But this isn’t what happened. The boys weren’t vandalizing property, stealing anything, or doing anything illegal. It isn’t a crime to ring a doorbell. Yes this is bad behavior and can scare people or escalate. Yes they shouldn’t do it. The police bringing them home is irrelevant since they weren’t doing illegal activity, there is no charge. It would be the same if the neighbor called OP or walked the boys back to her house. Yes OP was stupid to let them go to “the park” alone at 10, yes they were wrong to be doing that, yes the parents should be told at pickup. But I don’t think this warrants midnight phone calls and immediate pick ups |
This board is so weird. If you go with your kid to drop them off at college, you’re accused of being a helicopter parent, but you’re also a terrible parent if you let teens go out by themselves after dark. They’re going to be driving in two years and on their own in four short years. A group of teens going to a suburban park within walking distance of your house is not inherently unsafe. It does present the possibility that they’ll get in trouble, but, unless you’re going to keep your teens locked in the house until they head off to college (by themselves, according to DCUM) they’ve got to start experiencing some independence somewhere. They’ve learned a lesson, and it’s actually quite good that they did so without permanent consequences. My Mom taught HS, and her view was that there is something wrong with kids who never get into trouble (although I think DC is full of people who never got into trouble as kids). If this is the worst thing they do as teens, you’ll be lucky. |
I'm in my 50s and was, as were all my friends, free range kids. My parents had no idea where I was during the day. Yet, the rule for us and all the kids I hung out with were that we had to be home by dark. In the summer time where I grew up, that was about 9PM. Just why do you think that was? Even in the 'good old days', our parents knew nothing good came of young teens being out after dark. I can't believe your naiveté and poor judgment. |
| The number of prudes on this post is astonishing. |
| I get that it’s kids having fun, but growing up I was independent but a house rule was if you get put in jail parents will leave you in there for a couple days to learn a lesson. Same should apply to the police bringing you home, needs to be consequences to learn the lesson. I’m all for independence but you have to teach it and not just let bad behavior slide because that only leads to more poor decision making. |
Yes, good parenting is so prudish. |
OP can make that call for her own kids, but for her to let the group of kids out that late at night when the parents thought they were at her home for a sleepover isn’t the same thing. |
+1. Sorry but the “boys will be boys” attitude doesn’t fly for my sons. I’m raising them to be respectful of the neighbors, not to bother them at 10 pm at night for no reason other than a laugh. |
80s kid. We always had to be home when the street lights came on. This has zero to do with free range parenting. |
Ha ha ha she's a lunatic |
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My 8th grader and his friends did this. My husband went out and caught them, not the police. We chewed the entire group out.
I also let them know how stupid they are since everybody in our neighborhood has a Ring doorbell and can see who it was. On a side note, we loved doing this growing up in the 80s. Prank calls too were hilarious (long before caller ID). My brother and his friends also would take our remote and go in the back of homes with sliding glass doors and change the channels when people were watching. They never knew what was going on and why their TV was acting up. But, police are right, people are on edge, crazy and packing these days. |
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OP, I really can’t believe you thought this was ok.
Even if they just stayed at the park. Parks and playgrounds after dark turn into spots for teens and young adults to smoke, do drugs, even have sex. |
| Did they smoke pot too? |
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Also, not sure it really matters how we grew up—the culture is very different now. There is a perception that the world is unsafe, and there are a lot of guns out there.
Given the time of night, I would also be on the fence about contacting the other parents immediately. But I would absolutely be the ones to tell them right away in the AM. You made a bad decision as a parent and as a caregiver, and you need to acknowledge what happened for the sake of integrity. The other parents’ reactions may be as varied as you see here, but it’s up to you to take the heat for your part in it and not leave that news for their child to deliver. Kids will get their own consequences from their parents and I imagine you may experience some too. |
How did you hunt for nightcrawlers before dark? How did you catch lightning bugs before dark? |