Editor's Blog3 mins ago
sex
why is it that it's okay for a teenage girl to go round to her boyfriend's house for hours at a time during the day and evening, yet when it comes to sleeping over, that's totally out of the question?
what is there that you think we'll do at night that we won't do during the day? is sex a purely night-time thing when you get older?
i really cannot understand the logic, and would love to be enlightened as to why
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by magicdice. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's not so much that adults think you can only have sex at night... it's more perhaps that they don't really approve of you having sex, but they don't want to tell you that in so many words. And they feel that if they don't know about it then it's not really happening.
Yes, at any time of the day you could be "doing it" but if you and your boyfriend sleep together in the same bed at night at your house then your parents would feel are condoning your actions.
You're right, it *IS* illogical, but many fathers can be illogical about their teenage (and even older) daughters. The film "The father of the Bride" wasn't too far from the truth!
As a parent, I would feel it embarrassing if my son and girlfriend shared a bed under my roof. I don't know why - it's not that I don't approve of them having sex, I just don't want it to happen whilst I am about! I think it might be something to do with the fact that us Mum's can't even really let go of the apron strings and cannot really accept that our offspring have actually grown up.
Andy's reply is, as usual, brilliant.
Of course adults know you can do it 24/7. (Perhaps that's why there are so many unmarried mothers nowadays! )
But seriously, it is about respect. Even when I was married, we just didn't 'do it' when staying at their house.
I agree with ursula62 - if you're told it's okay to sleep over, (unless it's in separate rooms) then you're basically condoning it and then who picks up the pieces if something goes wrong? I don't just necessarily mean the obvious, but the emotional aspect when you split up and you've been allowed to behave like a married couple.
(Although you'll never understand while you are a teenager, you may one day if you have children of your own.)
My Mum and Dad are from that same school of thinking. My sister is 30, a career woman and lives with her boyfriend of 5 years, engaged to be married in 6 months. When the stay at my mum and dad's house they have to have separate rooms. I avoided this craziness by marrying my husband young.
You will just have to make sure you get all the sex you want in daylight hours.
I spend all evenings at my boyfriends house, and most weekend days and nights, but when I ask my dad if I can sleep over, he has a fit and says no.
I can understand why he does so - I am 16 and my boyfriend is 24. They get on like a house on fire, but dad is still oh so protective of me.
I don't understand it neither - I think it's their way of protecting you, but parents have to understand they were young once, too.
This all goes back to respecting your parents wishes.