Is it ever okay to look at your partner’s phone?
Kyle Sandilands checked his girlfriend’s phone while she was asleep.
He didn’t find much. In fact, nothing at all. And in typical female-fashion, she was watching him through not-so-closed-eyes.
SPRUNG.
Sandilands admitted to the betrayal on KIIS FM this morning as he and his co-host Jackie O debated whether couples should have an Open Phone Policy.
An Open Phone Policy is defined as an agreement where no phone is off limits. Passcodes, messages, photos – no secrets.
The question is, does this just create bigger trust issues?
My husband and I don’t have an Open Phone Policy. And I like it that way. We have an Open-Not-Open Phone Policy. There’s a boundary. We might flick through each other’s photos, answer a phone call for one another, but it’s certainly not a ‘what’s mine is your’s’ set up.
His space is his space. My space is mine.
“Hmm,” you say, “but what if I want to keep tabs on whether he’s cheating on me?”
There’s a difference between being nosey and being genuinely concerned that there are some big problems in your relationship.
Top Comments
I think when you have to make it a 'policy' there are issues in your relationship - she probably has a second phone he knows nothing about 😝 As for my household, hubby and I share absolutely everything - and not because we need to snoop on each other but because we just do. We'll open each others mail, answer phone calls and if he's in the shower and gets a text message, I'll read it to him and reply with what he asks me to (Relentless never ending employee questions)... Trust is a beautiful thing, if you don't have any in your relationship it's time to move on and find someone you can have it with.
I have serious issues with taking any advice from Kyle Sandilands. :P Mostly I think that if you feel a need to check your partner's phone or email, you've got underlying problems you might want to address.