Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family shares our locations with each other on Google Maps because we don’t see it as a big deal. We’re a family.
Same here.
Same here.
I’m not constantly tracking my kids.
Sometimes it’s just to see how close they are to home and have dinner ready.
Then … contact them.
Anonymous wrote:Too much togetherness. Not normal. Not healthy.
Anonymous wrote:In the Washington Post, a Carolyn Hax column talked about using tracking apps with adult children.
Most in the comments are against using the tracking apps.
Meanwhile, my college kid volunteered for us to track each other and also shares their location with friends. Sometimes, they'll tell me where their friends are located. It's just a fun thing. "They're on the Amtrak heading home, etc."
One time I was at a bar, and my college kid texted to ask me, "Where ARE you?!?!?" That was funny. It's also been handy when spouse has gone to pick them up at college and I can easily check their ETA and have dinner ready.
To us, the tracking isn't a big deal. If either of us didn't want to do it, we'd stop and it would be fine.
But I guess I can see some parents -- and my sibling is one -- who micromanage and control others, and maybe that's when tracking is not a good idea.
If someone's purpose is to control another person, then tracking apps are not good. If you have trust with someone, it's not a big deal.
What do you all do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t even track my high schoolers or husband. Technically, I can track my kids on Find my IPhone if there’s an emergency, but I have only looked at it 2-3x in the last couple of years. We text each other to share our whereabouts if need be. Works well without the feeling that you’re “spying.”
Isn't that what people are talking about? You are tracking them.
Yes, this is what we are talking about, so PP is on Team Track.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family shares our locations with each other on Google Maps because we don’t see it as a big deal. We’re a family.
Same here.
Same here.
I’m not constantly tracking my kids.
Sometimes it’s just to see how close they are to home and have dinner ready.
Then … contact them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our family— 2 parents, 2 college kids— all have Find My Phone activated. My kids are allowed to turn it off when they are at school. But, I don’t think they ever have.
That said, my promise to them— which I have kept— is that I won’t stalk them. So, I don’t check where they are unless there is a good reason. Like, once DD forgot to text when she got back to school and I checked to see that she was back safely rather than texting because her notifications were off and it was late at night.
But, I can go an entire semester and not check where they are. And I’m not sure what I’m going to see that can’t been unseen or is too intrusive. They spend the night in another dorm? Ok, they are in college. And I don’t have the class schedule memorized and have never checked to see if they are in class. If they aren’t, there isn’t much I can do anyway.
It’s actually more useful at home and I ask them to keep it on when they are home. I can check how far away they are from home when they are driving, etc. And it has useful when they study abroad, and text communication is tougher. I have an itinerary for DD studying in Eastern Europe this summer. But they are doing multiple side trips and the ability to know what country she is actually in is nice. And it was especially nice for safety when she did a week of solo travel before meeting up with her program. If she alone in a foreign country, knowing her location in case of emergency seems important. And when she was in transit to the program, having it was reassuring. Now that she’s with the program, I don’t expect to check much.
Also, my kids can track DH and I and we can track each other, but DH and I are honest with each other about where we are going. I can’t imagine he’d regularly track me. And I see no reason to track him unless I get a “driving in focus” message and I’m looking for an ETA for some reason. Plus, I don’t care if DH and my kids know where I am. I usually tell them before I leave the house.
I guess it depends on how you use it. It can be a useful tool you occasionally use for specific reasons. If you are regularly checking to see if your kid is in class or back in the dorm at midnight, I can see how it could make you nuts.
You _think_ you sound reasonable, but in fact you’re just as fretting and worried as the others who track the whereabouts and movements of their adult relatives.
As one example: why is it “nice” to see and know where your adult daughter is in Europe? Why not wait until she decides she wants to tell you what she did/where she went? If she’s in distress…. she’ll contact you.
She’s not the star of Taken III, and you aren’t Liam Neeson.
You have anxiety issues like the rest of them but pretend you don’t because Europe or something.
Anonymous wrote:In my family we all share our locations with one another. I think it makes everyone feel safer and there haven’t been any issues with crossed boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family shares our locations with each other on Google Maps because we don’t see it as a big deal. We’re a family.
Same here.
Same here.
I’m not constantly tracking my kids.
Sometimes it’s just to see how close they are to home and have dinner ready.
Anonymous wrote:Our family— 2 parents, 2 college kids— all have Find My Phone activated. My kids are allowed to turn it off when they are at school. But, I don’t think they ever have.
That said, my promise to them— which I have kept— is that I won’t stalk them. So, I don’t check where they are unless there is a good reason. Like, once DD forgot to text when she got back to school and I checked to see that she was back safely rather than texting because her notifications were off and it was late at night.
But, I can go an entire semester and not check where they are. And I’m not sure what I’m going to see that can’t been unseen or is too intrusive. They spend the night in another dorm? Ok, they are in college. And I don’t have the class schedule memorized and have never checked to see if they are in class. If they aren’t, there isn’t much I can do anyway.
It’s actually more useful at home and I ask them to keep it on when they are home. I can check how far away they are from home when they are driving, etc. And it has useful when they study abroad, and text communication is tougher. I have an itinerary for DD studying in Eastern Europe this summer. But they are doing multiple side trips and the ability to know what country she is actually in is nice. And it was especially nice for safety when she did a week of solo travel before meeting up with her program. If she alone in a foreign country, knowing her location in case of emergency seems important. And when she was in transit to the program, having it was reassuring. Now that she’s with the program, I don’t expect to check much.
Also, my kids can track DH and I and we can track each other, but DH and I are honest with each other about where we are going. I can’t imagine he’d regularly track me. And I see no reason to track him unless I get a “driving in focus” message and I’m looking for an ETA for some reason. Plus, I don’t care if DH and my kids know where I am. I usually tell them before I leave the house.
I guess it depends on how you use it. It can be a useful tool you occasionally use for specific reasons. If you are regularly checking to see if your kid is in class or back in the dorm at midnight, I can see how it could make you nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family shares our locations with each other on Google Maps because we don’t see it as a big deal. We’re a family.
What does that have to do with it? Families have never tracked each other until a decade ago.
I agree. Seriously messed up to think that putting trackers on each other is part of what being a family means.
. This week DH and I were heading out and knew that a kid was incoming. Checking to get an ETA helped us decide whether to wait for the kid to get home and do a handoff vs setting the dog up in a safe area. I don’t see an issue with using tracking in that type of cases.