B
bitterhope
Guest
We have one phone that the kids all share. It’s not a smart phone. It has no internet on it. When the kids want their own phone they are allowed to buy a prepaid phone and the phone cards each month themselves. So far only two have opted to do this (boys ages 17 and 18). Those two (one is away at school now) no longer have the option of sharing the “home phone” unless they are either at home or they no longer can afford/choose to stop buying phone cards for their own phone. It hasn’t happened. They enjoy having their phone, but they never have carried it around the way most of their friends do. It’s a running joke with their friends and girlfriends to never call or text my kids because they never know where their phone is. I’m often asked to call one of them so they can find their phone. The one at school has learned to keep track of his but it’s become a necessity in his life as a young adult. The twins are probably going to ask to buy phones soon. Both have steady income now, but they keep putting it off. Probably because they enjoy nearly unlimited access to the “home phone,” have the same circle of friends, and know they have a good deal not paying the bill. The next in line is still a little young for a boy to be interested in having a phone, but the next one down is a girl and she’s a little more interested in phone time. Very few of the kids around here get a phone at all before age 13-15 and usually smart phones are 17+ so the social pressure isn’t as strong as many other areas. Most of my kids have friends that borrow a parent’s phone to call or text, or they have the “home phone” like we do. I don’t know very many families that have a land line anymore. It’s usually cell phones only like ours because it tends to be cheaper here. We have three cellphones for less per month than one land line costs here and don’t need to worry about long distance charges (all our family lives out of the area), and the two oldest get off cheaper with prepaid plans. My husband enjoys being able to send texts to the kids or call them when he’s gone. They probably get more messages and calls from him than they do anybody else. It’s a nice way for him to connect in a personal level with them and keep communication going from afar without me needing to be in the middle all the time.