Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make up and temporary hair dye? No biggie.
Mocktails at a 13 year old's party? Were they mixed in shakers and served in cocktail glasses? That would definitely bother me. Frozen virgin pina coladas or strawberry daiquiris served in a plastic cup with a fun straw similar to a starbucks frappachino or a smoothie at a restaurant? Not a big deal.
I am generally conservative but am fine with adult drinking, host parties with alcohol and am not anti fun drinks for kids.
Virgin frozen margaritas and pina coladas and a drink the bday girl created. All were frozen and served in plastic glasses (like plastic margarita and plastic colada glasses).
I think the mocktails are really what angered me most. I just see it as glamorizing drinking which I don’t believe in. There’s alcoholism on my side of the family so we’ve always discussed alcohol with them and the seriousness of it. Most of this evening was spent talking about drinking and alcohol because she’s just absolutely enthralled with the mocktails.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is all perspective.
Like I said, I view margaritas as a "party" drink, of the clicking glasses, dance on the table, tequila drunk type of drink. So my kid telling me they celebrated with fake margaritas would bother me. Martini glasses are kind of the same thing. Kids frozen virgin drinks get served in all kinds of fun glasses, but the only thing ever served in martini glasses are alcohol martinis. It is a perception thing to me. I would get bothered by rootbeer served in a beer bong, but not inna frosted mug or glass bottle. The beer bong sends a clear message, where rootbeer in a mug does not send any message.
That said, I would be bothered by those two things (margaritas and certain glasses/presentations) but would not make a big deal of it.
And as I said in my original post, I am not anti alcohol, serve alcohol in my home, and host fun parties with themed drinks. I also have no issues with my kids getting virgin drinks in restaurants or having fun mixed juice/soda water drinks at home in fancy glasses like hurricanes.
SMH. You think of margaritas and dancing on the table. Me, whenever I smell Fanta Orange or Sunkist, I think of sloe gin and getting trashed as a high school student while visiting Ball State University. That doesn't mean I get my knickers in a knot when my kids want orange flavored drinks.
I'm also SMH that you are equating a beer bong with a martini glass. Seriously? Do you also avoid talking about sex and drugs with your kids? How do you feel about kids eating bananas?![]()
Anonymous wrote:OP, I grew up in a Muslim (totally zero alcohol) home and community.
We'd drink sparkling apple cider in plastic champagne glasses, as kids. It was fine. It was just a fun thing to do, and it wasn't really glamorizing alcohol.
Anonymous wrote:She does dance competitions and you are upset about this? Are you a "dance mom"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make up and temporary hair dye? No biggie.
Mocktails at a 13 year old's party? Were they mixed in shakers and served in cocktail glasses? That would definitely bother me. Frozen virgin pina coladas or strawberry daiquiris served in a plastic cup with a fun straw similar to a starbucks frappachino or a smoothie at a restaurant? Not a big deal.
I am generally conservative but am fine with adult drinking, host parties with alcohol and am not anti fun drinks for kids.
Virgin frozen margaritas and pina coladas and a drink the bday girl created. All were frozen and served in plastic glasses (like plastic margarita and plastic colada glasses).
I think the mocktails are really what angered me most. I just see it as glamorizing drinking which I don’t believe in. There’s alcoholism on my side of the family so we’ve always discussed alcohol with them and the seriousness of it. Most of this evening was spent talking about drinking and alcohol because she’s just absolutely enthralled with the mocktails.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is baffling. My mom was a control freak when I was growing up...and to this day, she basically thinks alcohol is the devil. She visibly tenses when any of my siblings orders alcohol...and I'm 40!
Nonetheless, she would have been fine with all of this. I actually see the mocktails as exactly the opposite. Instead of glamorizing drinking alcohol, it demonstrates that you can have fun and enjoy drinks without alcohol! Because it's about the fun mix of the juice flavors and the bright colors, nice glasses. Why should only alcohol drinkers get nice glasses...that's so weird! My kids drink milk out of twisty straws and bright colored cups. Yeah, these are all things aimed at kids, but the point is that fun cups and straws are fun! You don't want your kids thinking that the only way they can have fun beverages is by drinking alcohol...what an odd lesson to teach.
Or is this secretly a DCUM anti-juice thing?
I get the vibes that this is a feminist issue for some people (including OP). Y’know, the line of thinking that anything traditionally girly is b a d, that a 13 year old who shows interest in makeup or hair is less worthy than a 13 year old who likes sci fi, or that a woman who cares about her appearance/hair/makeup is somehow less able to be a powerful badass than a woman who wears Tevas and only wears Chapstick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe I’m inadvertently preparing my kids (13 and 10) to be future alcoholics or underage drinkers because kiddie cocktails and virgin pina coladas/margaritas are easily their favorite things to order at restaurants and we’ve never stopped them. It never even crossed my mind, really. Do I need to start researching AA meetings right now?
Research shows the opposite, you are demystifying alcohol and teaching them to understand socialization vs hiding and binging.
It’s 2018 and people still believe this? Oh, dear.
You are confusing belief with research. But, I’m always happy to review new information. Please share peer reviewed journals sharing to the contrary.
The “if you let them drink as teens they’ll learn moderation” myth is just that. A myth. And is not supported by research. In fact, the research shows that it may actually lead to more problems with alcohol down the road.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/04/110428065615.htm
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1381379/Letting-children-drink-home-makes-teens-likely-develop-alcohol-problems.html
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4108600/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3103453/
If you have evidence that shows the opposite, I’m always happy to review new information. Please share peer review journals sharing to the contrary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the op. I talked with the party hosting mom more today while the girls were at dance class. I assured her the face I made wasn’t in anger at her but more shock and disappointment at my DD re: the pink hair because she knows my feelings on unnatural colors. She’s asked to have fun colored hair in the past and I’ve said no. Knowing it is something we don’t allow and then doing it at a party is deceitful. I get it, it’s something small that I shouldn’t be strict about, but that’s just my preference. I’m actually not strict in other ways just like others pointed out about being okay with dance’s skimpy costumes and heavy makeup.
I don’t like the fun colored hair. I don’t think it looks cute on kids. I don’t think it looks cute or interesting on adults. I work in a job where tats have to be covered (I actually have 3), hair can’t be an unnatural color, and gaged ears have to have the flesh colored plugs put in so there’s no hole. However, I don’t see someone with it and think they are an idiot, loser, or criminal, just an FYI. I get that everyone has their own preferences and can do what they want with their bodies.
I did tell the mom I was upset with the mocktails. I told her why and about the history of alcoholism in my family. She said she understood why that could upset me. She asked if she’d put all the details on the invite if my DD could have still attended and I said yes, but we would have talked beforehand. She said she respected that. She didn’t feel like all details needed to be on there because part was a surprise for her DD (aunt & friends coming to do hair/makeup/nails) and because she feels they are at the age now where it’s not needed by the parents. It was a good conversation. I told her I understood from an outsider that the party was a big hit and seemed fun for them. She has older kids and told me to get prepared for all the things to come that will happen that I’ll be in the dark about and will find out about after the fact. I think that’s a big part of it since DD is my oldest. I have no experience here. I’m just used to the little kid ways of knowing what’s planned for parties and such. I know that’s on me to work on and change.
For those suggesting therapy, ha yes, been in that for yeaaaars. As I said, long history of alcoholim on my side of the family. Will add this to the list to work on. Thanks for responses and insight.
I'm sure you're a nice person OP but I would be exhausted if I were the other mother. I simply don't have the time or energy to do so much emotional work with you. I would discourage my DD from hanging out with your DD because of that.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is baffling. My mom was a control freak when I was growing up...and to this day, she basically thinks alcohol is the devil. She visibly tenses when any of my siblings orders alcohol...and I'm 40!
Nonetheless, she would have been fine with all of this. I actually see the mocktails as exactly the opposite. Instead of glamorizing drinking alcohol, it demonstrates that you can have fun and enjoy drinks without alcohol! Because it's about the fun mix of the juice flavors and the bright colors, nice glasses. Why should only alcohol drinkers get nice glasses...that's so weird! My kids drink milk out of twisty straws and bright colored cups. Yeah, these are all things aimed at kids, but the point is that fun cups and straws are fun! You don't want your kids thinking that the only way they can have fun beverages is by drinking alcohol...what an odd lesson to teach.
Or is this secretly a DCUM anti-juice thing?
Anonymous wrote:
The “if you let them drink as teens they’ll learn moderation” myth is just that. A myth. And is not supported by research. In fact, the research shows that it may actually lead to more problems with alcohol down the road.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/04/110428065615.htm
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1381379/Letting-children-drink-home-makes-teens-likely-develop-alcohol-problems.html
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4108600/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3103453/
If you have evidence that shows the opposite, I’m always happy to review new information. Please share peer review journals sharing to the contrary.