Having a Teenage son or daughter is a difficult task. Because of the changes in their bodies and their new way at looking at things and people, this can be one of the most difficult ages to deal with.
Perhaps the first and most important change is the discovery of the opposite sex. Before teen hood, boys and girls pretty much avoid each other, considering the other sex as boring or annoying. It is in teen hood that they finally find each other attractive, which leads to a whole series of problems, none of which they want to share with us, their parents.
They also discover a new set of relationships and priorities. We get demoted from heroes to embarrassments, and friends and that especially cute person become objects of worship.
This wouldn’t be so bad if weren’t for the fact that there is a new set of dangers and traps that await them. Drugs, alcohol, tobacco, irresponsible driving, teen pregnancy, and peer pressure are a few of the dangers that they have to face and that we’d like to keep them safe from.
Unfortunately, we’re the last people they want to talk to in the world. Because they recently discovered freedom and the fact that, by the greatest of chances, their generation is the smartest ever, every question we ask them or every rule we impose on them becomes in their minds a way of controlling them and restricting their freedom.
Fortunately, there is a way to survey and protect our children without the fights and the rebellion that it usually involves: using an Android spy app.
By installing an Android spy app on your child’s phone, you’ll have access to all the information that is usually so hard to get from them. Do you want to know who your child is in contact with, or whether or not alcohol will be served at the party, or if a bully is intimidating your son? By getting access to the phone’s text messages with an Android spy app, you’ll know the answers to these and more.
Now, some people question whether is legal or ethical to install an Android spy app on their child’s phone. You can only legally install an Android spy app on a phone that you own, and guess who bought the phone that your child uses. In fact, it’s the parent who gets to pay for the phone AND the monthly plans. If your child wants privacy, then he’s more than welcome to pay for his own phone.
But most of all, do you really want to ignore what is going on with your teen child? I certainly wouldn’t.







