Hey,well since your the girl thats older then him by three years i would say yes a little but its not bad. Now if he was turning 17 and you were 14 then it would be different he is just a boy. The boy is the one who should be there for you no matter what and since he is so young I'm afraid he wont understand and be there for you: I'm sorry but if its meant to be then it will happen. It would be different if you were older. Seeing as 17 and 14 are completely different maturity levels, I would say no. I don't think it is such a good idea.

14 year old dating a 17 year old.?



15 year old dating a 17 year old? | Yahoo Answers
Joseph, Michigan, it was the first time they had seen him in two and half months. But she admitted to police that was a lie. She was really For the next five years, he is forbidden from owning a smart phone or using the Internet. He is not allowed to talk to anyone under age 17, other than immediate family. He is banned from going to any establishment that serves alcohol and he has to be home before 8 p.


14 and 17 Year Old Dating?
Boris Johnson warns "bitter experience" has shown that a wave like the one in Europe is likely to hit the UK "three weeks later". Parker Bowles, the son of the Duchess of Cornwall and stepson to Prince Charles, had been with former journalist Alice Procope for almost two years. Social services have launched a review after a toddler died when she was left alone for almost a week as her mother celebrated her 18th birthday.




Multiple people were shot and two are dead following separate shootings Friday in Virginia Beach, Va. The supermodel used the hashtag "Sexy has no expiration date" on her post. The incident with the 'Power' star follows suit to many stories of a camera possibly saving someone's life while at risk of police brutality. The Minnesota Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that a man who had sex with a woman while she was passed out on his couch cannot be found guilty of rape because the victim got herself drunk beforehand. The big picture: Minnesota is one of the many states that says that for a victim to be too mentally incapacitated to give consent, they must have become intoxicated against their will, such as if a person secretly drugged someone's drink, The Washington Post reports.