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The spies who love me

The Independent

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July 22, 2025

More parents than ever are using apps and electronic tags to keep track of their children. But is it actually doing more harm than good, asks mother-of-two Victoria Richards

- Victoria Richards

The spies who love me

For my birthday last month, my dad gave me a pack of AirTags. “You could put one under the mat in your car,” he suggested helpfully. “Or, in the bag you take to work.” What he was really saying, when I read between the father-daughter lines, is that he’s worried about me. He wants to know where I am and that I’m safe - at 44.

That our parents still fret about our wellbeing, even into our forties, shouldn’t come as any surprise. It can feel overbearing, but what it really means is love. And I may eye-roll because I am an adult – as well as a mother to two children of my own – but I get it.

When they’re small, you sleep in fitful bursts, getting up every hour to check they’re still breathing. As they get older, it doesn’t get any better, just different: now, I worry about my 13-year-old daughter walking home with her friends. She looks grownup (too grownup), and I feel sick at the thought of her being catcalled or approached by men. I have her location via Find My iPhone as a tab on the homescreen, so I can see where she is at all times.

We had a row last week because she didn’t see the logic of my not allowing her to leave the local golf club at 8pm: “But it’s still light out, Mummy.” I didn’t have the heart to tell her that the names that ring through my mind are Sarah Everard, Sabina Nessa, and Zara Aleena – who was murdered close to where we live, three years ago.

But does this fear (my fear) help or hinder my kids from growing up and finding their feet – and their autonomy? How much should we really be tracking our kids online?

The Independent'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

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