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“What Does Your Status Mean?”: How to Act When Your Parents Are on Facebook

This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at Northeastern chapter.
My senior year of high school, I remember my dad telling me to sign out of “Faceoff” and get some homework done. “Facebook, Dad. Not Faceoff,” I would correct absentmindedly, as I continued to scroll through photo albums and status updates. If I had a dollar for every time my parents advised me to take the time I spent on “Faceoff” and apply it to schoolwork…well, then I wouldn’t owe Northeastern thousands of dollars in student loans when I graduate this winter.

Now, when I was eighteen, Facebook was still a relatively new phenomenon. Four years later, Facebook has closed the generation gap between parents and children. My parents have a better understanding of our generation’s favorite procrastination tool, since they are now just as hopelessly addicted to the little red notification box as I was, once upon a time. (Okay you caught me, I still am.)

Thankfully, parents didn’t latch on to the Facebook trend while most of us were still in high school, because let’s face it, they would be horrified to know what we were doing when we were seventeen years young. As the social networking empire gained notoriety and popularity throughout the years, it was only a matter of time until our parents, aunts, uncles, grandparents, and twice-removed cousin Larry all hopped on the bandwagon and inundated us with friend requests.


Let us all consider the ramifications of this phenomenon for a minute. Not so long ago, many of us wouldn’t think twice about posting pictures of a sloppy Saturday night to our profile or informing the Facebook community that we’d be skipping all of our Monday classes due to a Sunday too-Funday hangover via a status update. Now, there is a slight hesitation. While the pictures of you funneling tequila shots or your illuminating status updates may be amusing to your friends, Mom, Dad, and crazy Aunt Millie may be less than pleased with your “so college” lifestyle.

What is a collegiette™ to do when her parents have unprecedented access to the intimate details of your campus life? My best advice: embrace it! Maybe I’m just lucky and the biggest annoyance to having my parents on Facebook is having to teach them how to actually use it, but I think it’s an easier way to keep in touch with them as opposed to playing telephone tag during the week. However, for those of you with tiger mother-esque relatives watching your every move, more drastic action might be required.

According to an unofficial survey conducted by yours truly, I found that of the 80% of respondents whose parent or parents have a Facebook account, most of them (about 72%) are Facebook friends with their parents. (Shame on you, outliers! Not accepting your mom’s friend request is just unnecessarily harsh. Remember, she went through three days of painful labor to bring you into the world, the least you could do is click “confirm”.) Encouragingly, only 38% of those who took the survey felt as though they needed to censor certain information like photos or status updates they would not want their parents to see.

So while it seems that most of us are more or less comfortable with having an online relationship with our parents, it’s still safe to say that there are certain things they just don’t need to witness. Since we all go to Northeastern, we all know a thing or two about cleaning up our Facebook profiles (thank you Co-op 101!) so as not to deter any potential employers. It might be worth utilizing these skills and applying them more often than strictly during the co-op interview seasons. If you don’t want Goldman Sachs to see it, chances are you don’t want Mom to see it either.

Ultimately, it’s up to you just how much information you want about yourself to be available to not just your parents, but also the online world in general. It wouldn’t kill you to do a thorough sweep of your photos every once in a while, and believe me when I say NO ONE needs a constant status update about the minute goings-on of your day-to-day life. The “limited profile” option on Facebook is also available for you to pick and choose what information certain people are allowed to see. Here’s the bottom line: display the photos and information that you think presents the best version of you to the world. Remember collegiettes™, maintaining an air of mystery is always sexy!

Lauryn is a senior at Northeastern University majoring in journalism. She has written for Boston.com as well as the HC branch at Northeastern. Lauryn is also a teaching assistant for International Affairs students at Northeastern. In May and June of 2011, she embarked on a reporting trip to the Middle East, where she mastered the art of "man on the street" reporting and gained a new appreciation for falafel. In her spare time, Lauryn enjoys writing, walking around Boston aimlessly, traveling and a unhealthy obsession with her Kindle. She loves eating, French bulldogs and Anderson Cooper. After graduation, she hopes to pursue a career in foreign correspondence or magazine journalism. You can follow her on Twitter @laurynpaiva.
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Rachel Kossman

Northeastern

Rachel Kossman is a Northeastern University graduate, and former Her Campus Campus Correspondent. She spent her junior and senior years writing for Her Campus National, and is thrilled to be back contributing to the Post Graduate section.Rachel is currently working as Associate Editor for DAYSPA magazine, an industry publication for spa owners, where she gets to write about spa products, business tips, spa industry news, focus on green lifestyle content, and even review a spa or two every once in a while! She is currently living back in Los Angeles, where she was born and raised, and though she misses Boston and all her friends out east, is very happy to be away from the cold and snow!