Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking as the parent of a 15-year-old, I would want to know. Perhaps you could protect yourself by saying "this may just be rumor, but I wanted you to know what was being said about X."
About drugs or anything illegal, I would want to know, period.
About sex, I would hope my relationship is such that I can trust my child's judgment on whether to tell me. I would not want a parent I don't know talking to me about my child's rumored sex life.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks 15:31.
Anonymous wrote:I agree - many available substances can be dangerous, including prescription drugs, alcohol, and pot. Are they always, in every case, dangerous? No. But do they affect the brain every time they are used, and do the effects have long-term implications for the brain of a teenager which is still developing? Yes. That, my friend, is science and irrefutable. The longer kids stay away from all these substances, the better.
Anonymous wrote:Parents, wake up: pot is not a harmless drug. Though many of us who grew up in the 70s and 80s experimented with it with no permanent ill effects, I feel very differently about it now. I am the mother of two teenagers and they have two cousins who became addicted to pot at age 13 and are currently battling multiple addictions. Both of them say pot was what got them started. Let me tell you, their lives are hell. Rehab, police records, separation from family and friends, overwhelming physical and psychological cravings, willingness to give anything (sex, other drugs, money and valuables stolen from parents) to get high. Forget college - these young people from normal middle-class families will be lucky to get a job at 7-11 (hard to do when you have a record; hard not to have a record when you're an addict). Marijuana these days has a 10% potency, but some samples have tested as high as 30%. In contrast, average potency in 1983 was less than 4%. It is stronger and more addictive, and creates permanent changes in the structure and functioning of the still-developing adolescent brain.
If my kid was fooling around with sex and/or drugs, I'd want to know. I understand the risk of telling another parent their child may be involved - many parents react by wanting to shoot the messenger. Depending on the school, counselors or trusted teachers may be willing to talk to the parents to tell them that their children may be using. But if you consider these parents friends, you have an obligation to tell them. Acknowledge how difficult the conversation is, be willing to be proven wrong about your suspicions, offer help - but be a responsible adult and do the right thing.
Anonymous wrote:are you knowingly letting your child hang around 14/15 yr olds doing drugs and having sex because he said he would not have any friends? Who cares if he looses 1/2 his friends! This is a very bad path your child is on and it is your responsibility to try and help him get off of this path. Does he do any sports? Other activities that are healthy and will keep him occupied? I am shocked at the casual way you state it is "pot". Pot is a drug. Have you ever met a "POT HEAD"? Think no motivation, looser... Please be a parent to this child!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Under most circumstances I would agree that a child's (anyone under the age of 18 for this topic) privacy should be respected - no reading a diary, listening to phone calls etc.
However, in todays world, where information about a child can be made avaible to vast numbers of people with or without permission, requires guidance and supervision by parents. Growing up today is not like it was when we were growing up, we did not have to worry about pictures of indescretions being taken and passed around school. Its a reality and no offense to most teenagers but they do not have any idea about how conduct today may effect their life 5, 10 or 15 years later...Facebook is not a private a forum where a child should assume his or her parents will not snoop - that is telephone call, diary and perhaps notes and letters they may share with their friends. It is a parents responibility to guide their children through the different stages of their life, perhaps the hardest is the teenage years, and their their utmost to prtoect their childs reputation and safety.
Facebook becomes a private forum when it comes to reading your child's PRIVATE messages. The messages that the OP admitted to reading were private messages that are not put on the kid's public facebook page. It's as much of a breach of privacy as reading a diary or listening to phone calls.
Any child who posts information on his or her drug use and sex use, on Facebook, to 300 of his or her closest friends, has really got NO RIGHT to an expectation of privacy abotu that information. ANY of those 300 "friends" could share that information with anyone, at any time.
OP< personally I think you should share what you have heard with the parents of the other kids, if possible in a way that doesn't make your wown child a scapegoat. And you should share what you have learned with the school and anyone else necessary.
If your son loses half his friends because they are doing drugs and fooling around so be it. There is a time and a place for fooling around and getting wasted, and that is college.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. I have held off commenting thinking people would think I was a "freak" or a "Nazi"- but I look at my kids page, and I am sure I am seeing it all. I don't log in as a "friend" on my computer- I log in a DD on DD's computer. If she doesn't like it, too bad. She does not know when I check it, and I don't check that often, but when I do check I check well. I have stealth parental controls that show me commonly used combinations of keystrokes, which lead me to her passwords. I can, if I want to, check her facebook, email, chats- everything. I don't broadcast to friends that I do it, and it's not an issue, because I don't nit-pick over small stuff. Sex and drugs aren't small.