minoanmiss: Minoan version of Egyptian scribal goddess Seshat (Seshat)
minoanmiss ([personal profile] minoanmiss) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2021-02-03 11:02 am

Dear Care & Feeding: My Teen Is Writing Erotic Fan Fiction. Should I Make Them Stop?

I snooped and discovered much more than I bargained for …



My 16-year-old is basically writing porn. For context, they’re a relatively smart, compassionate teenager and they love to write—and OK, I was snooping and I shouldn’t have been, but they’ve also been diagnosed with depression, and throughout quarantine it’s felt like they’ve been hiding something from me and, fearing the worst, I looked at their iPad while they were taking a shower and found it open to a page of drafts to some site. I haven’t realized until now that they’ve gotten into writing fan fiction, specifically on one particular, popular website, for multiple fandoms, and some of what they write is … fine. Has some swearing I don’t like them using, but I get that it’s a creative outlet for them—some of them might actually be good if I understood the fandoms and such.

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But then I found some other fan fiction they’ve also written, and it’s very … mature. And adult. I don’t know where they learned half of this stuff—it feels like a year ago they didn’t even know what a condom was, and now they’re writing explicit and age-inappropriate fan fiction.

Do I give them “the talk”? Ground them? Take away their iPad so they can’t write? Tell them that I’m OK with their creativity, but this is inappropriate and it needs to stop? I’m reluctant to do anything because I know I was in the wrong for snooping, but now I feel like I have to do something.

—They Didn’t Learn This in ELA


Dear ELA,

No. You do not have to do anything. I promise you that nothing has ever needed to be done less. On your list of Things Not to Do, add “confronting my 16-year-old about their fan fiction,” and look at it often should you need a reminder.


[moves aside so as not to be crushed by stampeding hordes of teens now rushing to change their AO3 usernames just in case you are their parent]

Please don’t ground your kid over this, and don’t try to forbid them from writing, either. There’s a pandemic and they’re depressed, but even if these things weren’t true, writing fan fic is obviously an important and needed outlet for them, and is likely providing some form of community as well. They aren’t doing anything wrong. We are all of us, at any/every age, entitled to hobbies and fandom and fantasies and a rich and private inner life. I read so much fan fiction and so many of my grandmother’s romance novels when I was younger than your kid (which everyone in my family graciously pretended not to notice). They are 16—they could be having sex by now, never mind reading and writing about it.

You can certainly talk with them about sex and intimacy, bodily autonomy, internet safety and the importance of maintaining their privacy online, etc. But I just don’t see any good reason to subject them to a conversation about the fact that you read their rated-E fan fic. And I can only imagine the mortification and anger they’d feel if they knew that you’d snooped on their device and found their stories. Your 16-year-old still thinks their fan fiction writing hobby is a secret (which they must want it to be, for now—at least secret from you, or they’d have told you!), and maybe they also still think they can trust you. If I were you, I would not want to disabuse them of either belief. Stop creeping on their iPad. Don’t read any more of their stories. Let your teen live—and have their erotic fan fiction too.
laurajv: Holmes & Watson's car is as cool as Batman's (Default)

[personal profile] laurajv 2021-02-03 05:54 pm (UTC)(link)
"Do I give them “the talk”?"

LW they're 16 you should have given them the talk a long, long, long time ago.
heavenscalyx: (Default)

[personal profile] heavenscalyx 2021-02-03 06:43 pm (UTC)(link)
RIGHT?
melannen: Commander Valentine of Alpha Squad Seven, a red-haired female Nick Fury in space, smoking contemplatively (Default)

[personal profile] melannen 2021-02-03 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, the appropriate response here is to go 'Oh no, they grew up while I was busy with other stuff! What do I need to teach them about that I haven't?" and give them any part of the safe sex, consent, internet safety, ykinmkato, and how to get help with bad relationships talk that you missed till now.

(It's okay if it's awkward as long as it's kind, if you hit the awkwardness perigee in a conversation you initiate it'll make any conversations they need to initiate with you later seem easy in comparison.)
cereta: Me as drawn by my FIL (Default)

[personal profile] cereta 2021-02-03 08:19 pm (UTC)(link)
I had a moment when LW talked about the kid not knowing what a condom was.
bikergeek: cartoon bald guy with a half-smile (Default)

[personal profile] bikergeek 2021-02-04 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
I was just guessing the kid was pretending not to know, in order to avoid a conversation with Mom that she found cringe-y. Even if the parents did their best to encourage an open environment for discussion of such things, the embarrassment factor when you're that age is pretty huge.
mommy: Wanda Maximoff; Scarlet Witch (Default)

[personal profile] mommy 2021-02-03 10:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, this!