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papayahed
08-17-2009, 01:23 PM
I was watching some show the other day, the kids knew by rote some drug facts about a basketball player that tried drugs once and he died from it. Now obviously the parent had been talking about the subject and advising against it actively. I'm assuming the parents did the same about everything else - drinking, sex, etc... Here's my question: As a kid did your parents talk about these issues? And if they did did you listen?

I don't want this to be a debate about legality or morality I'm just wondering how effective parental guidance is vs. peer pressure. Ohhhh, another question - How great was the peer pressure to do things you knew your parents wouldn't like?

Nightshade
08-19-2009, 07:45 AM
I was always a goody two shoes, ( according to my mom) and for the most part I tend to follow her advice, but I think generally I agree with her anyway. The biggest break I ahd was the hijjab thing whihc was admittedly alot to do with peer pressure and agains my parents advice and my mum even roped in all sorts of family friends and teachers to stop me and I ignored her. It hasnt turned out bad but the same time I am not sure I would have made the decision to wear it if I had been deciding when I was older, all things given.

As to drugs , well I don't see the point I ge weird enough on a sugar high do I really want to be that out of control? As that was the way my mum pointed it out my answer then was no and still is.

AimusSage
08-19-2009, 07:58 AM
You know, they may have discussed it or not discussed it, but I sure as hell didn't listen or I would have remembered, but the thing is, they didn't need to discuss it, I was blessed with the ability to make the right choices myself :D

Delta40
08-19-2009, 08:09 AM
My parents discussed it with me over a cigarette and a beer. they told me not to drink or smoke because it was a stupid thing to do....They gave me their excuse - they didn't know how bad it was for you back then and their parents (hiccup) didn't bother to sit down and tell them like they were telling me. It's because they cared that they told me this. I was more impressed by their demonstration of addiction and followed suit like a good little girl for 25 years....

The moral (even though you don't want one) Our actions will always speak louder than words.

sciencefan
08-19-2009, 08:37 AM
My parents did not discuss drugs with me... well except once my father told me not to smoke pot... and that was in the context of he had tried it and found out it wasn't okay. But I am the kind of person who wants to be told by an expert why I shouldn't do such-and-such. Basically I didn't care about my father's opinion. He smoked cigarettes and drank alcohol. I didn't respect him.

My kids have had anti-drug, smoking, alcohol teaching in school. We talk about why it's bad. I don't smoke or drink, so I lead by example.

1n50mn14
08-19-2009, 10:52 AM
My mother told me once I turned seventeen, I could smoke, drink, do drugs and have sex with my boyfriend, because it would be out of her hands by then, anyway. (In no way was she advocating any of the above activities, she was just smart enough to realize that her advice was going to go unheeded, and smart enough to realize she couldn't stop me from doing anything.) I didn't listen. I moved out of home at sixteen and did all of the above (well, if you count marijuana as a drug).

My mother is a heavy smoker, got married at the age of seventeen, had a child at eighteen, &etc, so I didn't really find it necessary to follow her example. She wasn't the best person to listen to advice from, as it was selfish advice. Kids need to be informed, and make smart decisions, but they also need to make their OWN mistakes.

ClaesGefvenberg
08-19-2009, 12:06 PM
We used to discuss these things (and much more), and I definitely listened. Sometimes I even followed their advice.

/Claes

Annamariah
08-19-2009, 04:38 PM
My parents never talked to me about alcohol, smoking, drugs or sex. I guess I was (and still am) so boring they had no need to :D

I learned about all these things at school and of course from books and newspapers and other sources by myself. My parents never talked about these things, they just showed good example and said nothing (neither of my parents smoke, my father is a teetotaller, and my mother drinks rarely and never much).

Helga
08-19-2009, 04:59 PM
my mom talked a little to me about this stuff but not that much, she just trusted me. and she thinks I did as she wanted but I smoked from the age of 13 and untill I got pregnant, I also started drinking around 15. but I never tried drugs even though most of my friends did.
I don't think my mom talking a lot about it would have changed anything I knew what I was doing and even though I hardly drink now I really do miss my pipe!

Mr Endon
08-20-2009, 04:15 AM
My parents never talked to me about alcohol, smoking, drugs or sex. I guess I was (and still am) so boring they had no need to :D

I learned about all these things at school and of course from books and newspapers and other sources by myself. My parents never talked about these things, they just showed good example and said nothing (neither of my parents smoke, my father is a teetotaller, and my mother drinks rarely and never much).

My situation is more or less like this. I firmly believe that if parents educate their children well enough and expose them to sources of information, then they'll learn by themselves. Must be such an awkward conversation, that about 'risk behaviours' or whatchacallem.

My parents are very clever. I don't drink (at all), and my parents keep on trying to make me drink - maybe I don't drink because they encouraged me to try alcohol when the time was ripe. My rebellious (?) teenageness told me to do the opposite of what the parental authority tried to impose on me, and now I'm a boring vice-free young man who must explain to everyone he meets at parties why he doesn't drink (something that even I don't quite know for sure).

Annamariah
08-20-2009, 10:46 AM
My parents are very clever. I don't drink (at all), and my parents keep on trying to make me drink - maybe I don't drink because they encouraged me to try alcohol when the time was ripe. My rebellious (?) teenageness told me to do the opposite of what the parental authority tried to impose on me, and now I'm a boring vice-free young man who must explain to everyone he meets at parties why he doesn't drink (something that even I don't quite know for sure).

I don't drink either, and I also always have to explain WHY. I just don't understand why it is so hard to accept that someone doesn't drink alcohol. Why is it normal, acceptable, and even desirable to get drunk at parties and possibly to make a fool of oneself and it's always the one who is sober who's called the freak and has to explain their behaviour? :confused:

Mr Endon
08-20-2009, 01:06 PM
I don't drink either, and I also always have to explain WHY. I just don't understand why it is so hard to accept that someone doesn't drink alcohol. Why is it normal, acceptable, and even desirable to get drunk at parties and possibly to make a fool of oneself and it's always the one who is sober who's called the freak and has to explain their behaviour? :confused:

Beats the hell out of me! I've heard it has to do with social bonding. But I really don't know, I've even done some research on it.

P.S. Jim Gaffigan wonders about it too: 'http://comedians.comedycentral.com/jim-gaffigan/videos/jim-gaffigan---people-who-don-t-drink' [from 01:09]

Niamh
08-20-2009, 02:01 PM
I dont think my parents ever sat down and talked to me about Drugs. They didnt really need to. I grew up surrounded by drugs so i grew up seeing the effects it had on peoples lives. There were drug raids on my street every other night, that same family, nearly all of the womans kids because addicts. One died a few years back from pneumonia. He had aids fgot from using a dirty needle. From what i know. And the youngest is trying to stay clean. and it wasnt just them either. there were two blocks of flats beside my house and one of them was riddled with drugs. From what i saw growing up, i knew not to touch them. I read a lot more about them through school and such. I do think however they were obviously the ones to warn about not picking up needles if we saw them lying around. But we werent that stupid.

Dirtbag
08-28-2009, 01:38 PM
My parents did not discuss drugs with me... well except once my father told me not to smoke pot... and that was in the context of he had tried it and found out it wasn't okay. But I am the kind of person who wants to be told by an expert why I shouldn't do such-and-such. Basically I didn't care about my father's opinion. He smoked cigarettes and drank alcohol. I didn't respect him.

My kids have had anti-drug, smoking, alcohol teaching in school. We talk about why it's bad. I don't smoke or drink, so I lead by example.
So, did you ever find a pot connoisseur?

ntropyincarnate
08-28-2009, 04:48 PM
For me, parental advice made me want to do whatever it was they thought was wrong. So yeah, not quite the effect they were hoping for I don't think.

Maryd.
08-28-2009, 06:25 PM
I grew up in a single parent home and the only drugs discussed with me were - How's the headach and how many Disprins (Apsrin) did you take today?

Maximilianus
08-29-2009, 03:27 AM
My parents never talked to me about alcohol, smoking, drugs or sex. I guess I was (and still am) so boring they had no need to :D
I would rather say you've been smart (not boring) and they noticed it. After all, our parents are supposed to know us better than anyone else :) :D


I learned about all these things at school and of course from books and newspapers and other sources by myself. My parents never talked about these things, they just showed good example and said nothing (neither of my parents smoke, my father is a teetotaller, and my mother drinks rarely and never much).
My parents did talk to me, but they also encouraged me to develop a brain of my own. Most of all, I'd rather say I've been trained to be a free man and my freedom turned me into a teetotaller :D

My situation is more or less like this. I firmly believe that if parents educate their children well enough and expose them to sources of information, then they'll learn by themselves. Must be such an awkward conversation, that about 'risk behaviours' or whatchacallem.
Oh, probably, I believe, it wouldn't be so awkward a conversation if in the middle of it someone explains WHY some behaviors can be risky ;)


My parents are very clever. I don't drink (at all), and my parents keep on trying to make me drink - maybe I don't drink because they encouraged me to try alcohol when the time was ripe. My rebellious (?) teenageness told me to do the opposite of what the parental authority tried to impose on me, and now I'm a boring vice-free young man who must explain to everyone he meets at parties why he doesn't drink (something that even I don't quite know for sure).
Sometimes when I was a teenager, I recall my parents telling me that a bit of alcohol does no harm and could even be healthy, but by that time I already had a brain of my own, so I didn't want to try it, because I was already a free man and my freedom was telling me that it didn't feel like trying alcohol. So my freedom was rather whimsical, I must say :p
And after very few attempts, having seen I was a lost case, they ceased to insist :D

I don't drink either, and I also always have to explain WHY. I just don't understand why it is so hard to accept that someone doesn't drink alcohol. Why is it normal, acceptable, and even desirable to get drunk at parties and possibly to make a fool of oneself and it's always the one who is sober who's called the freak and has to explain their behaviour? :confused:
"Normal" people are like that. According to their eyes, I am a "freak" too and I never explained why. Generally I never explain any single one of my behaviors because, as I said before, I am a free man. As free as I am, I choose to explain only what I feel like explaining, which is almost nothing if someone should ever ask me why I am what I am while they are what they are, as though they were telling me they are right while I am wrong. Even if I were wrong to be sober, I wouldn't explaining "such a wrong choice", because I'm free to carry out the whim of not explaining my sobriety, as they are free to swallow every liquid that fits in their mouths. On the other hand, I could be willing to explain my sober freedom, but only when asked nicely :D

Beats the hell out of me! I've heard it has to do with social bonding...
My opinion is that social bonding sucks! I need no bond to someone who'd be constantly telling me that if I don't do what they do, they'd be "normal" and I'd be "freak". People who openly call themselves "normal" are deadly dangerous and should be watched all the time. As far as I've seen, they can well become an enemy.

Annamariah
08-29-2009, 01:52 PM
Beats the hell out of me! I've heard it has to do with social bonding. But I really don't know, I've even done some research on it.


My opinion is that social bonding sucks! I need no bond to someone who'd be constantly telling me that if I don't do what they do, they'd be "normal" and I'd be "freak". People who openly call themselves "normal" are deadly dangerous and should be watched all the time. As far as I've seen, they can well become an enemy.

I've noticed that whenever I'm somewhere where people drink (which doesn't happen very often), "Why don't you drink?" seems to be the only thing people want to know about me. A while back I was in a party where almost everyone else was drunk, and a guy came to talk to me. The first question was "Excuse me, but have you drunk anything tonight?". I told him I hadn't (except some water). The next guestion was "Do you usually stay sober when you party?". I told him I don't usually go to parties, but that I do usually (well, always) stay sober. Then he of course asked me why, and we discussed about it for a while. It's just somehow so typical... There are only two questions people ask me at parties. One is "Why aren't you drinking?" and the other is "Are you okay?". I guess I just look so miserable at parties of that kind, never fitting in :lol:

I don't mind being asked why I don't drink, but I do mind when people don't find my answers satisfactory. I don't think it's my duty to explain my behaviour in such a way, so it's annoying when people keep insisting I should try alcohol anyway even after I've told them why I don't want to. I don't like the fact I have to be defensive about the whole thing, as if it was wrong to be sober :sick:

Hurricane
08-30-2009, 06:56 PM
I can't remember my parents ever really talking to me about drugs or alcohol when I was younger. More recently, the party-line has been "We would like for you to never do drugs or drink before age 21, but you're over 18 so there's nothing we can really do about it." Tobacco was an unspoken no-go: my uncle and grandfather both died from smoking-related illnesses when I was little, so needless to say I never saw the appeal.
I've never done drugs and I'm essentially a nondrinker. Part of the reason for me was that while many of my friends drank/did drugs, I never really thought it was "worth it". There's a lot I could lose (kicked out of school, lose possibility of career I want, etc.) by being caught with drugs or drinking underage, and it's just not worth the risk.

Maximilianus
08-31-2009, 12:30 AM
I've noticed that whenever I'm somewhere where people drink (which doesn't happen very often), "Why don't you drink?" seems to be the only thing people want to know about me. A while back I was in a party where almost everyone else was drunk, and a guy came to talk to me. The first question was "Excuse me, but have you drunk anything tonight?". I told him I hadn't (except some water). The next question was "Do you usually stay sober when you party?". I told him I don't usually go to parties, but that I do usually (well, always) stay sober. Then he of course asked me why, and we discussed about it for a while. It's just somehow so typical... There are only two questions people ask me at parties. One is "Why aren't you drinking?" and the other is "Are you okay?". I guess I just look so miserable at parties of that kind, never fitting in :lol:
If you are not like them you'll never fit in, that's why I never go to parties. If I did, I'd have to explain myself for not fitting in. Explaining myself is something I seldom do, unless I have a very good reason. That reason could probably be someone drunk asking me why I'm not drunk myself, but only if I care a whole lot about that person so as to make them see what advantages sobriety has over drunkenness. Only in such a case would I invest some explanation to try to help someone rehab or something alike. Otherwise, I'd rather find an event where I can fit in such a way that I have to explain nothing, where I know that people are similar to me :p

Besides, the same would happen in a place where everyone is sober and only one drunk guy is there talking nonsense; he would never fit in, and very probably, he'd get a few scornful looks from the rest of the sober audience :p :D

I don't mind being asked why I don't drink, but I do mind when people don't find my answers satisfactory. I don't think it's my duty to explain my behaviour in such a way, so it's annoying when people keep insisting I should try alcohol anyway even after I've told them why I don't want to. I don't like the fact I have to be defensive about the whole thing, as if it was wrong to be sober :sick:
Life is a battlefield and as such, we need to be defensive all the time. My dear Anna, you are a Scandinavian!!! Just do what a Valkyrie would: stop explaining your sobriety, unsheathe your sword, and start beheading some drunken fellows :lol:


my uncle and grandfather both died from smoking-related illnesses when I was little, so needless to say I never saw the appeal.
Then the next generation of your family, that is you, got smarter, which means evolution worked its way. Good for you for being smarter, more evolved, or whatever we call it!


I've never done drugs and I'm essentially a nondrinker. Part of the reason for me was that while many of my friends drank/did drugs, I never really thought it was "worth it". There's a lot I could lose (kicked out of school, lose possibility of career I want, etc.) by being caught with drugs or drinking underage, and it's just not worth the risk.
Good for you again! It's important to watch a course of action and its consequences, and after that, choose to take a different path by the mere exercise of our right to choose, instead of letting someone else choose for us just for the sake of being tuned in with them. As long as you keep a mind of your own, you're gonna be fine :thumbs_up

Zee.
08-31-2009, 12:45 AM
haha you don't need to drink at parties. I'm not a big drinker, all of my friends are, + a few of them do drugs - each to their own.

I understand what you're saying Anna, it's just hard for people to understand because it is somehow foreign to them. Also, there are a lot of stupid people in this world, sometimes you got to remember that the next time someone asks you why you don't do drugs/drink.

Maximilianus
08-31-2009, 01:00 AM
Also, there are a lot of stupid people in this world

Oh, that's so true that I've reached the point of wondering about the spaceship that could fly them to another world :lol:

Annamariah
08-31-2009, 02:48 PM
Life is a battlefield and as such, we need to be defensive all the time. My dear Anna, you are a Scandinavian!!! Just do what a Valkyrie would: stop explaining your sobriety, unsheathe your sword, and start beheading some drunken fellows :lol:

So THAT'S what I should have been doing all this time, dammit! I knew that something was amiss... Now I just need to find my sword, dress in robes and then I can start my mission :banana:

(Do you think the police will understand when I tell them I just did what I had to do when people started to ask me stupid questions?)

---

Yeah, world is full of stupid people. It's too bad that ignoring them all would leave one pretty much alone :lol:

Maximilianus
08-31-2009, 06:53 PM
So THAT'S what I should have been doing all this time, dammit! I knew that something was amiss... Now I just need to find my sword, dress in robes and then I can start my mission :banana:
See? I figured out the solution to your problem all by myself :D



(Do you think the police will understand when I tell them I just did what I had to do when people started to ask me stupid questions?)
Oh, they'd better understand, for if they don't, you're going to have to behead them too :lol: Moreover, it's totally inadvisable to leave witnesses alive, so take those down as well :nod: ... :lol:



Yeah, world is full of stupid people. It's too bad that ignoring them all would leave one pretty much alone :lol:
That is SO TRUE! There's an overpopulation of them and an underpopulation of the few of us :lol:

We can fortunately accompany each other in a virtual way, which is better than nothing :p :D

Scheherazade
06-27-2012, 09:43 AM
The OP:
I was watching some show the other day, the kids knew by rote some drug facts about a basketball player that tried drugs once and he died from it. Now obviously the parent had been talking about the subject and advising against it actively. I'm assuming the parents did the same about everything else - drinking, sex, etc... Here's my question: As a kid did your parents talk about these issues? And if they did did you listen?

I don't want this to be a debate about legality or morality I'm just wondering how effective parental guidance is vs. peer pressure. Ohhhh, another question - How great was the peer pressure to do things you knew your parents wouldn't like?

TurquoiseSunset
06-29-2012, 10:17 AM
My parents never really discussed any of that. They trusted me and I was never much of a 'rebel'. Even when I did things I wasn't supposed to I approached them in an almost scientific way, haha. I started smoking when I was 18, but only for a while. I just wanted to see what it was like. I started drinking when I was about 16 or so. I've never been someone who's gone out to get drunk though. I don't see the point. I've never done any drugs. It scares me, because I've heard and seen first hand what it does to people. Yes, I could have tried something once or twice, just to see what it was about, but I really didn't want to risk it. It wasn't worth it for me.

My peer goup, so to speak, was always quite relaxed. I never felt pressured into smoking, drinking, taking drugs or having sex. It was all up to me. I felt more pressure to be dressed and look a certain way, than do things like that... girls, tsk. :lol:

Buh4Bee
06-29-2012, 07:15 PM
Nothing was discussed with me and I did everything.

qimissung
06-29-2012, 07:37 PM
My parents never really discussed anything with me. I think most everything I did they would not have wanted me to do. But I did it anyway. Once I got to college. :D

The peer pressure to do anything was not great. Except pot. This was the 70's. Everyone did it. Even some of my professors. I suppose I could have said no, but it never crossed my mind.

Buh4Bee
06-29-2012, 09:56 PM
Peer pressure is a very hard thing to say no to, especially if you are dating someone you care about. I was in HS when my boyfriend gave me pot. I probably wouldn't have been such a pot head, if I didn't run with the pothead crowd. I was wild, but I wasn't necessarily attracted to drugs, just being able to be a "free spirit". My point being, that if I didn't want to please this guy, I'd never succumb to the pressure. I think children and teenagers benefit from the discussion, because it gives them specific guidelines and confidence to say no thank you.

qimissung
06-29-2012, 10:23 PM
Yes, I think it's good to bring stuff up, although it never seemed to help my kids at the time. I have heard that we also tend to hang out with people who are similar in interests and outlook. I mean, that's true in general, so why wouldn't it also be true when were teenagers, whatever kind of teenagers we happened to be?

And how does a parent help/combat that?

hehe, I'm watching "Bad Teacher." "Hold it in." "Blow it out." "Hold it in." "Blow it out."

Buh4Bee
06-30-2012, 08:48 AM
Yes, I think it's good to bring stuff up, although it never seemed to help my kids at the time. I have heard that we also tend to hang out with people who are similar in interests and outlook. I mean, that's true in general, so why wouldn't it also be true when were teenagers, whatever kind of teenagers we happened to be?



I think it's true we do associate with people like ourselves, so if it weren't this guy, I might have run into drugs from someone else. Who knows?

The advice may not help in the moment, but it does stick with you as you become an adult and decide how you want to raise your own child.

OrphanPip
06-30-2012, 09:13 AM
Eh, my parents are emotional shells who barely noticed me growing up. My father was too busy working 14 hour days to support the family, and my mother was too busy up in her bedroom all day being insane. As long as I maintained my grades she refrained from psychotic breakdowns and we were all happy.

Also, they probably would have been much happier if I was screwing the girls instead of the other things I did during my slightly wilder high school days. Though, I was never more than a sexual rebel, not much drinking or drugs.

tonywalt
07-01-2012, 12:52 AM
We are influenced by our peers much more than parents - with some exceptions. I always determined I would try most things, but some wines can only be sipped occasionally - if at all.

Buh4Bee
07-01-2012, 12:38 PM
I agree, when we are teenagers we are influenced by our peers more so than our parents. If a kid is raised in a balanced home, they will mostly turn down drugs- there will be no need to take the stuff. It's the at-risk kids you worry about, when they are confronted by peer pressure. There are no parents around to talk to them.