Anonymous wrote:Your kid needs an Uber account with unlimited access when drinking.
No you can’t be liable. Don’t tell people you knew they were drinking.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you needed to overreact but you should have driven them to their homes, not to another party. Yes you could be liable.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you needed to overreact but you should have driven them to their homes, not to another party. Yes you could be liable.
Anonymous wrote:You did the right thing. And I would just let it be. That way your DS will continue to call you in these situations. Otherwise he would be drinking and driving or getting into a car with someone who was drinking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should be congratulated on raising a conscientious son who didn’t get sloppy drunk, didn’t hang out with friends who did, didn’t drive drunk and trusted you enough to come pick them up. I hope my son would do the same. Good job Mom.
Agree with this. They did the right thing to call. And you weren't "Encouraging" it. You were taking them to a safe place to sleep over.
I"d want my kid to call me. And we'd have the "drinking" talk after. I'm not policing other kids in this situation.
The'll be in college soon so all of you acting like these are young kids -and thinking you have the same control - are crazy.
Anonymous wrote:I would prefer that the teens called a parent like you then get into an Uber. Lots of criminal behavior happens with bad uber drivers or people who pretend to be uber drivers.
If it was a group of girls or your drunk daughter would you ask her to call an Uber or a parent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should be congratulated on raising a conscientious son who didn’t get sloppy drunk, didn’t hang out with friends who did, didn’t drive drunk and trusted you enough to come pick them up. I hope my son would do the same. Good job Mom.
Agree with this. They did the right thing to call. And you weren't "Encouraging" it. You were taking them to a safe place to sleep over.
I"d want my kid to call me. And we'd have the "drinking" talk after. I'm not policing other kids in this situation.
The'll be in college soon so all of you acting like these are young kids -and thinking you have the same control - are crazy.
Anonymous wrote:I think you should be congratulated on raising a conscientious son who didn’t get sloppy drunk, didn’t hang out with friends who did, didn’t drive drunk and trusted you enough to come pick them up. I hope my son would do the same. Good job Mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's true that you don't want to encourage secrecy, and you want them to trust you enough that they call you. At the same time, you don't want them drinking too much!
You're not in legal trouble, OP, since you don't have "evidence" they were drinking. No bottles, no vomit, no nothing. And police probably won't bother themselves for teens who drink quietly, don't wake up the neighbors, don't drive drunk and call their parent instead...
But I know how you feel. It's not *right*. At the same, good job parenting the child who called you![]()
Thank you. I’ve always tried to be open. A few years ago at our high school a couple of seniors died in a car accident while driving drunk. I used that as a lesson and it appears it hit home. . I am now going to put the Uber app on his phone so I’m not in the situation again. I’d rather have an Uber pick him up than me, if it is a group.
You are both absolutely foolish to think nothing could happen to OP or the boys legally if heaven forbid something happened at the next party. Don't for a second think that the "tipsy" part wouldn't come out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Start again, OP... You sound confused.
Sorry. I use voice text. Starting over. Last weekend, my son called me to pick him and his friends up from a party and then I drove them to another house where they spent the night. They were definitely tipsy. So in fact, I became like a designated driver. All the boys are 17 and have their own cars but they chose not to drive which is why they called me. After I dropped them off and came home I started thinking about it and wondered would I be liable for anything for driving them from the party to the other house. While they were tipsy, nobody appeared drunk or out of control. I have had Conversations with my son about drinking and he knows I prefer he does not, but as a senior in high school I realize that every once in a while he will have drinks. Definitely not every weekend. I stressed to him to not ever drink and drive, which is why I know he called me. I drove a group of boys not just him.
I did not drink when I was a senior in high school and it was because I knew my parents would not be ok with it. It’s not inevitable that teenagers drink.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Start again, OP... You sound confused.
Sorry. I use voice text. Starting over. Last weekend, my son called me to pick him and his friends up from a party and then I drove them to another house where they spent the night. They were definitely tipsy. So in fact, I became like a designated driver. All the boys are 17 and have their own cars but they chose not to drive which is why they called me. After I dropped them off and came home I started thinking about it and wondered would I be liable for anything for driving them from the party to the other house. While they were tipsy, nobody appeared drunk or out of control. I have had Conversations with my son about drinking and he knows I prefer he does not, but as a senior in high school I realize that every once in a while he will have drinks. Definitely not every weekend. I stressed to him to not ever drink and drive, which is why I know he called me. I drove a group of boys not just him.
Anonymous wrote:I feel sad for parents who feel like they have to act okay with this.