Current:Home > reviewsMy 8-year-old daughter got her first sleepover invite. There's no way she's going. -VisionFunds
My 8-year-old daughter got her first sleepover invite. There's no way she's going.
View
Date:2025-04-18 03:42:20
My 8-year-old daughter just got her first sleepover invite. There's no way her dad will let her go.
"Back in the olden days," as my daughter likes to say, I went to a lot of sleepovers. I walked several blocks to my friend's house to play in her room plastered with New Kids on the Block posters. I rode my bike to the nearby creek and played ... alone. I did a lot of things my kids aren't allowed to do without me today.
My mom, who is so (self-admittedly) neurotic that if I don't call her everyday she thinks I'm dead, never seemed to worry much about me doing those things back in the 1980s and '90s. Not that I would have known at the time, but I don't remember a debate about whether or not sleepovers were safe. Everyone did them.
But times have changed.
The great slumber party debate
Sleepovers are now a touchy subject. It can end friendships and create animosity among family members. I've seen more than one parent take serious offense to a sleepover offer rejected by another parent.
Like so many other issues (even something that might seem as ordinary as breastfeeding), once the debate is taken to the internet, things can get really nasty, really quickly.
Even harder than saying no to my daughter is explaining why. How do I explain to my 8-year-old that her friend's houses might not be safe? (They probably are safe, but how can I know for sure?)
"It's my job to take care of you."
"But if you know Alyssa's mom, why can't I go? You said yourself she's nice."
"True ..."
What I'm teaching my kids:Kindness isn't just a virtue, it's a survival tactic
All the perfect moms online will have the perfect answer, but I have always been an imperfect mother. I am not always sure what to say or do as a parent. And when I do or say something important, I am not always sure whether I did the right thing or said it the right way.
Most days, I'm pretty sure I could have done better.
I was warned about all this doubt, all this worry. When my oldest daughter was born, my mother told me, "Being a mom is about feeling guilty for the rest of your life." I guess this is what she meant.
My daughter doesn't understand the risks that I know about after having been exposed to sexual abuse by a babysitter when I was 12. She doesn't know the things I know from working as an attorney reading case after case, bad law after bad law, about child abuse. She doesn't know that most often it's those closest to us, those who have intimate access, who violate our trust and our physical integrity.
My daughter is a child. She still trusts people and believes in Santa Claus and magic. She still gets money under her pillow when the tooth fairy makes a visit.
Unsure about what to do, I spoke with two friends about "to sleep over or not to sleep over" and got two very different perspectives. One woman told me that her parents never let her stay over at a friend's house and she doesn't let her kids do sleepovers. "Why tempt the devil?"
Another friend told me her daughter has had sleepovers since she was 6. "You can't protect her from everything forever."
But I want to.
My concern about sleepovers is rooted in my own experiences
What happened to me, and the area of law I plunged into once I became an attorney, is part of what feeds my fear of something happening to my girls.
The 'Epstein list' ...and why we need to talk about consent with our kids
If we want to protect our children from anything it's violence, any type of violence, and the shame and fear, the blow to your self-worth, the terrible ways you begin to cope, that accompanies victims for years, sometimes decades, after that type of traumatic event.
Inevitably, what you decide to do with sleepovers, like so many parenting decisions, is deeply personal. One thing I have learned as a mother is that we are all trying to do our best, even if other people don't think our best is "the best." We base our decisions off of our life experiences, our values, our education – and we try to make the "right" choice.
With sleepovers it's true, you can't control what happens in someone else's house and that is a risk. It's also true that you can't shield your children from all harm, forever and ever. But who am I to decide the "right" answer in the great sleepover debate? I am just an imperfect mom trying to do my best.
Carli Pierson is a digital editor at USA TODAY and an attorney. She recently finished a legal consultancy with Equality Now, an international feminist organization working to eliminate sexual violence and discrimination against women and girls.
veryGood! (932)
Related
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- National Good Samaritan Day: 6 of our most inspiring stories that highlight amazing humans
- Sister Wives' Janelle Brown Brought to Tears Over Support of Late Son Garrison
- AP PHOTOS: Muslims around the world observe holy month of Ramadan with prayer, fasting
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- Ten years after serving together in Iraq these battle buddies reunited
- Corrections officers sentenced in case involving assault of inmate and cover up
- Teen Mom's Cheyenne Floyd Says This Is the Secret to a Healthy Sex Life
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Babies R Us opening shops inside about 200 Kohl's stores across the country
Ranking
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Mass kidnappings from Nigeria schools show the state does not have control, one expert says
- Stephan Sterns faces 60 new child sex abuse charges in connection to Madeline Soto's death
- House Democrats try to force floor vote on foreign aid for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Schedule, bracket, storylines and what to know for the Big East men's tournament
- TEA Business College’s Mission and Achievements
- ‘The Fall Guy,’ a love letter to stunt performers, premieres at SXSW
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry agrees to resign, bowing to international and internal pressure
Police search for a University of Missouri student in Nashville
Trade: Pittsburgh Steelers sending WR Diontae Johnson to Carolina Panthers
Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
Mississippi will allow quicker Medicaid coverage during pregnancy to try to help women and babies
Judge overseeing Georgia election interference case dismisses some charges against Trump
New Study Shows Planting Trees May Not Be as Good for the Climate as Previously Believed