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Professionals
urge parents to empower
kids to handle tough
decisions
about alcohol
use
For
teenagers, making
a bad decision about
alcohol use can cause
irreparable harm in
a way that few other
wrong decisions can.
The disciplinary actions
school administrators,
police officers, coaches,
and therapists take
in response to alcohol
infractions can be
swift and severe to
be sure, but they
all contend that it’s
parents who wield
the most authority—and
obligation—to
talk frankly with
their teens about
the dangers of alcohol,
set clear limits,
and follow through
on the consequences
when those rules are
breached.
The
parent volunteers
who run the annual
Wellesley Cotillion
held in December take
this admonition seriously.
A list of strict guidelines
is mailed out for
parents to read and
discuss with their
teenagers in advance
of the event. Notice
is made that all handbags
and jackets are subject
to inspection, and
backpacks and large
bags are simply not
permitted.
Further,
parents of any guest
suspected of being
under the influence
of a controlled substance,
or who behaves inappropriately,
will be called to
pick up their child
immediately. To ensure
this policy is carried
out, all parents are
required to provide
a phone number where
they can be reached
on the night of the
Cotillion.
The “zero
tolerance” policy
seems to be working,
says Wellesley parent
Donna Fessler who
helped run last year’s
Cotillion. Granted
it was a lot of work
for the parents involved,
she said, but the
event was both a joy
and a success.
“The
Cotillion is a gift
parents are able to
give their children,” Fessler
said, and the emphasis
should be on the positive. “It’s
about dressing up,
being with your friends,
and having a good
time,” she
said, adding, “and
most kids are good
kids.”
Nonetheless,
Fessler believes adults
need to be mindful
that teens will test
whatever limits are
set. “It’s
our job to set strict
and clear guidelines—and
to be sure they’re
enforced,” she
says, albeit with
a delicate touch.
When
teenagers know their
behavior is being
watched and that there
will be consequences
for breaking the rules,
they’re
much more likely to
make the right choices,
says Dr. Robert Evans,
director of Human
Relations Service
(HRS), a private,
non-profit mental
health agency serving
Wellesley, Weston,
and Wayland. HRS offers
a full range of outpatient
diagnosis, treatment,
and crisis intervention,
including an Adolescent
Substance Abuse Program
(ASAP). The emphasis
of ASAP is to provide
swift, practical intervention
to the family of a
teenager who may be
involved in problematic
addictive habits.
“Kids
who generally are
best able to monitor
themselves, come from
authoritative homes,” Evans
says. He defines authoritative
as “friendly,
but firm; supportive,
but not enabling.” In
an authoritative home,
for instance, a small
child has the right
to choose whether
to eat, but not what
to eat. In contrast,
Evans says that in
an indulgent home,
when a child refuses
to eat the meal that’s
served, the parent
prepares a different
meal.
“Going
hungry briefly—although
this rarely happens—isn’t
going to hurt the
child; constantly
getting one’s
own way will,” Evans
says. What may seem
like a minor issue
when children are
young, however, sets
the tone for how they’ll
respond to parental
authority in the teenage
years ahead.
An
even more extreme
example is the child
who protests that
he doesn’t
want to go to Grandma’s—and
the family doesn’t
go. That’s
an adult decision,
Evans says, not a
child’s.
But increasingly,
the line that differentiates
adults from children
is becoming blurred.
“For
a child of the ’50s,
seeing a commercial
for Viagra during
a Red Sox game would
have been unthinkable,” he
said. “There
was a clear notion
that teenagers where
not ‘mini
adults.’ There
were still forbidden
fruits.”
Now
many teens feel entitled
to the adult world,
including alcohol.
Teenagers may argue
that since parents
drink at parties,
they can too. But
that’s
faulty logic—and
it’s
against the law, says
Youth Safety Officer
Brian Spencer of the
Wellesley Police Department.
Of his 21 years in
law enforcement, the
past eight have been
here in Wellesley.
He now serves as the
School Resource Officer
and runs a variety
of programs for different
grade levels that
cover such topics
as cyber-bullying,
internet safety, and
alcohol awareness.
“It’s
all about making smart
decisions and keeping
the lines of communication
open,” he
says. For all his
time in the classroom,
however, Spencer says
his influence pales
in comparison to the
role of the parent.
“Parents
need to keep the conversation
going, and to listen
[to their kids],” Spencer
says. The only time
not to discuss alcohol
use, however, is when
a teen’s
been drinking. “Make
sure they’re
safe and that they
don’t
need medical attention,” Spencer
says. But wait until
the next day to discuss
it and, more importantly,
to enforce the consequences
that have been discussed
ahead of time.
“The
parents’ role
is not to be their
kid’s
best friend,” Spencer
says. Parents
need to lay down
clear rules and
then follow through
when they’re
broken. This
means
talking specifics
with their teens
about what to
do if alcohol
appears at a party
or if the person
driving has been
drinking.
Role-playing
can help.
Spencer
believes that it’s
okay for teens to
make their parent
the excuse for not
drinking by saying, “my
parents are up when
I get home, so I can’t
drink.” Of
course, this means
parents must actually
be awake and be checking
teens’ breath
when they do come
home. “If
they know they won’t
get away with it,
they’re
less likely to take
that chance.”
Special
Event Safety
Tips for Parents
Reprinted
from the
Weston Parent
Connection
Safety Tips
and Guidelines,
February
2008. To
view the
document
in full,
visit: www.westonschools.org and
search “Parent
Connection.” |
School
administrators and
coaches know this.
In 2007 they worked
with the Massachusetts
Interscholastic Athletic
Association
(MIAA) to heighten
penalties for student-athletes
caught drinking,
using drugs, smoking,
or chewing tobacco.
Prior to the rule
change, if a player
was caught in the
off-season, there
was essentially
no penalty. Those
caught now (even
in the summer) will
lose
eligibility the
next time they play
a sport. In short,
there’s
never a time when
coaches can look
the other way when
it comes to underage
drinking. MIAA
officials
do encourage athletes
found in violation
to continue practice,
however, because
they don't want
them out there with
nothing to do, taking
chances.
But
take chances they
will, the experts
say. A feeling of
immortality is part
of adolescence. Adults
need to be the ones
who constantly remind
teens about safety
and about consequences.
That’s
why before the Cotillion
each year, Wellesley’s
Youth Commission
hosts a public Alcohol
and Youth Awareness
Forum together with
the Wellesley Police.
Maura Renzella,
the commission's
youth director, says
that during the
forum a documentary
film about a hit-and-run
accident involving
a drunk driver is
shown, followed
by a question and
answer period.
Renzella,
who also co-leads
the “Thinking
about Drinking Basics” with
Officer Spencer for
eighth graders, says
that kids who’ve
had conversations
with their parents
beforehand and know
that they can call
and be picked up with
no questions asked,
are more likely to
call their parents
when the time comes.
“With
today’s
technology, you’d
be surprised how
quickly you can
go from texting ‘Mom
and Dad are at
the movies’ to
having 50 kids
knocking on your
door looking
for a party,” Renzella
said.
| Strategies
for Raising
Healthy, Resilient
Kids
Eight
Tips For
Empowering
Your Child
Reprinted
with permission
from:
Empowerment
Fitness®
DKS
Consulting Group, LLC
572
Washington Street
Wellesley,
MA 02842
781.433.0307
www.empowermentfitness.com |
"In
Wellesley and Weston,
the houses are big
and the basements
can be cavernous,” Renzella
says. Teens have become
savvy enough to keep
both the number of
friends and the volume
of music down, in
hopes that the adults
upstairs—when
there are some—won’t
intrude. “But
you have to intrude,” she
said, all while trying
not to embarrass your
teen too much.
But
many parents grapple
with how to exert
their authority, while
still allowing their
teens to assume more
responsibility for
their own behavior,
says Dr. Dale Sokoloff
of Wellesley-based
DKS Consulting Group.
Sokoloff, a clinical
psychologist and former
founding member of
the Eating Disorders
Program at Massachusetts
General Hospital,
is a pioneer of Empowerment
Fitness® (see
sidebar).
Her
group offers workshops
to help parents empower
their children to
face difficult decisions. “No
parent can envision
every scenario his
or her child is going
to face,” Sokoloff
said, so the emphasis
needs to be on the
process of how good
decisions are made.
“By
eighth grade, kids
who want access to
alcohol are beginning
to get it. They’re
very savvy,” Sokoloff
said—be
it through an older
sibling or classmate
or an unlocked liquor
cabinet. “So
rather than always
talking about what
they shouldn’t
do, focus instead
on what they should
do,” she
adds. Frame the conversation
in terms of identifying
what they really want.
Some good questions:
What
kids have you chosen
to be with? Will
what you’re
doing be a good experience
or bad experience?
And
this is a conversation
to be having with
children of all ages,
Sokoloff says. Gear
the content toward
their current experience
such as the rule about
wearing a helmet when
biking or skateboarding.
Questions can help
kids connect actions
with consequences:
Do
you know why wearing
a helmet is important?
How would you say ‘no’ to
a friend who made
the suggestion not
to? Here’s
what will happen if
you’re
caught without your
helmet.
“Parents
are so much more important
to their kids than
they realize. [Kids]
may look like they’re
rejecting you, but
bottom line, the most
important people in
their lives are their
parents,” she
says.
And
even when you think
they’re
not listening, they
are—especially
when it comes to the
high-charged temptations
involved in drinking,
smoking, sex, and
driving. These are
conversations that
can be easier to have
side-by-side in conjunction
with another activity,
Sokoloff says. Repetitive
physical actions like
throwing a baseball,
playing ping-pong,
or shooting baskets
can establish a natural
rhythm for conversation,
even for the most
taciturn teen.
“It
doesn’t
have to feel like
a lecture,” Sokoloff
says, which teens
are likely to tune
out.
Karen
Hoffman, Sokoloff’s
partner at DKS Consulting,
added, “kids
are going to make
mistakes. Not to panic.” The
important thing is
that they learn to
pick themselves up
so that mistakes become
learning opportunities,
something they refer
to as “failing
forward.”
Parents
are sometimes so afraid
of their kids being
unhappy or having
to face unpleasant
consequences as a
result of their actions,
that parents try to
keep them from failing,
often to the extreme. “When
the coach calls you
and says ‘your
kid is off the team
[for drinking],’ Hoffman
says, "instead
of arguing your case,
say ‘thank
you.’”
| Serving
alcohol to a
minor?
It’s
a crime in
the eyes of
the law
When
calling, parents
should provide
the WPD with
the
following
information:
Excerpted
from the “Role
of Parents” section
of the General
Policy Concerned
with Youth and
Alcohol instituted
by the Wellesley
Police Department
in November
1999. To view
the policy in
full, visit: www.wellesleypolice.com/YouthAlcoholPolicy/YouthAlcoholPolicy.htm
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