30 answers

Teen Text Messaging Saga

My 16 year old seems unable to to put down her cell phone since we have gotten unlimited text-messaging on her phone. She has never had a cell before as she was living in a children's home up until 2 weeks ago; we have just adopted her. I thought the novelty of the phone would wear off by now. I have spoken to her about manners, being rude, etc. For the most part she puts it away during family time, BUT every other moment that child is texting. Does anyone have advice on how they handle this situation? Am I making too much of it? I'm getting tired of hearing myself talk to her about it, so I'm sure she's tired too. Thank you.

6 moms found this helpful

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So What Happened?™

Wow, I so appreciate the feedback, advice and time from everyone. I am beginning to understand that texting is a genre that is new to me and a very important part of my daughters social life. I will continue to give her boundaries and as long as she respects them I shouldn't get "my panties in a bundle"! Thank you Mamas for hearing, listening and caring. What a great resource this website is. I imagine I will be visiting often!

Featured Answers

Good for you adopting an older child! You might try setting time limits on texting. Like she can text from 3:30 to 5:30 then put it away for the rest of the day. I would be concerned about her texting at school if she is that enamored with it. I've heard kids are often allowed to text at school. Be careful she isn't doing that all day instead of listening to her teachers.

Good Luck!
M.

4 moms found this helpful

As an adolescent counselor the only thing I would recommend is see if you can see what it is she is texting, and what she is receiving. There have been reports lately of inappropriate text messages: sexual content, teens being sexually harrassed, bullied, etc...

Just a precaution.

3 moms found this helpful

I think the advise of setting boundaries and schedules and helping her adjust will work well.
She is probably so dang excited!
GOOD LUCK

3 moms found this helpful

More Answers

Congrats! I agree and disagree w/those below...It's only been 2 weeks! This sweet girl probably didn't have much before she got to your home. I would tell her your expectations and then see if she follows through or disregards your rule. I also don't think getting rid of the unlimited texting just yet is the answer....if she abides by your rules and puts the phone away during family times and other events why can't she have unlimited messages? This saves you money incase she would go over a limit! Just remember, it's only been 2 weeks...this phone is probably like gold to this sweet girl!! I would give it a little more time and then see what happens....maybe a month or so...just put yourself in her position. YAY to you for adopting an older child!

5 moms found this helpful

You are making too much of it. I have a 16 year old and that is the new way they communicate with their friends. I am glad my daughter has unlimited text messaging because she used over 8000 text messages last month. As long as she does her choirs, homework, and anything you ask be happy and enjoy your daughter. I have a adopted son 2 years old.

4 moms found this helpful

My son is 17 and my niece is 18 - my son had 500 text msgs last month and my niece over 1000 and both have had phones for a few years not just weeks(my husband and I each had just under 200 texts). As long as your daughter is learning manners on when it's appropriate and inappropriate I feel it's ok. When my daughter was a teen, I learned to pick my battles. If endless text messaging is the biggest problem you have and it doesn't interfer with school or other responsibilities, please consider yourself extremely lucky. Just set the rules and let her know it's a responsibility and a privilege. If she's irresponsible with it, she'll lose the privilege. Is the texting causing any harm or disrespect or just irritating you? I have added a download block to my son's phone and my husband's phone :)

4 moms found this helpful

This is very normal and kids today are master multi-taskers. However, I set boundaries with my daughter (17)such as no texting during school hours, after 10PM, during meals, during church, homework time, while driving, etc. She knows I check the itemized cell phone bill to check if she is texting during school, and monitor her compliance as much as possible. The consequence for breaking the rules is no phone for at least a week. Don't be afraid to take away the phone and be firm. She will hoot and holler but she'll live.

PS: Pay for the unlimited text feature--it will save your sanity not to mention your checkbook.

4 moms found this helpful

The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh away. Sit down with her and tell you how you feel and work out what is fair use of the texting. Extended conversations should be off limits during family time or during homework for instance, when a one or two word answer might be permissable. Then there is her ability to turn off the phone and ultimately your ability to taketh it away.
C. S.

4 moms found this helpful

Good for you adopting an older child! You might try setting time limits on texting. Like she can text from 3:30 to 5:30 then put it away for the rest of the day. I would be concerned about her texting at school if she is that enamored with it. I've heard kids are often allowed to text at school. Be careful she isn't doing that all day instead of listening to her teachers.

Good Luck!
M.

4 moms found this helpful

Hi,
I am a social worker and deal with teens. Cell phones are in with this generation but they do become obsession very quickly. So boundaries need to be set otherwise the phone will become an obsessive compulsive issue. I have already experienced this numerous times with my clients. So the parents would put a timer on the phone or often had to remove the telephone until responsibility or action was taken. One youth i was working with used text, downloads, and such and ran the bill up to over $1,000.00. She became defiant and rebellious. So mom took the telephone and allowed her to use it at certain times. Yes, it caused anger and loss of control but boundaries are very important esp. since she is a new member. If boundaries aren't set now, then her behavior will become more rebellious. I would advise an adoption support group esp. for older teens that you and your daughter can participate in.....or even seek post adoption counseling. Adopting an older child can be very difficult and challenging. You will need extra support. But the counseling is necessary so that the transition can be a smooth one and loving. Good luck. JW

4 moms found this helpful

I too am going through this and have been for some time. We now treat the phone like we do the computer...they have a set amount of time to use it. When it first became a problem, I sat my 16 yr old daughter and my 14 yr old son down and explained that they could not ignore me and/or the rest of the world b/c of texting. If they could show good judgement and limited use themselves, I would not set boundaries re the phone. That lasted for one day, possibly two...? They can take their phones to school (they are not allowed to use them there but can call me after if they need to), leave them on the kitchen counter when they get home and then use them or the computer for their alloted hour. From 9-10pm they can take their phones and/or be on the computer. At 10pm they turn them in b/c they were staying up all night texting. I let them take them when going somewhere without me but that's it. I'm way over the phones!!! We also have an exchange student this year and had the same problems w/ him. Within the first two weeks of the exchange it became apparent that a teenager is a teenager, is a teenager...no matter where they come from! Hope this helps somewhat...it has helped us to restore some sanity in our house hold.

4 moms found this helpful

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