
"I was married, didn't worry about that stuff and neither did my then-husband. We all had fun using the filters and sending the funny pictures to each other. Fast forward a few years and I got a divorce and my kids and I started a group chat and shared our locations with each other. And to this day, even though they are grown, we send no less than twenty snaps to each other a day. Mostly of dogs and funny things that happen to us during the day."
"So when I finally checked his snaps after he'd sent a few more and saw a message that said. "Maybe I should send you a picture so I know if I'm your type or not" with a dick picture, I quickly figured out how to get rid of him (keep in mind I wasn't SnapChat-efficient) and blocked his number."
A woman first used Snapchat after her children downloaded it for her and enjoyed playful filters and photo exchanges within the family. After a divorce, she and her grown children maintained a frequent group chat and location sharing, sending many daily snaps of dogs and daily moments. When she began dating again, a match sent explicit images via Snapchat, prompting her to block him immediately. A friend warned that men who want to use Snapchat for dating may be concurrently sending similar messages to multiple women, and subsequent experiences reinforced that pattern.
Read at Scary Mommy
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