3 Responses to “Parents, Do You Allow Your Children Privacy?”

  1. Jen says:

    I think you need to show your teen that you trust him or her, unless they give you a reason to do otherwise. I'm like you to the extend that I keep an eye on the Facebook and who he's e-mailing, but I don't read all the e-mails and I don't have the password to his Facebook. I've looked at his FB a couple of times when he left it up on my computer and if asked him who he's talking to on the cell phone, but I won't go any more intrusive than that unless his behavior warrants it. I think if you don't give your teen ANY privacy, they'll want to sneak even more, but on the other hand, it's my house so if he's acting funny, I have the right to investigate. BTW, he's 15.

  2. Bookwormm21 says:

    I think the fact that your friend's son is unaware of at least some what his mother is doing makes it snooping/spying rather than monitoring. It's hard to judge, given that your friend did not say what led her to do those things, but if her son finds out, it could really harm their relationship. I know that if my parents had been doing those kinds of things without my knowledge when I was a teen, it would have taken me a very long time to forgive and trust them again if I ever found out, and I probably would have been less inclined to be up front or honest in the future.

  3. glamazini
    Twitter:
    says:

    My initial answer was "nope, children have no privacy" and honestly that's where I stand now. That said, I don't foresee myself actively "snooping" in anyone's stuff unless I have reason to be suspicious of destructive behaviors. When I was growing up I gave my parents no reason to snoop and they never did although I 100% understood that if they decided to they would exercise that right. That's where I stand.

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