Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Say your 16-yr-old was at a friend's house and got drunk. But she tells you before you find out from other parents, who found out when their kid came in stumbling and smelling of alcohol.
If you have a 'no lying' policy, how do you handle this type of situation differently than if you found out your kid had been drinking the harder way -- e.g., how the other parents found out or if you asked her and she lied and said "no"?
I'm trying to learn better how to handle this type of situation and would love to learn from others here.
Is this hypothetical? Did your kid text you to say "I'm drunk" before coming home?
Anonymous wrote:Say your 16-yr-old was at a friend's house and got drunk. But she tells you before you find out from other parents, who found out when their kid came in stumbling and smelling of alcohol.
If you have a 'no lying' policy, how do you handle this type of situation differently than if you found out your kid had been drinking the harder way -- e.g., how the other parents found out or if you asked her and she lied and said "no"?
I'm trying to learn better how to handle this type of situation and would love to learn from others here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t have a consequence for this.
My 13yo took a gummy at a friends house. Told me a few days later but had gone to bed at 7pm that night so I wouldn’t notice. I told her that that was consequence enough and I appreciated her honestly. The gummy belonged to the friends dad.
As long as not driving after drinking and they were on a safe space I’d just have a conversation.
WOW. Consequence was a self-imposed early bedtime? No follow up with the friend's parents? JFC.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone.
We have a family history of alcoholism, on my side as well as on DH's. And, in all honesty, I did not handle this situation very well. I always thought I'd be so much better when the time came! I wouldn't say I was horrible (no yelling or outright 'punishment', but there were consequences less freedom during spring break).
I like the approach of having her do research on alcoholism.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone on here who thinks a little drinking by a 16 year old is a "serious issue" and that you need to jump into punishment mode is either a troll or doesn't have teenagers.