Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the kind of thing I'd tell my husband, but he's pretty mellow and would just be like "Okay, we need to hug her, then go over what medications she's supposed to take and remind her to finish the course even if she feels better, we need to tell her to tell the boy to get checked, etc."
Yes, OP, she should definitely stop telling her friends.
Same here. My husband and I tell each other everything parenting wise unless a kid specifically asks us not to. So since she doesn’t care I would tell. But he wouldn’t over react.
New poster. I have always told my husband everything about our kids. I am so surprised that the majority are saying not to. I haven't been in this situation yet, but I believe I would tell my husband.
Just found out today 18yo DD had sex (found BC while we were cleaning her room), told my DH later.
She is in long term relationship so expected. We share important details of our kids, would be wierd to keep him in dark. - quick, straightforward convo, done.
And that’s why neither of you have a good relationship with your DD. She didn’t trust you to go get BC or talk to you at all about her relationship.
That’s sad and embarrassing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the kind of thing I'd tell my husband, but he's pretty mellow and would just be like "Okay, we need to hug her, then go over what medications she's supposed to take and remind her to finish the course even if she feels better, we need to tell her to tell the boy to get checked, etc."
Yes, OP, she should definitely stop telling her friends.
Same here. My husband and I tell each other everything parenting wise unless a kid specifically asks us not to. So since she doesn’t care I would tell. But he wouldn’t over react.
New poster. I have always told my husband everything about our kids. I am so surprised that the majority are saying not to. I haven't been in this situation yet, but I believe I would tell my husband.
Just found out today 18yo DD had sex (found BC while we were cleaning her room), told my DH later.
She is in long term relationship so expected. We share important details of our kids, would be wierd to keep him in dark. - quick, straightforward convo, done.
Anonymous wrote:It's the kind of thing I'd tell my husband, but he's pretty mellow and would just be like "Okay, we need to hug her, then go over what medications she's supposed to take and remind her to finish the course even if she feels better, we need to tell her to tell the boy to get checked, etc."
Yes, OP, she should definitely stop telling her friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the kind of thing I'd tell my husband, but he's pretty mellow and would just be like "Okay, we need to hug her, then go over what medications she's supposed to take and remind her to finish the course even if she feels better, we need to tell her to tell the boy to get checked, etc."
Yes, OP, she should definitely stop telling her friends.
Same here. My husband and I tell each other everything parenting wise unless a kid specifically asks us not to. So since she doesn’t care I would tell. But he wouldn’t over react.
New poster. I have always told my husband everything about our kids. I am so surprised that the majority are saying not to. I haven't been in this situation yet, but I believe I would tell my husband.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP! Just thinking of your thread.
Any update? Specifically, were you able to have DD treated, and did you keep the whole thing secret from your husband?
(sarcastically referencing a negative post a few up). Anonymous wrote:My high school senior 18 year old daughter was seeing a fellow student, though it ended.
She was complaining of something like a yeast infection but not a yeast infection. She doesn't have a GYN, so we went to the pediatrician. She does take birth control because of heavy irregular periods. She wanted privacy with the doctor which I told her fine. I got some notices to pick up prescriptions for her.
Later that night, she came to me (the mother) and told me the doctor's office had called her (she's over 18, so most communications go through her, I get notices for things like the prescriptions being put in or whatever because my daughter signed permission for me to have limited access, which everyone is fine with). Diagnosis: chlamydia.
She said I have to talk to you, I said ok, what's up, she told me, and I just said, ok. And she said what are you thinking? And I said, well, I'm thinking I hope you are taking care of yourself and you are ok and that you are being safe We talked about it a little and she said it had just been this one guy and she had been a little sad it didn't turn into anything but she was ok, but that she was being safe.
She did not ask me to keep this private. But my husband can be a bit emotional and can get worked up about things and frankly I think this is a need to know basis and maybe he doesn't need to know. At least not right now (he's under stress in another area of his life and tends to catastrophize things, especially when he's under stress). Her final quarter grades are stressing him out and he's being hard on her senioritis.
So I'm thinking about waiting to tell him - maybe over the summer, maybe once she's gone off to college. She doesn't care one way or the other. Any thoughts or experiences? Is this the kind of thing you tell your husband or no? WWYD at this point? (I'll admit I was hoping she'd do what I did - get to college, and then take herself to the gyn, so I guess I should add find a gyn for her to the list of things to do).
Anonymous wrote:Why is this in tweens? Shouldn't this be in Adult Children, because she's y'know, an adult?
Please don't tell other people her personal medical issues. If she wants to tell him, she can. She didn't need to tell you, don't make her regret it by spreading it around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would disagree that she's being safe if she caught chlamydia. She needs to use condoms, even if she's on the pill.
Her father doesn't need to know. There would be zero benefit.
Don’t mean to be harsh but I agree with this. To get an STI at this age is an issue and shouldn’t be brushed aside as I am glad she told me.
Her fertility could be affected. Assume she has learned her lesson.
Lesson to all of us that the downside of putting your DD on pill is this. But better than nothing.
— mother of a 18 DS whose housekeeper found condoms in his room yesterday. Don’t plan on saying anything.
Anonymous wrote:I would disagree that she's being safe if she caught chlamydia. She needs to use condoms, even if she's on the pill.
Her father doesn't need to know. There would be zero benefit.