I agree with the clothing issue for girls. We have to be careful when picking out clothing for my 12 yr old. She is 5'5 already which basically means no shorts for her ever. They are made short to begin with and then her height makes them booty shorts. However, she picks out capris and jeans and is prefectly happy. We do shop at Hollister and aeroposle, etc, but she chooses more modest clothing. My DD grew up putting tatoos everywhere and taking fake shot drinks. Shoot my DH grandpa gave her wine on hard bread one visit when she was teething. Apperently, thats what his wife did when his kids were small. But she also had us telling her what was ok for her and what was not. As long as you build a solid foundation for your children these things seem small and silly. My DD is in 6th grade and has never made a grade below a B (ranges 3.6-4.0), dresses with clothes that fit (even lifts her arms to make sure her shirts do not rise up), treats adults with respect, and grew up of the fake tatoos and fake drinks stage.
I read alot of the posts from teachers on here and I am glad you are not at my DD's school. To make a generalized judgement based on a few teens in your classes is wrong. Honestly, I can not imagine there being that many troubled teens in your classes. I might be a bit naive here cause we do live in a small county town (the middle school has under 600 kids for 6th-8th). I will admit right away. But I have volunteered many hours at our middle school and the kids are behaved for the most part. Usually there will be 2-3 in a day that acts up. I also am in charge of our public library's tween and teen programs. We have some of the best tween and teen volunteers. Now we have had a few that join just to join, but usually come around in the end. I can not say what other teens and kids will do because mommy let them but a tatoo on their belly. But I can give my own experience with my own kids.
We as teachers are not making generalized judgments at all - since I've worked with hundreds upon hundreds of teens, I am speaking in facts, not generalizations. I don't generalize, as it serves no purpose. I am speaking from years of experience in teaching and counselling teens.
Again, most parents are tricking themselves if they think pretend drinking of alcohol (real drinking of alcohol is even worse), pretend cigarettes, etc., is just innocent fun. Innocent fun should not include adult activities. In regards to the tattoos, I did not say that if kids use fake kids' tattoos that this is horrible - I said that the placement and sexualization of the little 5 year olds' backside tattoo is wrong. Play tattos/stickers are fun for many kids, but they should be treated as the fun stickers that they are, and placed on hands, not on backsides, breasts, etc. Once they are placed in these areas, it has now crossed over from child play, into adult play, and that is not an area that I want any baby girl of 5 years old to be in. Also, it's important if kids know what real adult tattoos are, to explain the difference between the removeable play tattoos and the permanency and risk of adult tattoos.
A bigger issue than actual tattoos (kids can't get real tattoos at reputable places until they are of a certain age), is play alcohol, cigarettes, candy pills, etc. For those in which these activities are an issue, and that's pretty much most of my students, they almost all trace it back to what their parents and other adult relatives did with them. Why take a chance? Growing up is hard enough as is, but this kind of stuff makes it even harder - we'll let you play with pretend alcohol when you are little, or, pretend tattoos on your backside so that you can show off your body to others, but once you hit 10, by golly, you can't do this stuff anymore, and if you do, I'll ground you, kill you, etc.? That's very confused and inconsistent parenting.
No offense to any parents who find these behaviours acceptable, but have you taken any basic child development or psych courses? I'm thinking not - it doesn't matter how solid a foundation you think you are giving your kids, once you practe confused and hypocritical parenting, it will break this solid foundation down in many cases, faster than you will believe. Again, not for all kids, but for most.
Not to mention the messages that it's sending to other parents - I would never allow my children to play with children whose parents think alcohol is a game. I have had many family/friends/students killed by drunk drivers, so this alone tells me that you are all missing a very big point. Alcohol should
never be used in fun situations, ever, as it can kill. This is basic psychology 101 - once you dumb it down and make it childlike in nature, it then becomes something other than what it is and that is when real trouble hits. Believe me - it's no fun seeing a young, beautiful girl of 15 laying in a casket. You all need to remember that when you are doing jello shots or juice shots with your kids - there is no difference between gin or juice in this instance, except for how it affects the body. You have set up an atmosphere in which alcohol is now a game or a toy, and that is a huge problem.
In regards to the tattoo issue, as the OP posted about, it is getting into dangerous territory, period. I have no right to judge any adult who gets a tattoo, as that is not my concern nor right to do so - that is not what I have been discussing at all. I have a problem with the placement of this tattoo as this little girl seems to think it's fine to drop her pants to show off a private area of her body. This is dangerous because already she is showing boundary issues. Again, I have counselled teens who have been raped who had these same boundary issues as it's hard for kids to distinguish when the boundaries have been continually blurred.
It all starts in childhood folks, so, please for the sake of the mental and physical health of your children, stop making adult activities into games. Play tattoos are stickers to be placed on hands or arms, and that's it. Alcohol, sex, cigarettes and pills are to be treated at all times in a serious manner because when they aren't, you can end up seriously injured or dead. This is the message that you need to be
showing your kids at all times. Actions usually speak louder than words, as most people are visual learners, so if my mom is doing jello shooters of juice with me, I learn that alcohol is fun, no matter what mom has told me. This is confused parenting at its finest!
Tiger
