Mom, the Phone Bill’s Due—Does That Include Snooping Rights?

May Be Interested In:Liverpool given asking price to sign Rayan Cherki as Lyon reach verbal agreement


Photo by Tim Gouw on Unsplash

Technology is one of those things that we all HAVE to have these days. How in the world did any of us survive without a smartphone? Kids having smartphones is widely debated, but when you decide to give your kid one for safety purposes or anything else, are you allowed to snoop?

There are parental controls. However, you’ll always hear the moms on social media that say “I bought their phones, I pay the bills, I can go through their phones whenever I want.”

So, is this okay?

Let’s take a look at what one mother has advocated for…

Photo by Vitolda Klein on Unsplash

Meet Laura

Laura Muse is a mom and a mental health clinician from North Carolina. She has two teenagers, a boy and a girl. Since the kids were around 11 years old, she began a weekly check where she would go through their phones to see who they were communicating with and what kind of activity they were engaging in.

She confiscates their phones at the end of each night so they get plenty of rest without being tempted to reach for their electronic devices, too.

She has said she trusts her kids but also wants to keep them safe. On the job, she’s seen how people have experienced trauma because of abuse, sexual assault, and more. If she sees an issue on one of her kids’ phones, it allows her to talk to them and turn it into a teachable moment.

Image by Jan Vašek from Pixabay

What Some Parents Do

Many parents talk about limiting screen time. Others set up parental controls on the phone or establish strict rules about when the phones can be used.

With so many apps and social platforms out there, parents are doing the best that they can.

Mental health experts on Psychology Today often advise parents to keep an open line of communication with their kids. It’s also a good idea to set up boundaries.

When you do everything you can to keep your kids safe, it reduces the potential for mental health problems down the road.

 

 

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

I Was Stuck in an Underground N.Y.C. Subway for 1.5 Hours and Needed to Be Evacuated (Exclusive)
I Was Stuck in an Underground N.Y.C. Subway for 1.5 Hours and Needed to Be Evacuated (Exclusive)
Bernard Keane (Image: Private Media)
Mapping dystopias from the airship of urban nightmares: 2024, via 1968
Drug 'superlabs' leave a toxic mess. Some say B.C.'s cleanup rules are a mess, too | CBC News
Drug ‘superlabs’ leave a toxic mess. Some say B.C.’s cleanup rules are a mess, too | CBC News
FTC refers Snap complaint alleging its chatbot harms young users
FTC refers Snap complaint alleging its chatbot harms young users
Musical duo Baba Stiltz and Okay Kaya: ‘Basically our music’s for losers’
Musical duo Baba Stiltz and Okay Kaya: ‘Basically our music’s for losers’
Zelensky says Trump and EU must work together to ‘stop Putin and save Ukraine’
Zelensky says Trump and EU must work together to ‘stop Putin and save Ukraine’
World in Motion: The Headlines That Matter | © 2024 | Daily News