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Do you agree with this MOM!!????

post #1 of 11
Thread Starter 
One mom, Jannel Burley Hofmann, bought her 13-year old son Gregory an iPhone for Christmas, and wrote the following letter / contract to accompany his gift. So check out her letter to him and let us know what you think: is she being perfectly fair and reasonable? Too controlling and restrictive?

12/25/2012
Dear Gregory
Merry Christmas! You are now the proud owner of an iPhone. Hot Damn! You are a good & responsible 13 year old boy and you deserve this gift. But with the acceptance of this present comes rules and regulations. Please read through the following contract. I hope that you understand it is my job to raise you into a well rounded, healthy young man that can function in the world and coexist with technology, not be ruled by it. Failure to comply with the following list will result in termination of your iPhone ownership.
I love you madly & look forward to sharing several million text messages with you in the days to come.
1. It is my phone. I bought it. I pay for it. I am loaning it to you. Arent I the greatest?
2. I will always know the password.
3. If it rings, answer it. It is a phone. Say hello, use your manners. Do not ever ignore a phone call if the screen reads Mom or Dad. Not ever.
4. Hand the phone to one of your parents promptly at 7:30pm every school night & every weekend night at 9:00pm. It will be shut off for the night and turned on again at 7:30am. If you would not make a call to someones land line, wherein their parents may answer first, then do not call or text. Listen to those instincts and respect other families like we would like to be respected.
5. It does not go to school with you. Have a conversation with the people you text in person. Its a life skill. *Half days, field trips and after school activities will require special consideration.
6. If it falls into the toilet, smashes on the ground, or vanishes into thin air, you are responsible for the replacement costs or repairs. Mow a lawn, babysit, stash some birthday money. It will happen, you should be prepared.
7. Do not use this technology to lie, fool, or deceive another human being. Do not involve yourself in conversations that are hurtful to others. Be a good friend first or stay the hell out of the crossfire.
8. Do not text, email, or say anything through this device you would not say in person.
9. Do not text, email, or say anything to someone that you would not say out loud with their parents in the room. Censor yourself.
10. No porn. Search the web for information you would openly share with me. If you have a question about anything, ask a person preferably me or your father.
11. Turn it off, silence it, put it away in public. Especially in a restaurant, at the movies, or while speaking with another human being. You are not a rude person; do not allow the iPhone to change that.
12. Do not send or receive pictures of your private parts or anyone elses private parts. Dont laugh. Someday you will be tempted to do this despite your high intelligence. It is risky and could ruin your teenage/college/adult life. It is always a bad idea. Cyberspace is vast and more powerful than you. And it is hard to make anything of this magnitude disappear including a bad reputation.
13. Dont take a zillion pictures and videos. There is no need to document everything. Live your experiences. They will be stored in your memory for eternity.
14. Leave your phone home sometimes and feel safe and secure in that decision. It is not alive or an extension of you. Learn to live without it. Be bigger and more powerful than FOMO fear of missing out.
15. Download music that is new or classic or different than the millions of your peers that listen to the same exact stuff. Your generation has access to music like never before in history. Take advantage of that gift. Expand your horizons.
16. Play a game with words or puzzles or brain teasers every now and then.
17. Keep your eyes up. See the world happening around you. Stare out a window. Listen to the birds. Take a walk. Talk to a stranger. Wonder without googling.
18. You will mess up. I will take away your phone. We will sit down and talk about it. We will start over again. You & I, we are always learning. I am on your team. We are in this together.
It is my hope that you can agree to these terms. Most of the lessons listed here do not just apply to the iPhone, but to life. You are growing up in a fast and ever changing world. It is exciting and enticing. Keep it simple every chance you get. Trust your powerful mind and giant heart above any machine. I love you. I hope you enjoy your awesome new iPhone. Merry Christmas!
xoxoxo
Mom

Original article and survey can be found here...
bit.ly/X05ea8
post #2 of 11
Very cool! This mother approves. (He is only 13, after all.)

Not all of those are rules, you know-- there's also parental-type advice and a few mere suggestions in there, too.


post #3 of 11
A bit harsh and overprotective, I know, but then again, I also bear in mind that he's only 13.

It wasn't until 19 when I got my first cellphone, a simple one as opposed to contemporary smartphones, thus such rules were not necessary in my case anyway, plus, by that age I already had the time to know and learn that cellphones are meant to be mainly utilitarian, not better nor worse, nor more or less (admittedly, maybe a bit faster) than any other means of communication.
post #4 of 11
Ugh. Poor kid. Must be like Alcatraz in that prison household.
I was brought up strictly but was never presented with binding contracts.
post #5 of 11
With today's kids, hooray for this mom!
post #6 of 11
I'm not sure what he will/can do with the phone if he'd stick to all the rules.

Quote:
Take a walk. Talk to a stranger.
post #7 of 11
The letter strikes me as both reasonable and humane. Brava, Mum!
post #8 of 11
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lady Grinning Soul View Post

The letter strikes me as both reasonable and humane. Brava, Mum!

its not a letter. its a contract. to a thirteen year old.
post #9 of 11
Sounds like my wife and I except that we are not nice enough to give our kids i-Phones, they get cheapies and not until they are 15 or 16. Yeah, we're very mean parents.
post #10 of 11
This letter is great and this mom is awesome.

To all the people who say it's over-protective, I don't agree.

In the end, trust has to be earned. That's how privileges work. If you behave, you get more of them. If you don't follow the rules, you keep less of them.

Something like this should be probationary. Rules like this aren't oppressive if it's for, let's say, the first year or two the kid has the cell phone. If he behaves and proves that he can handle responsibility (thats what freedom comes with), then the restrictions should loosen.

My parents had similar rules when I got my first phone (at age 13). Before there was touch screens, apps, texting and even a backlight for the screen. I was allowed to leave the house with the phone, but I had to call my parents every 3 hours to make sure I was okay. When I did bad things, my phone was taken away for a few days, but mostly, I followed all of the rules and these rules phased out.

There are two extreme forms of parenting in my opinion.
Laisezz-faire parenting often results in the kid getting involved in crime, drugs and other painful experiences.
Authoritarian parenting often creates a naive sheltered child who can't be independent and full of resent.

I'm no expert at parenting, but in my opinion, the right policy (the one my parents set with me) is to trust the child until the child can be proved to not be trusted. The whole Reaganese adage of "Trust, but verify" works here.
post #11 of 11
The contract doesn't cover him getting 'battered' for it and left in hospital. Well, they don't live in South London, I suppose.
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