Anonymous wrote:I have discovered for the third time that my DD (who is 16) is reading fan-fiction porn. There are sites like Archieve of our Own where people post the fan fiction that they write, and some of it is just ordinary bad (bad writing), but the rest of it is porn - and not romantic porn, but hard core disturbing porn (stories or gang rape, male on male rape/sex, kids watching, etc). When we discovered it before, we have told her that her curiousity is normal, totally age appropriate but that we don't feel like this is the kind of material she should be reading. We asked her to stop, she agreed, and we casually monitored her internet use - meaning I didn't check what she was doing every day, but would occassionally look. After the second time we discovered it, we put a tracking software on, and that helped, but it isn't 100% teenproof and this is the third time we have discovered her accessing it again. I think she feels guilty about it. She has some issues of picking at her skin...and I think it is related to the guilt, tension she feels about reading this stuff. I think it is time for us to block her access to the site....but it is hard to completely block a site ...and then of course she can probably find this stuff somewhere else....and I don't want her to turn to videos. We have a fairly open relationship, but this is hard. We have really tried to avoid shaming her, but the content is so disturbing to me, that is is hard avoid some shame. Any advice? Please -helpful and thoughtful posts only.
Anonymous wrote:Buy her a vibrator.
Eh sounds like you’re the one relying on books dear.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you are not too bright are you. Or I guess your doctor stinks because our doctor absolutely has these discussions and we have very open conversations with our teens. But let me guess you’re the parent who tells/thinks all the other parents are way too strict and you’re the parent who’s got it all figured out?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again OP this site will make you think everything and anything goes and it’s all normal and healthy. It is not and your doctor is the best person to seek advices from, teens need boundaries and guidance even when they think they don’t. Please don’t take advice on this subject from this board. At the bare minimum google some reputable medical sources.Anonymous wrote:I have seen dozens of tiktok videos from liberal/leftist Gen Z creators who said that their parents’ giving them unfettered access to the internet at a young age really messed them up and they will not make the same mistake, and those videos have thousands of likes, shares, etc. I wonder if this is the kind of stuff they are talking about?
Anyway, I’ll just reiterate that I think erotica is all good but the kind of stuff OP’s daughter is reading isn’t appropriate for minors.
I hope you don't actually have children. Telling HER DOCTOR about her porn preferences would be the ultimate humiliation and betrayal of trust and privacy.
You're the type of parent that make kids move 1000 miles away to get as far away from you as possible
Loosen up a little, honey. Maybe go upstairs and lock the door and read some of your teens erotica.
Anonymous wrote:OP here again- thanks for the many helpful comments. I too read Flowers in the Attic (every book!) but Incan guarantee that the fanfic does not compare. If it were like that I would ignore it. DD does well (like a 3.4 or something) but she spends more time reading the fanfic than she does at schoolwork. So i do worry it is a bit of an addiction. I realize the male on male comment sounds homophobic- I am lgbt supportive- but the stories feel particularly violent. And I guess I am concerned that it doesn't include her- a female perspective. I have considered telling her she can read any book she wants but that the invetted stuff online is not ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Women reading m/m smut is one of those things that's astonishingly common and almost never discussed. I used to know a lesbian who exclusively wrote X-Men m/m porn. She was still a lesbian, an old-school Park Slope lesbian. But it's a thing. I see the appeal myself, I just wish more of it was good.
I'm pretty sure my 14 yo writes smut on AO3. I never ever want to read it. Boundaries, people.
Almost never discussed because it can be shamed like this. I’ve had conversations with my kid about fanfic - about authors taking an existing universe they love and reimagining some parts of it. Yes, sex can be part of it, even extreme situations like you describe.
Fun fact: NK Jemisin said in a NYT piece that she has a secret account under which she posts fanfic.
Anonymous wrote:you are not too bright are you. Or I guess your doctor stinks because our doctor absolutely has these discussions and we have very open conversations with our teens. But let me guess you’re the parent who tells/thinks all the other parents are way too strict and you’re the parent who’s got it all figured out?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again OP this site will make you think everything and anything goes and it’s all normal and healthy. It is not and your doctor is the best person to seek advices from, teens need boundaries and guidance even when they think they don’t. Please don’t take advice on this subject from this board. At the bare minimum google some reputable medical sources.Anonymous wrote:I have seen dozens of tiktok videos from liberal/leftist Gen Z creators who said that their parents’ giving them unfettered access to the internet at a young age really messed them up and they will not make the same mistake, and those videos have thousands of likes, shares, etc. I wonder if this is the kind of stuff they are talking about?
Anyway, I’ll just reiterate that I think erotica is all good but the kind of stuff OP’s daughter is reading isn’t appropriate for minors.
I hope you don't actually have children. Telling HER DOCTOR about her porn preferences would be the ultimate humiliation and betrayal of trust and privacy.
You're the type of parent that make kids move 1000 miles away to get as far away from you as possible
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the responses that just say “ignore it and don’t talk to your daughter” are somewhat informed by American puritanical prudishness. A parent can have a healthy, sex-positive conversation with their child about what kind of sexual stuff they are reading without it being weird.
There's nothing healthy about barging your way into your child's sexual fantasies.[u]
you are not too bright are you. Or I guess your doctor stinks because our doctor absolutely has these discussions and we have very open conversations with our teens. But let me guess you’re the parent who tells/thinks all the other parents are way too strict and you’re the parent who’s got it all figured out?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again OP this site will make you think everything and anything goes and it’s all normal and healthy. It is not and your doctor is the best person to seek advices from, teens need boundaries and guidance even when they think they don’t. Please don’t take advice on this subject from this board. At the bare minimum google some reputable medical sources.Anonymous wrote:I have seen dozens of tiktok videos from liberal/leftist Gen Z creators who said that their parents’ giving them unfettered access to the internet at a young age really messed them up and they will not make the same mistake, and those videos have thousands of likes, shares, etc. I wonder if this is the kind of stuff they are talking about?
Anyway, I’ll just reiterate that I think erotica is all good but the kind of stuff OP’s daughter is reading isn’t appropriate for minors.
I hope you don't actually have children. Telling HER DOCTOR about her porn preferences would be the ultimate humiliation and betrayal of trust and privacy.
You're the type of parent that make kids move 1000 miles away to get as far away from you as possible