Flankerl
Well-Known Member
14 or 15 for a boy. 25-30 for a girl.
lol thats what my boyfriend always says
When the first date should be? Considering my experience it doesnt matter what parents think.
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14 or 15 for a boy. 25-30 for a girl.
Just wanted to see your opinions on this. My parents were kinda strict so I couldn't actually go out on a date with a girl till I was 16 and it had to be in a lit public place......so the skating rink was it.
With my daughter I'll have to play it by ear since I'm much more liberal with her than the way I was brought up.
I have four points.
1. It is fantastic you have such a great relationship with your children.
2. It is unrealistic to believe your children share everything with you.
3. Birth control is needed "before", not "when". Lock the barn before the horse is gone, not the night after. Even if your children are 100% honest with you, sometimes things happen they did not foresee to discuss with you.
4.No one can say for sure they will not be raising grandchildren.
This is pretty much how I feel about it too. Although times change, people really don't. However how society and peers accept behaviors will have a lot of influence on some decision making. Like the gap between what my parents believed and what I heard, I'm sure I will run in with my daughter when the time comes. All I can do for now is instill in her values of responsibility, self awareness, and expectation as you said.I hated that my mom would not let me date until I was 16. It's just stupid (and frustrating) for a teen to be halfway through high school before a parent allows any sort of dating.
Really I don't think it's so much just age, but what sort of behavior is allowed at a certain age. The ages 10-14 there is really nothing wrong kids holding hands, having long phone conversations, some kissing (not tonguing), and supervised outings. And then from 14 on, you can't censor or limit what they hear, see, say, and do at school or at friends houses, and rather than putting up limits and restrictions I believe it is more productive to instill a since of responsibilities, expectations, consequences, and realistic consequences that can happen (such as pregnancy and STDs) to deal with the bombardment of peer-pressure that overlaps into dating and sex.