> Thought I would ask how others handle the Alcohol issue with their > teenagers. [quoted text clipped - 14 lines] > there would be alcohol at the party. In our jurisdiction it is illegal to > drink until age 18. But apparently this happens quite a bit. I think this is a Big Mistake. When I was a teen, parentally chaperoned alch parties were just an excuse to get way overly drunk by all the kids there. So what do the kids gleen from that? It is ok to get hammered as long as there is a grown up there to hold your head over the toilet?
> Our first instinct was to say she couldn't go. Then that she could go, > but wasn't allowed to drink. We ended up buying her two 'coolers' and let [quoted text clipped - 9 lines] > her it wasn't allowed until she was in Grade 10 and even then only when > supervised. I want to know why parents of these children are allowing drinking parties at their houses in NINETH GRADE?!? Can 9th graders not come up with fun things to do at a party without drinking?
> This daughter is very social and I have no doubt she will be asking to go > to parties all the time in grade ten (a couple of months away). > > What to do????? I will tell you our plans. My kids are little. But as part of our health education responsibilty, we have been discussing smoking, drinking and peer pressure. The primary lesson about smoking has been if you don't start, you don't have to quit. we have spoken about the risks, the damage to your body and that some significant percent of people wind up addicted.
What I would do is;
Educate about the risks. Not JUST addiction. That will seem far away to the invincable teen brain. But the risk of making a fool of yourself. The risk of reduced inhibition leading to dangerous sexual activities and date rape. The risk of diminished judgement leading leading to other dangerous situations like getting in car with a drunk person. Find real life examples, even from your life or those you know. Someone peeing themselves sounds like an effective one for a teenager. Can you imagine the horror? Do not OVER dramatize to lose credibility. But the risks are enough that you should not have to.
Then I would scaffold life long learning by removing your allowing or not allowing. Tell them that you will give them the freedom to learn how to engage in these situaions safely. The right to attend these parties hinges on making the right choices while there. If the wrong choices are made, then the right to attend these parties will be restricted in the name of safety.
The point is to lead them to independant conclusions and skills for handling these situations. If YOU limit and restrict them specifically, then they won't make independant learning about how much is too much, etc.. Also they will not make an independant decision to make the correct choices abou drinking, which is the lifelong message thata they must take away. Worse they may wind up with the sneak and hide mentality and thinking the taboo drunkeness is cool.
Good luck. It is a tough issue.
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