Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of teens and tweens, where do you store alcohol? do you lock it up? Keep close tabs on your quantities? Starting what age?
We had a big party scheduled for March 2020 and then barely touched anything through the pandemic so still have a big stash of hard alcohol. It occurs to me that I should start giving away before my kids or their friends start to show interest.
I don’t have liquor cabinets. So no I don’t. Is this a real thing? Who are you needing to lock it from?
In other words, I don’t drink liquor so there no liquor in the house except for maybe an occasional bottle of wine once or so a year.
You’re really asking if liquor cabinets are a real thing because you don’t drink liquor? Moron.
You literally drink so much liquor/alcohol that you require a special cabinet for it? Drunkard.
Anonymous wrote:You literally drink so much liquor/alcohol that you require a special cabinet for it? Drunkard.
Anonymous wrote:This thread has someone saying their kids have fake IDs but they dont steal from home??? 😂 Hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of teens and tweens, where do you store alcohol? do you lock it up? Keep close tabs on your quantities? Starting what age?
We had a big party scheduled for March 2020 and then barely touched anything through the pandemic so still have a big stash of hard alcohol. It occurs to me that I should start giving away before my kids or their friends start to show interest.
I don’t have liquor cabinets. So no I don’t. Is this a real thing? Who are you needing to lock it from?
In other words, I don’t drink liquor so there no liquor in the house except for maybe an occasional bottle of wine once or so a year.
You’re really asking if liquor cabinets are a real thing because you don’t drink liquor? Moron.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. If they want liquor, they can get it. There are certain liquor stores that don’t card. I am teaching my kids that alcohol is a part of life to be enjoyed in moderation, not some terrible thing that needs to be kept under lock anx key.
This was how I felt too, until...
My kid who I didn't think was interested in alcohol yet and a small group of friends took a full bottle and did a bunch of shots.
Some of them ended up dangerously drunk. At 14.
I encourage all of you to lock it early, then it's not a new thing after an incident like this. Your other option is to never let your kid be in the house alone.
No. This is ridiculous. Like saying you should lock up the bleach in case the kids drink that. The trick is to raise them so they don’t steal your liquor, not so they can’t steal your liquor. Erecting a physical barrier between your teenagers and something you don’t want them to get is a simplistic solution and won’t stop them getting their hands on booze if they really want it.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. If they want liquor, they can get it. There are certain liquor stores that don’t card. I am teaching my kids that alcohol is a part of life to be enjoyed in moderation, not some terrible thing that needs to be kept under lock anx key.
This was how I felt too, until...
My kid who I didn't think was interested in alcohol yet and a small group of friends took a full bottle and did a bunch of shots.
Some of them ended up dangerously drunk. At 14.
I encourage all of you to lock it early, then it's not a new thing after an incident like this. Your other option is to never let your kid be in the house alone.
Anonymous wrote:As a teen, I stole my parents' liquor and added water to make it look like nothing had been taken. Turns out, two of my younger brothers were doing the same thing.
Then we became of legal drinking age. And my mother couldn't understand why my father was suddenly getting drunk after two drinks.
For us, it's the cabinets above the fridge. Too high for every day use, fine for liquor that we only get down once in a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are toddlers, but you bet I'll lock that up when they're older.
So many of these posts are SO naive. I was the good kid who never had parties, never went to parties, was bookish, nerdy, never got into trouble, straight As, super responsible. I had a small group of friends, all similar in behavior. We had sleepovers at each other's houses from time to time, never anything anyone would describe as a party. All supervised by parents, they were always home. And all in a completely different area of the house then where the liquor cabinet is.
But I was sneaking booze out of my parent's liquor cabinet starting at 15 to drink with my friends at each other's houses. By the time I graduated high school, that liquor cabinet was all bottles filled with water.
And of COURSE I knew the rules and expressed to my parents that I had no interest in drinking. Put on a good act about how "It tastes so gross!" We weren't "hanging out by the liquor" - it takes 1 minute to pour liquor into a water bottle and take it to another room. Eventually the host parents would fall asleep, and we would stay up and drink. Quietly! No rambunctious behavior besides what would be expected for three teen girls having a sleepover. But we were plastered.
So, yeah. Lock your liquor, folks.
I was also a bookish and very responsible kid but I never stole my parent’s liquor.
+1
My kids are now 25 and 20 and never stole from ours either, and our house rivals most well stocked high end bars.
+1. My kids are now adults and never stole from us. I am fully aware that they drank-I saw their fake IDs and even bought them liquor in college, but they never stole from us.
You're naive.
My parents had a liquor bar and I never drank from it. Not everyone is interested or attracted to booze. You’re naive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of teens and tweens, where do you store alcohol? do you lock it up? Keep close tabs on your quantities? Starting what age?
We had a big party scheduled for March 2020 and then barely touched anything through the pandemic so still have a big stash of hard alcohol. It occurs to me that I should start giving away before my kids or their friends start to show interest.
I don’t have liquor cabinets. So no I don’t. Is this a real thing? Who are you needing to lock it from?