Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Possibly true someplace. Definitely not true in VA.
Parents in VA who allowed alcohol to under-21s sometimes are prosecuted - and in at least some cases jail time has resulted.
Does anyone know if the parents who served alcohol to high school students in Arlington before the horrible crash that took the life of a promising young man were charged?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids aren't even in high school yet, but every grad party I've been to for my friends' kids had copious amount of alcohol. The kids were playing beer pong, the girls were sipping Veuve and high noons. I started drinking freshman year of high school, so I don't find this odd, but it would make me nervous as a parent from a liability standpoint.
Wow. Prom pre parties and grad parties were dry for anyone under 21 in our crowd.
Anonymous wrote:My kids aren't even in high school yet, but every grad party I've been to for my friends' kids had copious amount of alcohol. The kids were playing beer pong, the girls were sipping Veuve and high noons. I started drinking freshman year of high school, so I don't find this odd, but it would make me nervous as a parent from a liability standpoint.
Anonymous wrote:^ +1
We never learned to socialize without alcohol. In HS/college, post-college—it was about getting drunk. Every get together was a bar, a brewery, a winery, a block party. It was really hard to give up alcohol because I didn’t even know what to do without it for fun,
I’m so glad my sons don’t need alcohol to have fun or as a crutch. I’m amazed the fun they have without it in college, truly. Granted, they picked non-Greek/non big football schools so alcohol doesn’t permeate everything.
I swear so many of us learned binging behavior and cane out of college with alcohol use disorders.
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: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:I love the hypocrite parents worried about drinking. Back in our day Prom we were clubbing, going to bars in HS. My prom I skipped in NY the after party was in a NYC night club with open bar as drinking age 18 and pretty easy at 16 to go to a bar. Plus kids would co Spring break my HS in Cancun and back then drinking age 16 in Mexico,
Now we are so worried. The kids are fine. Drinking is out of style. It is so 1980s.
Plus in college in a few weeks our HS Seniors will be at keg parties if not mature enough today how will they handle it in a few weeks
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?
Gee, maybe… continue not to drink illegally? Worked for me & all my siblings. And my now-DH.
Who are you people? I don’t know any parents like this. Literally none. Is it socioeconomic? Private school parents generally do not have this “absolutely no alcohol until legal” mentally.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Possibly true someplace. Definitely not true in VA.
Parents in VA who allowed alcohol to under-21s sometimes are prosecuted - and in at least some cases jail time has resulted.
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?
Gee, maybe… continue not to drink illegally? Worked for me & all my siblings. And my now-DH.