Dec 9, 2019, 2:27 AM

@thesuntsar said in The Dark Side of online Role-Playing:

he doesn't want his impressionable kid communicating with internet strangers behind closed doors so the computer is in a public space.

@Meg said in The Dark Side of online Role-Playing:

in what world is like-- don't engage (AS AN UNDERAGE PERSON) in a sexual way with people you don't know who they are online an abusive stance?

It's puritanical thinking like this that messes kids up. It teaches kids that sex is dangerous and bad and they should feel bad for wanting to know about it.

"We don't do this in our house." is saying to your kid that if they engage in this behavior or even like it, there is something terribly wrong with them.

Talk to any young trans person or gay person who grew up in a religious household and they will tell you, having your parents put down laws about what is and what is not acceptable things to think about and feel will mess you up.

I know these parents think they are doing what is best for their children but history, statistics, science, and experience, all show this is not the case.

Your kid is going to learn about sex and it's going to be confusing and emotionally problematic enough without his or her number 1 source of emotional security in life making them feel like shit for having thoughts and feelings they can't control.

Policing your kid's exploration of sexuality is way more developmentally harmful than letting them go online and learn about sex on their own terms.

Parents who try and control everything just end up driving a wedge between themselves and their children. It's a bad, bad, idea.