Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s not doing anything wrong unless she was lying to him. Teenagers do not have to be in committed relationships. Calm down, Mom.
She was cheating. That's lying.
We don’t know that. That’s his perspective.
OP here. She was cheating. And cheating is lying. That is why my son is so upset. He 100% believed (and was told) that they were exclusive. So were the other two boys apparently. The boys have spoken and her cover completely unraveled. She is a psycho little tramp, to put it mildly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I came home to a distraught, heartbroken, 17 year old son last night. He found out his gf of 9 months actually had 2 other boyfriends. Besides having him screened for STDs, my first thought is to message the mom and let he know what a skanky little POS her daughter is. I'd use polite language of course, but even still there's a part of me that thinks theres no way of doing it without looking a bit crazy.
I think the conversation that you need to have with your 17 YO son is, first empathy and sympathy (yes, we've all been there) and second, why it's a mistake to get sexually involved at this age. How devasting for a teen to have to have an STD test.
Anonymous wrote:JFC helicopter mom.
Doesn’t matter if the girl was right or wrong - if he’s old enough to have sex, he is old enough to navigate relationships without mommy.
If you fall into the “let mommy handle it” trap, he’s going to end up completely dependent on you and not know how to handle these things himself.
Do you really want to end up with a 40 year old son who, whenever he has a problem with his wife, calls mommy and lets her deal with it? Great way for him to end up divorced.
By all means, be there for him, listen to him, empathize with him, but ultimately, let him decide how he wants to handle it. Don’t be that mom.
-signed, someone who stopped hiring young adults because of how often moms came to job interviews or called me when I was being “mean” to their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s not doing anything wrong unless she was lying to him. Teenagers do not have to be in committed relationships. Calm down, Mom.
She was cheating. That's lying.
We don’t know that. That’s his perspective.
OP here. She was cheating. And cheating is lying. That is why my son is so upset. He 100% believed (and was told) that they were exclusive. So were the other two boys apparently. The boys have spoken and her cover completely unraveled. She is a psycho little tramp, to put it mildly.
Anonymous wrote:you sound like you are ten years old
who calls a 17 year old a 'skank' - grow the f up.
Anonymous wrote:As another poster stated, please be very careful and what language you use around the house talking about this. Your son is hurting and you really don’t want this to become how he feels women and relationships. This went poorly, and he invested in the wrong person. It’s normal to have a lot of feelings under the circumstances.
When we are intimate with someone, we run the risk of being hurt by them. That’s the lesson. People can disappoint us and it’s really important that we know who we are and make good choices in our partners.
Anonymous wrote:I came home to a distraught, heartbroken, 17 year old son last night. He found out his gf of 9 months actually had 2 other boyfriends. Besides having him screened for STDs, my first thought is to message the mom and let he know what a skanky little POS her daughter is. I'd use polite language of course, but even still there's a part of me that thinks theres no way of doing it without looking a bit crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s not doing anything wrong unless she was lying to him. Teenagers do not have to be in committed relationships. Calm down, Mom.
She was cheating. That's lying.
We don’t know that. That’s his perspective.
OP here. She was cheating. And cheating is lying. That is why my son is so upset. He 100% believed (and was told) that they were exclusive. So were the other two boys apparently. The boys have spoken and her cover completely unraveled. She is a psycho little tramp, to put it mildly.
Judging by your reaction, your son was raised by a psycho and that’s the level of crazy that feels normal to him. Of course he sought out a girl who was a little crazy for his first relationship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s not doing anything wrong unless she was lying to him. Teenagers do not have to be in committed relationships. Calm down, Mom.
She was cheating. That's lying.
We don’t know that. That’s his perspective.
OP here. She was cheating. And cheating is lying. That is why my son is so upset. He 100% believed (and was told) that they were exclusive. So were the other two boys apparently. The boys have spoken and her cover completely unraveled. She is a psycho little tramp, to put it mildly.
Anonymous wrote:STDs - are they using condoms? I mean the men in DC are sleeping with like 3+ women per week from Tinder. Dont sex shame your son's former girlfriend and DO NOT message the mother.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like your son is a little loose with his morals as well. 17 and having sex? And then blaming HER? Also, he has to know she's not a virgin, right? So he has to know she's putting out all over the place. That's probably why he dated her.
No, they're both gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s not doing anything wrong unless she was lying to him. Teenagers do not have to be in committed relationships. Calm down, Mom.
What part of the words "girlfriend of 9 months" is not clear to you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I came home to a distraught, heartbroken, 17 year old son last night. He found out his gf of 9 months actually had 2 other boyfriends. Besides having him screened for STDs, my first thought is to message the mom and let he know what a skanky little POS her daughter is. I'd use polite language of course, but even still there's a part of me that thinks theres no way of doing it without looking a bit crazy.
I think the conversation that you need to have with your 17 YO son is, first empathy and sympathy (yes, we've all been there) and second, why it's a mistake to get sexually involved at this age. How devasting for a teen to have to have an STD test.