What's happening.
You text your teen to ask where they are. They reply, “You can literally see on Life360. Stop checking on me.” You realize the app has quietly become the issue.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
I'm your parent. It's my job to know where you are.
It's stalking. None of my friends have to deal with this.
Their parents are negligent. End of discussion.
I'm leaving my phone at home from now on.
- “It's my job to know where you are” conflates safety with surveillance — they're not the same and your teen knows it.
- “Their parents are negligent” insults the teen's friends and ends any chance of negotiation.
- The teen's “I'll leave my phone at home” is the predictable next move and it actually makes them less safe, not more.
What works — and why.
You're right that I've been checking more than I need to. The app was supposed to be for logistics, not surveillance, and I lost the line.
Yeah.
How about this — I'll stop checking unless I haven't heard from you and it's past curfew, or you don't show up where you said you'd be. Deal?
Fine.
And — independent of any app — if you ever need a no-questions ride home from anywhere, that's standing. You text, I show up, we don't discuss it in the car.
- Owning the over-reach (“I lost the line”) gives the teen back their dignity and ends the fight immediately.
- A specific rule (when you WILL check) is calmer than open-ended monitoring and easier to hold yourself to.
- The no-questions-ride offer makes the relationship the safety net, not the app — which is what actually matters when a teen is in trouble.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- I've been checking more than I need to. I lost the line.
- The app was for logistics, not surveillance.
- If you ever need a no-questions ride home, that's standing.
- You text, I show up, we don't discuss it in the car.