Teenagers and random room inspections

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  • emkayelle91
    emkayelle91 Posts: 846 Member
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    My sons are young now, but once they are teenagers I don't plan on going through their room unless I see a huge red flag as to why I should. But my goal is to let my sons know that they can tell me anything without judgement and therefore I won't feel the need to go through their things. I know that my mom went through my room, and all it did was make me want to do bad things and get away with it, that's mainly why I don't want to be that way with my sons when they are older. Plus, I never hid my bad things in my room anyway. I hid everything in my old play room from when I was little among my barbie collection. She never thought to look there ;)
  • Crimson_Fire
    Crimson_Fire Posts: 2,504 Member
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    ...I don't like to wash the laundry I had already washed because she was too tired, lazy, bored, busy...ect. to put it away properly.
    Mom?! Is that you?? ...oh goodness. I'm 23 and I own my own home, but I am the absolute WORST when it comes to putting clean laundry away.


    Anyway, to answer the OP's question...My parents had the rule of "We pay for the roof over your head and all of your stuff. This gives us the right to pop in at any time if we feel that it's necessary." My sister and I never gave them a reason to, but they let us know that they would do it. We were cool with that.

    Edited for typo.
  • MYhealthyjourney70
    MYhealthyjourney70 Posts: 276 Member
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    only if they gave me reason to search their rooms. i gave them their privacy.
  • BillyC96
    BillyC96 Posts: 7,560 Member
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    I do it all the time. My house my rules.

    This.

    Mom and I pay the bills. We have free reign.

    Having said that only one of the kids has given us a reason to do it. This does not include going in to investigate a bad smell caused by an unintended new life form being cultivated in a long forgotten dish.
  • mariepreston1995
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    against it

    my mom would never ever had done it...she had no reason too id tell her anything and I mean anything because I knew I could

    no matter what it was.......drugs,sex,rock&roll

    This. Kids should be able to go to their parents for anything. Kind of hard to do when they search your room for answers.

    True but, when they don't go to their parents for anything and they use a "follower" mentality with the wrong crowds. There is a fine line

    If you see something suspicious or think he's acting strange, then maybe you could search his room when he's not around, but I would hate it if my parents searched my room with me there, or told me they searched my room... because it would definitely lower my chances of coming to them when I needed help or advise.
  • lizzardsm
    lizzardsm Posts: 271 Member
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    I was a really good kid and would never even contemplate doing anything bad. My parents were ultra conservative, ultra strict, and ultra untrusting. I never did anything bad to make them not trust me and they never really gave me their trust. I knew that my mom would regularly snoop through my room when I was in school. I just learned not to keep anything that I'd want found in the house - which for me was just that I stopped keeping a diary. As a result of the lack of trust and snooping, I lied lied lied lied about anything that would trigger my parents (no, I'm NOT going to a movie with guys and girls... just my girl friends...).

    I think and an open and honest relationship with your kids is something to strive for. I also think that room inspections are sometimes necessary to keep your kids safe. If you have a good relationship with your kids in the first place, it might feel less like violating privacy.
  • pawnstarNate
    pawnstarNate Posts: 1,728 Member
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    This does not include going in to investigate a bad smell caused by an unintended new life form being cultivated in a long forgotten dish.

    Been there.....I never knew a half glass of Tang could actually turn green until a few months ago
  • cherie515
    cherie515 Posts: 37 Member
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    I'm a snooper, can't help it. I don't actually have teens yet but I'm guessing its a Yep.
  • lisalsd1
    lisalsd1 Posts: 1,521 Member
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    I disagree; UNLESS the kid has given you a reason to inspect. For example, the kid has been in trouble for drinking...then an appropriate "punishment" would be random room inspections.

    When my mom was a teen (back in the 60's), her mother did random room inspection for no other reason than my mom liked art...so she had to be "on drugs." Yeah, my mom still resents it.
  • seltzermint555
    seltzermint555 Posts: 10,742 Member
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    This does not include going in to investigate a bad smell caused by an unintended new life form being cultivated in a long forgotten dish.

    Been there.....I never knew a half glass of Tang could actually turn green until a few months ago

    Maybe this is where I won out by being a little bit of a neat freak even as a teen ;-)

    I remember my friends getting in trouble sometimes even when they were 20 yrs old and in college, for having food and dirty dishes and glasses causing issues with bugs or rodents in their parents' homes. What in the world!? I know I probably sound snotty saying this but EWW that's disgusting. I rarely ate or drank outside of the kitchen/dining areas and if I did I washed my plates.

    So I guess that may be part of why my parents didn't find my stash of illicit items!! haha
  • SpeSHul_SnoflEHk
    SpeSHul_SnoflEHk Posts: 6,256 Member
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    Coming from a good kid who had her parents snoop and find birth control I was on for endometriosis, which, in turn, caused them to change their will instead of being freaking adults and talking to me about it... I'm against it, unless mine gives me a reason to.


    *giant sigh* I didn't think it was possible to hate your parents more.

    My mom found my birth control too. I was 16 and it was a friggin huge deal that I was having sex with my serious boyfriend. So my mom interrogates me...my whole life she said that sex is for people who love each other. So I find someone who I love and it's not good enough for her that not only I'm having a loving relationship, but I'm doing my best to make sure I don't get pregnant. I'd clearly already been lying to her for a long time, but this type of **** is why you have to talk with your kids.

    Don't make assumptions. Sit down with them. LISTEN TO THEM. Try to understand, you remember what it was like to be a kid. Don't lie. You're still a friggin kid.

    This reminds me of the time my mother took my pants from my room to wash them, and found my condoms in the pocket. She confronted me abut it, and threw them away and said, I wasn't allowed to have sex at 15. Really, what she did was tell me I couldn't have "safe" sex at 15.
  • FatFreeFrolicking
    FatFreeFrolicking Posts: 4,252 Member
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    Against it, unless you have a valid reason to believe child is a danger to herself/himself or others.

    Edited for typo.
  • ironanimal
    ironanimal Posts: 5,922 Member
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    Never happened to me, but all they would have found would have been lost socks and empty Dr. Pepper bottles.

    I'm against it, unless you have cause for concern and the teen wasn't being truthful with you. If I ever have a son, I'll make sure to check he has a good supply in his tissue box every now and then.
  • agarlits
    agarlits Posts: 429 Member
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    My parents tried that on me when I was a teenager. They never found anything that I had hidden though and they quit shortly after I started doing random inspections of their room.
  • Docmahi
    Docmahi Posts: 1,603 Member
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    omg the coffee filters hahahahahahaha - i have no kids but man I dunno if I would want to lmao who knows what you would find
  • Go_Mizzou99
    Go_Mizzou99 Posts: 2,628 Member
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    I have one kid who has graduated college, is building his first house, and is basically doing very well. And his younger bother by 2 years, same deal as his older brother on everything, is in his 3rd (and final) rehab for drug addiction.

    Random room searches would not have made a difference. At any high school assembly, 85% of the kids there either have drugs in their system or have tried them. These are hard statistics.
  • dietcoke281
    dietcoke281 Posts: 226 Member
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    Only controlling parents would do that. If you actually trusted your child maybe they wouldn't have to hide stuff, therefore room inspections wouldn't be required.
  • emilyisbonkers
    emilyisbonkers Posts: 373 Member
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    If you're having to resort to deception and deceit to maintain authority you're going wrong somewhere
  • Winter_wren
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    Absolutely against this idea.

    Parents who want their kids to trust them and be able to come to them with any problems would absolutely destroy that trust with a random room search. Just because teenagers are younger doesn't mean that they're not entitled to a measure of respect and common decency.

    My parents did occasional, random room searches when I was in high school (for no reason whatsoever: they just wanted to "make sure" I wasn't into anything I shouldn't be) and not only did it make me feel like my personal space had been violated, but it made me lose all trust and respect for them forever.
  • MomOfRose
    MomOfRose Posts: 89 Member
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    My daughter is almost 10 and we just started random room-checks. They started because she'd come out to the living room to grab her water bottle after having been "asleep" for an hour - except there was no part of her that looked "just woke up." I asked her what book she'd been reading (really hard to get mad at a kid whose favorite pasttime is reading) and she denied being up that whole time. When I said I'd go get the book out of her bed, she fessed up. When I went into her bed to get the book, I found a dozen or so candy and granola bar wrappers. Turns out she's been waking up in the middle of the night, eating, then taking the trash back to bed with her so I wouldn't know.

    Had I not gone into her bed that first time, I'd never have known that she's been stress eating (school, custody issues, etc.) and we wouldn't be working on correcting it.

    The room-checks I do aren't an abuse of my parental authority and aren't meant to terrify her or strip her of her right to privacy. They're a way of keeping our lines of communications open so I can help her. If I ever find anything that I think is dangerous or affecting her health in some way, then we'll discuss it and remove it.