Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,190
My dd is in 8th grade and we've been talking about this for quite some time. I did some really stupid things in HS but that doesn't mean I'll turn the other way if my child starts doing this same thing.
I can't say I'm surprised by some of the lackadaisical attitudes on this thread but I am saddened by it. As parents I feel we should be disappointed by the choices some teens make and lay down the law that it will not be tolerated.
Not everyone chooses the same hill to die on. I'll be honest - I don't think teens experimenting with alcohol is a big deal so long as they aren't getting behind the wheel afterwards. I think the way our society addresses alcohol is misguided at best, and the lessons I pass on to my kids are far more "think about the possible consequences" than "just say no".
I certainly do not think it would "never" happen--but I DO think it would happen less.
Think about it--f someone cheats on a test and they get away with it, they are more likely to do it again and again and eventually start to think of it as a "normal" thing. They get to the point that they feel like they know what they are doing and how to do it and they won't get caught and nothing bad will happen to them.
I have seen that very thing happen with drinking and driving too. Someone was worried about it and dd it anyway but driving super slowly, etc. That went okay so the next time they worried a little less and drove a little less slowly. By the tenth time that person is hopping in the car convinced they can "handle it" and driving at normal speeds.
All I am saying is that I DO feel that the overall number of people willing to drive while impaired would go down if the incentive to "sneak" home by driving after illegally drinking were taken away by having rules similar to some other countries in which the drinking is legal for a couple of years before the driving is. It keeps someone from taking those first few drives when they are still worried about it (even if they are not rule follower type kids--if your teen and nearly all of their friends are not legally able to drive then you probably wll have some system n place to get them home from whatever get together--alcohol or not, right?)
I agree. Those "buzzed driving" commercials have it right... by the time they're old enough to drink legally, many people have enough experience driving after a few drinks to think of themselves as experts with a foolproof system for doing so safely and without getting caught. And by 21 driving is second nature, something they take entirely for granted, so the pattern of always having a car on hand to get from point A to point B is so ingrained that doing otherwise feels like a huge hassle.
Besides, on the simple logic of it... Shouldn't it require MORE maturity and responsibility to handle a machine with the potential to kill or injure others than it does to decide if you want to imbibe an intoxicant that will (with driving taken out of the equation) at worst only harm yourself?