budwmn
If you believe in magic, you belong
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2003
- Messages
- 924
Cruise Critic has a nice new article on teen behavior on cruise ships and how to avoid problems. Here are a few highlights (and suggestions)
:
"Lay down the law.
Tell your kids what is expected of them. Yes, it's a family vacation and there will be fun: curfews stretched to 3 a.m., unlimited slices of pizza daily and other we-never-do-this-at-home occurrences. But insist that basic good behavior still applies. No running, pushing, shoving or cursing in public areas. No cutting in lines, shouting in the halls or throwing food in the dining rooms.
Then, create consequences. If you or anyone else catches your progeny misbehaving, let them know what will happen. After my teenage son missed a midnight curfew by two hours, we "grounded" him the following evening, insisting he stay in the cabin after dinner with no friends visiting. For the rest of the voyage, he came in on time (though not one minute too soon).
Talk about sex, drugs and alcohol.
Think of a cruise ship as a weeklong party for teens. Now think of what you warn your kids about before going to a land based bash: sex, drugs and alcohol. On a Caribbean sailing when we asked a mother of two lively 13- and 16-year-old daughters why her girls weren't participating much in the teen program, she told me the boys only want one thing "and my girls aren't interested." On another Caribbean cruise an outgoing and popular teen was busted mid-voyage for selling marijuana. He and his family were not forced off the ship, but he was booted from the teen program and shunned by his peers -- for getting caught, we think, not necessarily for selling. So don't be naive. Cruise ships, while wonderful, aren't Neverland.
Monitor your kids.
"Your parenting responsibilities do not stop because you walked across the gangway of a ship," says McDonald. We've learned to have our teens to check in with us several times a day. We tell them to find us at the gym, adult pool or other quiet spot we're likely to be by a certain time. This enables us to touch base, ask what they're doing, and make plans for dinner or the next day's shore tours. If for some reason, we've changed our locale, then the teen is to go to the cabin, look for a note from us and write down where he or she will be. Then, once in awhile go to where your child is hanging out and observe. It's not spying; consider it checking up.
Be realistic.
Nobody's kids are perfect, and neither are the adult passengers. But clearly stated rules and expectations as well as frank talks go a long way toward creating the type of family vacation you want to remember for the right reasons."
:"Lay down the law.
Tell your kids what is expected of them. Yes, it's a family vacation and there will be fun: curfews stretched to 3 a.m., unlimited slices of pizza daily and other we-never-do-this-at-home occurrences. But insist that basic good behavior still applies. No running, pushing, shoving or cursing in public areas. No cutting in lines, shouting in the halls or throwing food in the dining rooms.
Then, create consequences. If you or anyone else catches your progeny misbehaving, let them know what will happen. After my teenage son missed a midnight curfew by two hours, we "grounded" him the following evening, insisting he stay in the cabin after dinner with no friends visiting. For the rest of the voyage, he came in on time (though not one minute too soon).
Talk about sex, drugs and alcohol.
Think of a cruise ship as a weeklong party for teens. Now think of what you warn your kids about before going to a land based bash: sex, drugs and alcohol. On a Caribbean sailing when we asked a mother of two lively 13- and 16-year-old daughters why her girls weren't participating much in the teen program, she told me the boys only want one thing "and my girls aren't interested." On another Caribbean cruise an outgoing and popular teen was busted mid-voyage for selling marijuana. He and his family were not forced off the ship, but he was booted from the teen program and shunned by his peers -- for getting caught, we think, not necessarily for selling. So don't be naive. Cruise ships, while wonderful, aren't Neverland.
Monitor your kids.
"Your parenting responsibilities do not stop because you walked across the gangway of a ship," says McDonald. We've learned to have our teens to check in with us several times a day. We tell them to find us at the gym, adult pool or other quiet spot we're likely to be by a certain time. This enables us to touch base, ask what they're doing, and make plans for dinner or the next day's shore tours. If for some reason, we've changed our locale, then the teen is to go to the cabin, look for a note from us and write down where he or she will be. Then, once in awhile go to where your child is hanging out and observe. It's not spying; consider it checking up.
Be realistic.
Nobody's kids are perfect, and neither are the adult passengers. But clearly stated rules and expectations as well as frank talks go a long way toward creating the type of family vacation you want to remember for the right reasons."
my sister and i would never dream of acting up.
