Is My Teen Daughter Ready for a Boyfriend?

How Do You Know If a Girl is Ready to Date?

Lyn Lomasi
"Is my teen daughter ready for a boyfriend" is an inevitable question that parents of girls will have to ponder. How do you know when your teen daughter is actually ready to handle the joys and consequences that come with dating? Readers were asked for their thoughts and personal experiences on the right age, signs a girl is ready, and dealing with first dates. Here's what some of them had to say.

Jolynne Hudnell, 43-year-old mother of twin girls (age 16) responded with these words:

"I don't know if I'm old fashioned or not, but my girls weren't allowed to go on dates alone until they turned 16. Prior to that, they could go if a parent would be present (I would also need to know the parent's name and cell phone number if they had one). They were always expected to answer my text to check on them, or to text me at certain intervals. They also had to be home at a certain time. If the rules were broken, they would not be allowed to go "on a date" again until they started keeping in contact with me again when going out with a group of friends and such.

Since they kept to the rules prior to turning 16, they now can go out on dates without a parent present. But they still have to keep in contact at certain intervals and answer me when I text. They also have to be home on an agreed upon time.

As for old enough to have a boyfriend, a girl is going to have a boyfriend when she wants, even if she just sees him at school. If she is still attending classes and keeping her grades up, I don't really have a problem with it. If she skips class to see the boy, then we have an issue, and may have to notify the school to be sure she attends classes. So far, both girls have been very responsible about following the rules."

Randy Barefoot, successful father of 2 almost independent women answered:

"My 26 year old, married daughter says, "No teenage girl should have a boyfriend." This revelation is astounding because I told her this when she was 15, but she didn't believe me. For the 1st date, the boy should come to the girl's house where he must meet the parents. His arrival should be timed to interrupt Dad cleaning his shotgun.

Seriously, a girls maturity level where boys are concerned can be measured by her motives. If she wants to date because her friends have boyfriends other frivolous reasons, she has no business dating. When her motive is because she has an honest affection for the boy, she's ready to date.

First dates are preferably group activities. My first date with my future wife was when I was 14 and she 15. It was a triple date with my parents, my sister and her fiance. My parents said I could invite a friend. It surprise them when I asked Sharron.

So the short answer is, examine the girl's motives. Open, honest conversations between parent(s) and teen are the key. Just another good reason for real family dinners where people talk instead of watch TV. "

Khara House, who is a teen mentor, had this sage advice:

"I've told more than one teen-aged girl that she wasn't mature enough for a boyfriend. In fact, I've told more than one twenty-something female that she wasn't mature enough for a boyfriend! Being ready for a relationship isn't, after all, about age as much as it is about knowing who you are and what you want, and having the degree of maturity and understanding necessary to pair that with what another person needs and wants.

One question I asked a girl I was mentoring once was, 'If he asked you right now to do something you'd usually never agree to, would you do it?' If the answer is anywhere from 'yes' to the awkward pause before 'no,' I say she isn't ready. For some girls I'd say it comes down to what the girl wants out of the relationship. Why is she so interested in dating this guy? If she doesn't know, or the reason is based on anything other than the foundational things in a relationship-- i.e., saying 'Because he's so hot!' doesn't cut it-- then she might not be ready!

As for the other thing, about getting through first dates ... I suppose 'roll with the punches' isn't particularly sound advice?"

Another successful mother, Lynda Altman gives these suggestions:

"As a parent you have to ask yourself some very hard questions such as does she have accurate information about her body and sexuality? Does she understand the consequences of premarital sex? Does she understand and know how to protect herself from STDs. Has she taken a self defense course so that when she says NO it means NO. This may seem a lot to ask before something as benign as a fist date, but they may come up.

Archaic as it sounds, as parents do you plan to chaperone the first date? Or is it going to be an outing with a group of friends?

A teenage girl is ready to date when she every little thing is not a crisis. When grades are good and behaviors are in control. If she is still going through the 'I hate you' stage, and everything is about rebellion, then she needs more time before she is ready to enter into a potential relationship."

Published by Lyn Lomasi - Featured Contributor in Lifestyle

Lyn's the Community Advocate at Yahoo! Contributor Network. Contact her with community issues & ideas. She's been contributing since 2007 and previously acted as a Community Guide. Read her tips for success...   View profile

33 Comments

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  • Amanda Gibbs 6/7/2011

    I'm from Jamaica and based on how these parents including mine behave I think Parents should allow their daughters to be able to speak with them withput hurtful critism especially on topics such as these or else they'll end up doing it the way you were trying to prevent in the begining...the best advice you could give is to be careful, you cannot choose for them and the moment you force them to hide and do what they want, you'lll regret it!!! Great Article though...

  • Amanda Gibbs 6/7/2011

    I'm 18years old and i'm yet to go out with friends to their birthday parties and i'm never going on a date as long as I live with my mother!!! She hates everyone that I like and the one time I told her I think it's time for me to get some privileges she flipped, she hasn't spoken to me since and we really don't talk but it's not like we used to. But she's judgmental and thinks boyfriend means taking up the role of a parent. It's a Jamaican mentality it seems....I HATE MY LIFE!!!!!

  • GIRL WHO IS LOVED 1/30/2011

    IT ALL DEENDS HOW COOL YOUR PARENTS ARE. MINE AREN`T SO COOL RIGHT NOW IM GROUNDED AND CAN`T GO WITH MY FRIENDS. I CAN ONLY SEE EM ON SCHOOL HOURS

  • ERICA JIMENEZ 1/30/2011

    I AM A 11 YEAR OLD GIRL IN MIDDLE SCHOOL.I HAVE A BOYFRIEND (I DON`T KNOW HOW) MY PARENTS FOUND OUT IN A TEXT (NOT BY ME) THIS BOY IM HEAD OVER HEELS. HE REPECTS YOU. HE IS A GUY THAT YOU`D WANT TO SHOW YOUR PARENTS. HE LOVES ME AND I LOVE HIM. HE IS ATHLETICLIKE ME. HE DOES WRESTLING AND BASKETBALL. I HAVEN`T MISSED ONE OF HIS BASKETBALL MATCHES, HE IS A BOY THAT EVERY GIRL AT SCHOOL WANTS TO OBTAIN AND DROOLS OVER.HE HASN`T HUGGED ME YET BUT WE`VE ONLY BEEN GOING OUT FOR ABOUT A WEEK OR SO.HE IS VERY SHY AND I AM ALSO VERY SHY AROUND HIM. WHENEVER I AM SAD HE DOESN`T ASK ME WHATS THE MATTER HE ASKS ME WHAT CAN HE DO TO SEE ME SMILE ONCE MORE. AWWW..... I LOVE HIM <3

  • Beth Callahan 4/23/2010

    This is a great article and has very strong points. :) I have 2 daughters but they are both under 9 so i have a few years before I can start worrying about this.

  • Jennifer Wagner 4/23/2010

    See, maybe this is why God didn't give me a little girl. I don't think I could handle the worrying!

  • Crystal Cavin 4/16/2010

    My baby sister is 15 years old, and not even half as wild I was at her age, but I still find myself having a cow when she does something I consider too 'mature'.

  • Shamontiel 2/22/2010

    ...wondered how long they'd last. Ha, ha, ha. But for my female friends growing up, I definitely felt like some of them needed to wait longer. It all depends on the girls' strength level (mental and physical) and how easily swayed she is. There are naive women in their 40s and 50s just like those in their teens.

  • Shamontiel 2/22/2010

    I saw this question on your Facebook status before I closed that account but left it alone since I'm not a parent. But I'll respond here. I never had a dating rule. My parents were just serious about no guy coming in my room. Because I had far more male friends than female friends (I'm talking 80% guys, 20% girls), they really didn't know if any of the guys liked me nor did I. Partially it was because my older brother was insane and they were terrified of him so nobody really crosse the line until he moved. Then, guys I thought were my friends switched up the program after my brother moved out and got married. But I say that it really depends on the girl. My parents trusted me alone with a guy moreso because they KNEW nothing was going down. To this day, I still here my parents, my brother and guy friends say, "The guy who ties you down is going to have to be one VERY strong guy and very patient." My personality made it to the point where my parents almost laughed at the guys and wonde

  • Linda M. McCloud 2/17/2010

    I think it depends on the child. Great job.

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