committed a felony.
YOU are nuts!!!!Jesus Christ! I hope you haven't procreated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would call the police and have her arrested. If she sent nude photos of herself to an underage child then she is now a sex offender and she has committed a felony.
Yes, having your child convicted as a felony is a brilliant idea. You cant be serious.
Anonymous wrote:I would call the police and have her arrested. If she sent nude photos of herself to an underage child then she is now a sex offender and she has committed a felony.
Jesus Christ! I hope you haven't procreated.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, obviously you have a lot of stuff going on with her. Sexting at 14 is unusual behavior. I suspect it's not the only troubling thing she does.
You need a global approach for dealing with her. This isn't about a phone, this is about a child exhibiting very troubling behavior that is quite dangerous. I would advise you not to get caught up in nonsense details like what kind of phone she has and look at the bigger picture.
She needs help. You have 4 years to get it under control and then you can't make her do Jack shit. Four years sounds like a long time, everyone on here will tell you is a blink.
Get her help. Get her help.
You're right she needs help. You're wrong that it's atypical behavior. Welcome to 2018 (or 2015 really).
I know what year it is. I have teenagers and I work with teenagers. Sexting at 14 is not unheard of but it is not typical. It's a sign of a very trouble kid.
+1 I work in a middle school. Although certainly quite a few do it, sexting is not typical behavior for the average 14 year old girl.
Anonymous wrote:I would call the police and have her arrested. If she sent nude photos of herself to an underage child then she is now a sex offender and she has committed a felony.
Anonymous wrote:I would call the police and have her arrested. If she sent nude photos of herself to an underage child then she is now a sex offender and she has committed a felony.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another middle school counselor here. Yep, pretty common. Still quite worrisome, but not outside the bounds of predictable 14-yeR-old behavior. Agree that safety, digital footprint, reputation, privacy would be my biggest concerns. Contact the providers to get any explicit images taken down if possible. Tell the school what’s going on so they can support you too and handle any fallout there. Read the recent New York Times article by Lisa D’Amour:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/02/well/family/teenagers-stop-asking-for-nude-photos.html
Wondering in what type of middle school you work? It's not at all "pretty common" where I work.
I’ve worked in public and private school. You’re naive to think it’s not happening in your school.
Anonymous wrote:My 8th grade dd has an acquaintance who was found to be sexting and having sex. Her phone was taken away, she was sent to a different school, was made to delete all of her social media accounts, etc. Not even days later, she opens new accounts from some unknown device and has been posting and snap chatting ever since.
You need to turn off the wifi.
Dd should only be at home or at school and (assuming you have a home phone) can access a landline at either if she needs you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another middle school counselor here. Yep, pretty common. Still quite worrisome, but not outside the bounds of predictable 14-yeR-old behavior. Agree that safety, digital footprint, reputation, privacy would be my biggest concerns. Contact the providers to get any explicit images taken down if possible. Tell the school what’s going on so they can support you too and handle any fallout there. Read the recent New York Times article by Lisa D’Amour:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/02/well/family/teenagers-stop-asking-for-nude-photos.html
Wondering in what type of middle school you work? It's not at all "pretty common" where I work.