Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP here with more updates! I went over to the friend's home last night. They live in a well-maintained home and seemed very understanding. Her mom is Buddhist, so there was incense burning in the living area of the house. It might be because of this that I didn't notice an overwhelming marijuana odor, but overall the house was clean and well-kept. They did have a shelf dedicated to paraphernalia like DD said, but it was on the bottom of a bookshelf with glass doors covering it up. Otherwise, no Bob Marley posters or rasta colors or anything like that.
I learned that the two moved to the area from a liberal college town, which explains their departure from the typically conservative MD family. I also think this is why DD and her friend get along so well, as they both aren't satisfied with the "typical" culture of MoCo girls. They're into stuff like organic food and meditation (no judgement, of course!), but overall seemed like responsible, if unconventional, parents. The dad works a 9-5 job in hospitality, and seemed to genuinely regret smoking with the two girls. He said he understands that pot affects everyone differently, and that just because he finds it helpful for him and his daughter doesn't mean that he should be influencing or enabling my DD to start using. His story also matched up 100% with DD's. While I don't think I'm ready to trust DD in their house just yet, I think that going over with DD for dinner once in a while wouldn't be a bad idea.
I still think you are crazy. No way no how would my kid ever step into a house again where the father had smoked pot with my DD.
+2!
That dad is probably sleeping with your DD and laughing at you behind your back. If they are so "organic" and "hippy", why wouldn't they ask for your consent? There is no way that they thought that you would be ok with it. For god's sake, parent.
No offense, but this is why dads are useful. No interested father is going to allow his daughter to smoke pot with someone else's dad. This whole post is so sad. I have so many friends like your DD. Came from broken homes and looked to be doing fine. Got to 17 and fell apart. Then the stories of abuse come out, and all the other inappropriate experiences because their mothers were completely oblivious.