The first time my daughter told me to delete a photo, she was 10 years old. I had just posted what I thought was an adorable shot of her in a flowing pink dress with chocolate icing smeared across her cheeks and dress. She had been eating a massive cupcake, the kind piled high with frosting, when it tipped forward and tumbled straight down the front of her dress. To me, it was a perfectly imperfect moment, one of those classic kid disasters parents laugh about for years. To her, it was mortifying. She stood behind me with her arms crossed, her voice steady in a way I wasn’t ready for. “Mom. Take it down.”
I grew up in the age of film cameras and shoebox photo albums. If my parents captured me mid-tantrum or with a runny nose, those pictures got shoved into a sleeve where only close family ever saw them. By the time the prints came back from Walgreens, the moment was already over, and if you were lucky, maybe forgotten. Nobody cared that I wore the same Winnie the Pooh T-shirt for three years in a row, or that my bangs were uneven because my mother let me cut them myself. Those pictures existed, but they didn’t follow me into middle school or pop up years later during a job interview.
Our kids don’t have that luxury. Their childhoods are archived in real time, one upload after another, and the permanence is something I didn’t consider until I saw my daughter’s face that day. I wasn’t just documenting life—I was curating her identity before she even had a say in it.
It’s hard to admit this out loud, but sometimes parenting collides with ego. I want to believe I share pictures out of pure love, but there’s also the quiet satisfaction of likes, and validation that comes when people comment on how cute or funny my kids are. Social media turns our families into content, whether we mean it that way or not. And when I scroll back through my feed, I have to ask myself a hard question: do my posts serve as keepsakes, or are they proof I kept up with the highlight reel?
The tug-of-war comes down to this: I want to remember the details, the messy, fleeting things that make childhood magical. The sticky fingers, the gap-toothed grins, the way my kids drape themselves across the couch like exhausted cats. I want to hold those moments in a place where other people can see them too, because there is a kind of beauty in knowing my joy resonates beyond the walls of our house. But the cost of that joy might be my kids’ privacy, and that cost feels heavier the older they get.
Now that they’re old enough to scroll themselves, my children are starting to draw lines. They don’t always want me to tag them. They ask me not to post videos of their school performances. They roll their eyes when I suggest a “cute” selfie together. Part of me aches when they say no, not because I think they’re wrong, but because the denial reminds me this story isn’t mine alone.
I want to be the mom who laughs at the chaos, but I don’t want to be the mom who turns her children into the punchline. And that’s where the real conflict lives. The chocolate icing photo wasn’t about the cupcake. It was about me trying to bottle up a memory I knew would slip through my fingers if I didn’t capture it. What I didn’t realize was that the memory I saved could become the embarrassment they carried.
So I deleted it. Not because it wasn’t funny. It was hilarious. But because my daughter asked me to, and she was right. Someday she’ll have her own feed and her own story to tell. She’ll share the parts of herself that she wants the world to see, and maybe she’ll post a messy photo or two. Or maybe she won’t. That will be her decision, and I’ll have to respect it.
Parenting in the digital age isn’t just about raising kids. It’s about learning when to step back and let them own their stories, even if it means letting go of the content I thought I couldn’t live without. My daughter’s chocolate-smeared cheeks and frosting-stained dress are still saved in my camera roll, and in my memory, even without the likes to prove it. I don’t have to share them for them to matter. And that, I’ve realized, is enough.