I will track my daughter on Life360 when she goes to college in the fall — and it's nonnegotiable

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  • My daughter is going away to college this fall, and my anxiety is already creeping in.
  • I've used Life360 to track my kids ever since they started driving.
  • I have no intention of removing my daughter from Life360 once she heads off to college.
My daughter is a high school senior and was recently accepted to her dream college. As we celebrate her huge accomplishment and start planning for this exciting change, part of me is more than a little anxious about my first child leaving home.

Don't get me wrong — I fully trust my daughter. She is the proverbial "good kid" and has given us no reason to worry over the years. Still, the world outside her exemplary behavior and our well-intentioned parenting is still a dangerous place.

That's why my daughter will stay on our family's Life360 account for her freshman year and possibly beyond. That's nonnegotiable.

I understand my decision is controversial

For the uninitiated, Life360 is a location-sharing app where you can track your family member's movements. I became aware of its existence as my kids hit their teen years; I heard about other parents using it. I decided to track my kids through high school, especially when they started driving — and have no plans to stop.

To be clear, I don't stalk my teenagers. I don't obsessively check the notifications when they arrive in a new location. I don't ask a million questions about their plans. I don't punish them if they travel a certain distance or go somewhere without telling me.

Really, it's just a gut check — a way to keep me from worrying if they're running late or not replying to texts or phone calls. If I can at least see where they are, that their phone still has battery, and that there are no unsafe driving alerts, then I know they're simply living their lives, and I can go back to living mine.

I don't want to lose that peace of mind just because my daughter is going to college.

I've mentioned my plan to other college moms, and some of them raised their eyebrows. I understand that to some people, this may seem like a breach of privacy and, possibly, a bit of a helicopter mom move. To me, it's a practical use of a tool at my disposal that may help me sleep easier when half my heart is living in a dorm room 150 miles away.

I'm mostly open to changing my mind​

Right now, my plan to track my daughter at college is nonnegotiable.

But as an experienced mom, I know better than to speak in absolutes. My list of "I nevers" that I've gone back on over the years is about a mile long. When raising kids, there is no rule book, and we need to be prepared to make adjustments.

After all, when my kids first started learning to drive, I couldn't fathom them going places without me, and now, they drive everywhere on their own.

Maybe several months of safe and uneventful college life will convince me that it's time to cut the digital cord. Maybe I will feel the need to have her location available for the rest of her college years. I am keeping the door open for either possibility.

For now, my daughter is fine with my tracking​

Thankfully, my daughter isn't asking to be removed and doesn't seem bothered.

In fact, she's been known to check on me when I'm on a trip without her or merely going to Sephora without inviting her along. I consider our relationship to be quite healthy, and she knows the app provides me with some mental breathing room, so she hasn't asked me to stop.

If she did, we would have a conversation, and I would hear her out. But tracking her for at least the first few months at college would be a requirement.

Eventually, I'm sure it will become clear to us both that it's time to move on from this phase, but for the immediate future, the app stays.
 
Its non negotiable - I keep an open mind
What reason is there not to track her after college? If it's because it's illegal to do so are you really gonna let the law get in between you and your daughter?
If you're that anxious about her leaving the house you could've given her medication to keep her bed ridden, this way she won't do drugs or run of with some guy.

You have to ask yourself are you doing enough as it is? Rent a hotel nearby school and check up every month, steal her garbage phone her friends and teachers every day.
 
Cree.
And follow me on this one.
Py.

You're the kind of dumbfuck that goes "But why do my kids hate me" "But why did my kids put me in a nursing home" "But why are my kids fighting over my inheritance"

Do all of us a favor and put some Clorox and vinegar in a bucket and breathe deep.
 
this may seem like a breach of privacy and, possibly, a bit of a helicopter mom move.
If she did, we would have a conversation, and I would hear her out. But tracking her for at least the first few months at college would be a requirement.
Non negotiable? Why would a grown ass woman need to get your approval to stop you stalking her? Why would anybody ever write, let alone publish, this insanity?
3. If this is an advert, it's awful.
I hope so. But then I have to wonder who the fuck this ad is meant to appeal to.
 
If you click the links in the article it goes to more articles about the same app. The ‘writer’ of this piece has only this contribution to their profile. This is an absolutely bait to sell people on this app and maybe get some subscribers to this website.

Here’s the writer’s profile, all the articles seem to be hocking something though.
 
Non negotiable? Why would a grown ass woman need to get your approval to stop you stalking her? Why would anybody ever write, let alone publish, this insanity?

I hope so. But then I have to wonder who the fuck this ad is meant to appeal to.
She doesn't state it outright because she knows it would make her look terrible, but realistically the only way she could enforce this is by threatening to not pay for her college tuition. When your children are legally adults, you do still have some level of control over them, but only for as long as they're financially dependent on you. "Let me stalk you remotely while you're at college or you won't be able to afford to go" does not exactly scream a healthy familial relationship.
 
If your going that far just go all the way...
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Can't slip it off, can't cut it, can't disarm it, and it has a nice security LED.
 
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