Anonymous wrote:Um, set the rules explicitly. No sex In the house, regardless of gender.
Next question?
Anonymous wrote:I find this thread profoundly depressing. Sexuality is not something that should be a social status thing, a "how cool a parent am I to be so open minded" thing, a state to be bragged about thing, a "selfied" and made into social media piece of internet fodder. Or a new benchmark to be reached to show openness. SEXUALITY IS. We should accept it, respect it, not judge it and educate about it. But this whole thread demeans those who have put their livelihoods and sometimes lives on the line to let people live as they must live. Half the posters on this thread are dealing with sexuality like it's a cool thing, a right-of-passage thing or a Vanity Fair cover or a Vogue spread inspired thing. A boundary to be challenged just because we are running out of boundaries to challenge. A way of rebelling when staying out a bit late has lost its parental outrage mojo. If one of my kids thought that being sexually ambiguous was the new frontier of coolness I would be tempted to give them a good hard shake. And tell them about relatives and friends whose genuine, hard-wired, soul-crucifying need to be respected and able to live freely has impacted their lives in a way that no Katy Perry song, Caitlin reality show or adolescent arrogance can ever articulate. So before you slavishly tell your teens that it's okay to do whatever they want, do tell them that sexuality is not like choosing chicken over fish in a restaurant. A social media brag in this context is like pretending that your tan makes you African American because you want a bit of exoticness and a taste of the struggle. Hey kids. Before you go home to your middle-class existence, your college education and your neo-liberal utopia think about what it means to someone else's struggle to make it a transitory bit of frivolity on your part.
Anonymous wrote:Most of the reason to be afraid of teen sex is pregnancy...seems like if you're still worried about sex this way then you just don't want her to enjoy herself.
Anonymous wrote:Alright, here's one-
my son is 16, his girlfriend is 16. They've been dating for 4 years. Girlfriend's parents are divorced, lives with mom for the past year or so. Dad lives in another town. Mom is often not around, girlfriend and mom don't really get along. We love girlfriend to death, even though her family has red flags all over it, she's a great kid and spends a lot of time at our house.
Son asks us at midnight one saturday if she can sleep over. She had a huge fight with mom and was alone in her apartment, had been for several days. Girlfriend was really having a rough time. Son said he'd sleep on the couch or in the basement.
Would you allow your son's 16 year old girlfriend sleepover, without her parent's consent?
Anonymous wrote:I'm the poster from the other thread with the 13 year old. I can assure you, it is NOT a stupid question and it is one we are grappling with now. DD has a friend who she says is her girlfriend and has wanted a sleepover. I discussed with the therapist and we agreed that this is not a good idea. Like a PP said, I don't want to "punish" her for coming out to us. But OTOH, if it were a boyfriend, I wouldn't allow a sleepover either. So we framed it as, we're taking her seriously, and that means no sleepovers with someone you are attracted to because it could lead to emotional and physical situations that you aren't yet mature enough to handle. And especially my DD because she is already really struggling emotionally.
Another PP mentioned what is your obligation to other parents and I am also not sure what to do there. She has not had a sleepover since she came out to us. But if she is invited by a friend (a platonic friend, not a girlfriend), do I have an obligation to tell the other parents?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a spin off from the previous thread about gay or bi teens. I have 2 DD who are under the age of 10, so this isn't an issue for me. But it seems to be rather trendy for teen girls to say that their bi. If one of my daughters ever said she was bi, I would be very supportive of her, but I wouldn't allow her to have sleepovers with girls for the same reasons I wouldn't allow them with boys. However, the idea of not letting my daughter have sleepovers with her friends seems very sad to me. Wondering how parents who are in this situation handle it.
Interesting question…just want to point out that there's something else there that's tricky. And that is the obligation to tell the other parent. Let's say my DD is lesbian and wants a sleepover. (Ok I agree with you for same reasons as you stated and wouldn't do it) but if I were going to do it, the other parent and kid needs to know this. But it might still be private info for your kid.
Anyways if my kid was doing a sleepover with anyone who might be interested sexually in my kid, I'd want to know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you serious? "Trendy" for teen girls to say they are bi? What does that even mean?
You must not be under 30.
You're correct, but not by much. Enlighten me, please!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you serious? "Trendy" for teen girls to say they are bi? What does that even mean?
You must not be under 30.
Anonymous wrote:Are you serious? "Trendy" for teen girls to say they are bi? What does that even mean?
Anonymous wrote:I hope you've already talked to your teen about peer pressure and how you would like him/her to handle it.