A parent’s heart, heavy with the desire to protect, often builds walls meant to shield their children from the world’s unpredictable storms. But in trying to enforce a strict “no dating until 16” rule, this mother discovered that safety cannot be dictated by age alone, and control can breed secrecy instead of trust.
What began as a well-intentioned boundary quietly fractured the bond between parent and child, pushing her oldest into hidden dangers and forcing her youngest into painful dishonesty. It became clear that love and protection require flexibility, understanding, and open conversations—because true safety grows from connection, not concealment.

AITA for telling my kids that their younger siblings’ rules are different because I learned from them?











According to developmental psychologist Laurence Steinberg, adolescent development is highly nuanced, and rigid, age-based restrictions often backfire by encouraging secrecy rather than fostering responsibility. The parent’s initial “no dating until 16” rule, while rooted in a desire for safety, failed because it did not align with the reality of adolescent social development or the influence of modern communication methods.
The parent correctly identified that the rule created a dynamic where the actual boundary became ‘avoiding detection’ rather than ‘safe engagement.’ This shift in focus often leads to riskier behaviors, as adolescents seek privacy away from parental oversight. The subsequent decision to adopt open communication for the younger children demonstrates a positive corrective action based on learned experience, prioritizing relational trust over rigid control.
The anger expressed by the older children stems from a sense of perceived injustice and invalidation. They feel their past compliance was for a faulty system, and now their parent is essentially admitting they were unfairly held to a standard that is no longer deemed necessary for the younger siblings. The parent needs to validate the older children’s feelings of being ‘guinea pigs’ while clearly explaining that the rule change is an evolution of understanding safety, not a punishment for them. A constructive recommendation is for the parent to hold a family meeting to discuss the *philosophy* of safety and trust rather than just the *rules*, acknowledging the past while establishing a clear, open framework for the future for all children.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.



![[deleted] YTA slightly](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/b16cf3c779861fc0938b21fdd6796801.png)
“I’m sorry for imposing rules on you that created a bad environment, I am learning from it and that’s why I’m trying to do better by them”
There. Take accountability of your decisions and dumb rules.


You need to understand that on their side, they are seeing that the strict dad that they had was capable of being an understanding parent but for some reason didn’t do it for them, you’re owning up for it, but they still got the shorter end of the deal, be more empathic towards them, you’re not an asshole for improving.








Edit: I stand by my YTA. But I’m getting asked if you should just continue making the mistakes and I don’t believe I said that.

I imagine you watched your older children lie to you in that time between 13-16 and let it happen and then suddenly when it was your son you changed.


The parent faced a significant conflict between maintaining an established, strict rule intended for safety and acknowledging that this very rule fostered secrecy and harm. Realizing the original policy failed its purpose, they shifted toward open communication for their younger children, leading to feelings of unfairness and anger from the older children.
When a parent admits a foundational rule was flawed and adjusts it based on experience, should the older children accept this change as necessary learning, or is their frustration valid because they were subjected to a less effective, stricter standard?







