Anonymous wrote:We let our teen daughters have a little bit of alcohol at home when we're drinking, although they don't do it outside the home. I'd rather that they are exposed to it at home first and learn their limits when they are around us rather at some random college party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The dad has the right idea. You need to know your limit before you go to college.
No. College kids who enjoy partying and drinking don’t care what their supposed limit is. There will be the fraternity parties where no student is saying “no thanks, I’ve reached my limit, something my dad taught me”. And anyone thinking their “athlete” son is so health conscious that they don’t drink doesn’t know anything. Biggest drinkers on campus are students who play hockey, football, lacrosse, basketball, baseball. The stereotypes are not far off.
Anonymous wrote:It’s fairly common for college-bound teenagers to have some experience drinking before they go off. I certainly wouldn’t want my child’s first experience at a fraternity party. Now if your child has zero inclination to drink, then that’s great, and maybe they will stay that way.
But most drink in college. I think dads who have sons are fairly concerned about this because boys will drink copious amounts. It’s scary to think of.
Anonymous wrote:So stupid. I’m in my 40s and have never been drunk. It’s not some sort of requirement or inevitability, especially for a teenager with a developing brain.
Anonymous wrote:The dad has the right idea. You need to know your limit before you go to college.
Anonymous wrote:So stupid. I’m in my 40s and have never been drunk. It’s not some sort of requirement or inevitability, especially for a teenager with a developing brain.
Anonymous wrote:I can't see myself doing this purposefully but I will say that my son got REALLY drunk near the end of sophomore year of high school (barfing in an Uber drunk) and he's really never had more than a beer since. He's often the (not even a sip) driver in his friend group.
(and lest you all say he's a loser--no, top student, headed to a top10 college this fall)
Anonymous wrote:I dated a guy who did this with his teenaged daughter. He wanted her to learn her limits at home. Which may have some merit, but the problem was he was an alcoholic (in recovery), and the whole thing just felt like transference to me (he bought her the same kind of booze that he used to binge on).