What's happening.
Your 15-year-old, eyes red: “Mom. Someone took my Snap and screenshotted it and now it's in the school group chat. Like, the one in the bra.” You sit down.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
WHY would you send a photo like that?? You knew this could happen!
I sent it to ONE person.
Nothing is private once it's on a phone! How many times have I told you?
(absorbs that telling you = more pain on top of pain; keeps the next leak quiet)
- “Why would you send a photo like that” puts the wrongdoing on the victim. The person who shared without consent is the wrongdoer; the law agrees.
- “How many times have I told you” is lecture-as-comfort. It comforts you, not them.
- You've now made yourself an additional source of pain. The teen will route around you to deal with whatever's next.
What works — and why.
Okay. Come sit. First — this is not your fault. You sent a photo to one person you trusted; they violated that trust. That's the wrongdoing here, not you. I need a few specifics so we can act fast: who sent it, who's in the group chat, when did this start.
Jordan sent it. It's been in the chat for two hours. The chat has like 40 people.
Got it. Three things we're doing in the next hour. One: screenshot the chat right now — we need evidence with timestamps. Two: I'm calling the school first thing tomorrow because non-consensual sharing of an intimate image of a minor is a federal CSAM issue and the school has a duty to act. Three: NCMEC's Take It Down service will hash the image and have major platforms remove it — we file tonight. Last thing — I love you, this is brutal and unfair, and we will get through it. You did nothing wrong.
- “This is not your fault” first, and repeated, is the sentence the teen will carry. Without it, no amount of action repairs the moment.
- Naming Take It Down (NCMEC) + the federal CSAM frame turns a feeling of social catastrophe into a documented legal process with real intervention.
- Acting in the first hour (screenshots, filing) is when intervention is most effective — speed AND warmth, not one or the other.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- Come sit. First — this is not your fault.
- You sent a photo to one person you trusted; they violated that trust.
- Screenshot the chat right now — we need evidence with timestamps.
- Take It Down will hash the image and have platforms remove it. We file tonight.
Non-consensual sharing of an intimate image of a minor IS child sexual abuse material under federal law. NCMEC Take It Down (takeitdown.ncmec.org) — file tonight, works on AI-generated images too. NCMEC CyberTipline 1-800-843-5678. School Title IX coordinator and principal in writing within 24 hours. Cyber Civil Rights Initiative Helpline 1-844-878-2274 for image-removal advocacy. Save evidence with timestamps before blocking the person who shared. If your teen mentions self-harm or suicidal thoughts: 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.