Anonymous wrote:I have adult kids and a 17 year old still at home. My honest answer? It depends on the transgression.
Smoking cigarettes? No.
Smoking a little weed? No.
Cursing? No
Breaking curfew? No
Having sex? No
Drinking? Probably not.
Sneaking out? Maybe.
Vaping? Yes
Speeding or reckless driving? Yes
Vandalism? Yes
Using drugs (other than pot). Hell yes.
Drinking and driving? Abso-fukcking-lutely
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you catch your teen (15 year old) doing something wrong e.g. vaping, and you know others are involved, or you catch them together, do you tell the parents of the other kids?
Yes. And also, the police.
Anonymous wrote:When you catch your teen (15 year old) doing something wrong e.g. vaping, and you know others are involved, or you catch them together, do you tell the parents of the other kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Be prepared for them to get angry with you (“Susie would never do anything like that! How dare you lie to me!”), but yes always share facts.
NP here. This is what I am wondering. If we are talking about the "my kid would never do that, I will instead blame your kid" types, is there any use in telling the parents? There are parents of a different culture that I know, where nothing is ever their teen's fault, even though you (and other people) know it most certainly is. These are the types of parents who end up suing other parents over their own kid's stupid behaviors. Sometimes there is no use in telling.
Unreal. I hope you mean parenting culture and not other type of culture. Lots of parents like this in every culture and country and no need to bring that into it here. You have a problem with that particular parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Be prepared for them to get angry with you (“Susie would never do anything like that! How dare you lie to me!”), but yes always share facts.
NP here. This is what I am wondering. If we are talking about the "my kid would never do that, I will instead blame your kid" types, is there any use in telling the parents? There are parents of a different culture that I know, where nothing is ever their teen's fault, even though you (and other people) know it most certainly is. These are the types of parents who end up suing other parents over their own kid's stupid behaviors. Sometimes there is no use in telling.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - It is vaping.
I told the parents via email on saturday morning (I rarely see these parents in person). One said "thank you very much" and the other did not respond.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Be prepared for them to get angry with you (“Susie would never do anything like that! How dare you lie to me!”), but yes always share facts.
NP here. This is what I am wondering. If we are talking about the "my kid would never do that, I will instead blame your kid" types, is there any use in telling the parents? There are parents of a different culture that I know, where nothing is ever their teen's fault, even though you (and other people) know it most certainly is. These are the types of parents who end up suing other parents over their own kid's stupid behaviors. Sometimes there is no use in telling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We caught our nextdoor neighbor teenagers doing some dangerous things with other teens in their back yard while the parents were out. We broke up the party. Sent the boys home and gave the neighbor teen the option of her telling her parents or us telling. She opted for her telling. It worked out well and the teen came back to thank us for giving her the option.
Wow. I want you for a neighbor!
Anonymous wrote:When you catch your teen (15 year old) doing something wrong e.g. vaping, and you know others are involved, or you catch them together, do you tell the parents of the other kids?
Anonymous wrote:I have adult kids and a 17 year old still at home. My honest answer? It depends on the transgression.
Smoking cigarettes? No.
Smoking a little weed? No.
Cursing? No
Breaking curfew? No
Having sex? No
Drinking? Probably not.
Sneaking out? Maybe.
Vaping? Yes
Speeding or reckless driving? Yes
Vandalism? Yes
Using drugs (other than pot). Hell yes.
Drinking and driving? Abso-fukcking-lutely