Anonymous wrote:In our state, people under 21 may legally drink alcohol if they are in a private residence and under the supervision of their parents/guardians. We have included DC in drinking wine with us at meals from time to time; we would never give him drinks before a party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious for everyone keeping their kids dry....what exactly do you expect will happen when they are exposed to unlimited alcohol during the first few nights they are at college and for the entire freshman and sophomore years before they turn legal?
Maybe not drink if they weren’t allowed and/or taught to drink at home. Everyone advocating for kids having drinks at home is merely teaching them to acquire the taste. You do realize any drinking before 21 will train their brains to respond more positively to alcohol, right?
THIS EXACTLY!!!
Anonymous wrote:Just curious for everyone keeping their kids dry....what exactly do you expect will happen when they are exposed to unlimited alcohol during the first few nights they are at college and for the entire freshman and sophomore years before they turn legal?
Anonymous wrote:Most parents don’t necessarily “let” them kids drink but the kids are drinking anyway. DS and his friends drink. He knows we don’t approve but also that we’re not going to punish him as long as he doesn’t drink in excess and never drives or rides with someone who has had a drink.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We never served alcohol.
We knew they had fake ids and we didn’t confiscate them.
We knew they drank at other people’s houses so we provided unlimited Uber.
We discussed what to do in certain dangerous situations… cops arriving, someone is throwing up, etc. don’t drink and swim.
I’d say if you have a kid that won’t drink lean into that but don’t put your head in the sand.
Don’t forget about drugs… kids think they can get high and drive, educate them.
This is us too and most of our friends and kids’ friends’ parents
Anonymous wrote:We never served alcohol.
We knew they had fake ids and we didn’t confiscate them.
We knew they drank at other people’s houses so we provided unlimited Uber.
We discussed what to do in certain dangerous situations… cops arriving, someone is throwing up, etc. don’t drink and swim.
I’d say if you have a kid that won’t drink lean into that but don’t put your head in the sand.
Don’t forget about drugs… kids think they can get high and drive, educate them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious for everyone keeping their kids dry....what exactly do you expect will happen when they are exposed to unlimited alcohol during the first few nights they are at college and for the entire freshman and sophomore years before they turn legal?
The research is clear: The younger kids are when they start drinking, the higher their risk will be for developing alcohol use disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious for everyone keeping their kids dry....what exactly do you expect will happen when they are exposed to unlimited alcohol during the first few nights they are at college and for the entire freshman and sophomore years before they turn legal?
The research is clear: The younger kids are when they start drinking, the higher their risk will be for developing alcohol use disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious for everyone keeping their kids dry....what exactly do you expect will happen when they are exposed to unlimited alcohol during the first few nights they are at college and for the entire freshman and sophomore years before they turn legal?
Anonymous wrote:We don't serve alcohol to minors but know parents who do. Also it seems common here in the DMV for older teens to have fake IDs and go to bars with their parents knowledge. These are kids from UMC and MC families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious for everyone keeping their kids dry....what exactly do you expect will happen when they are exposed to unlimited alcohol during the first few nights they are at college and for the entire freshman and sophomore years before they turn legal?
Maybe not drink if they weren’t allowed and/or taught to drink at home. Everyone advocating for kids having drinks at home is merely teaching them to acquire the taste. You do realize any drinking before 21 will train their brains to respond more positively to alcohol, right?
Anonymous wrote:Just curious for everyone keeping their kids dry....what exactly do you expect will happen when they are exposed to unlimited alcohol during the first few nights they are at college and for the entire freshman and sophomore years before they turn legal?