Anonymous wrote:It's all about the friends, access, and freedoms. Which way does the friend group peer pressure sway?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sports, OP. Sports.
High school athletes do stupid stuff all the time. They're not immune.
+1
I thought Sports would be the key too, unfortunately, not in high school. Lots of the athletes smoke weed. That's how my son started doing it. The ones who don't do it are heavy into drinking. Soccer/Football are his sports.
What I have learned is to keep communication open and honest with your teens.
I mean the Lax team at our HS is the source of the biggest parties, I can't believe we're an outlier on that front.
Anonymous wrote:Sports, OP. Sports.
Anonymous wrote:
I disagree. Kids from financially secure families (not obscenly rich kids) do not have the poverty related stressors and life circumstances that exposes them to the seedier side of life. If you are poor and living in a poor neighborhood, you are exposed more to the dealers and you have more of a need to have money for essential things like food, clothing etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Statistically what is most likely to keep your teenager from destructive behavior?
My twins are 11 and will be in Jr. High next year. I know that everything can start at this age and I want to prepare my kids.
I’m not a scare tactic type parent. I want to arm them with facts and tools. I know I experimented with drugs, alcohol and sex in HS but things are so different now. I’m worried.
Not sure about statistics but being involved in sports year round has helped. My kids are very serious about their fitness and performance, which includes staying away from alcohol, vaping, and drugs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sports, OP. Sports.
This is insane to me that people think this.
Folks, the high school sports crowd are the partiers. Wake up!
Anonymous wrote:A happy, functional, socially involved, financially secure family life.
Parents in good and functional marriage with no addiction, abuse or adultery
Kids in rigorous academic programs with EC and service commitments. Kids with outside enrichment and academic support..
Be present for your kids and be clued in about their day to day life.
Keep an eye on the company they keep.
Keep them off social media.
Keep an eye on your kids - their physical and mental health, their spendings. Their digital footprint etc.