Hiding from parents whom we visit?

je
3

Near my school, a wealthy pensioner lives alone in a big house. He is quite nice and likes to talk about his exciting travels.

He has a small gym in his big house, an outdoor pool, a cool set of fat speakers and bass, multiple TVs (Netflix, Sky, …) and game consoles (2 x PS4 Pro, 2 x XBox One X, 1 x Nintendo Switch and 1 x game PC for gambling), a foosball table and a billiard table. He has a large book collection, such as Harry Potter series, Lord of the Rings series, The Hunger Games, etc. He likes to cook lunch and always has a lot of sweets in the house.

He knows a colleague of mine and he invited me to join him. Then the man said I could always come over after school, if I'm upset and use the things in his house. He also has a party room where we can have a party.

But he would not be happy if we tell our parents about it because they might misunderstand it. I thought that was something strange. Would you hide everything from your parents?

Re

If your story is true (which I honestly doubt), then I would not go there at first. Because if the man does not want you to talk to your parents about it, he has something to hide, and that can't be good.

To

Yes a pensioner with ps. Xbox sweets and everything are you sure you are not in the hotel?

po

If somebody says "Do not tell it, that might be misunderstood"… If I were careful, I would say it a lot (in this case the parents).

A supposed paradise, of which one should not tell the parents but yes (they could otherwise misunderstand and ban) … Associate with the teen version of the "type speaks on the playground a child and lures it home, under on the pretext he has sweet little animals and sweets at home ".

In addition, parents want to know their children in safety. I would like to be informed about where and with whom my offspring spend their free time. Especially if it is with people I do not know.

Just think, when you introduce your parents, they have the chance to get to know this guy. You can then get a picture of yourself and decide much more objectively whether he would be a "good" deal or not