I find this story fascinating and think it raises some very good questions on life and family in the 21st century.
Apparently the story has gained traction worldwide, but in a nutshell, a 17-year old boy has taken his parents to court to get around them grounding him due to his involvement with a 24-year old woman.
The full story is here.
I'm not sure whether it's of any importance, but for the sake of factuality, I must note that Rhi Jeffrey did not "win" a gold medal at Athens - she competed in the early rounds of the 4 x 200m relay and was awarded a medal for being part of the winning team.
As a parent, I have a sneaky suspicion I may well have acted the same way as Justin Wright's parents. At 17, he should not be involved with a 24 yo, and I would certainly try to stop my kids doing in that situation. Almost 30 years ago, I was the 24 yo going out with a 17 yo and I know damned well my intentions weren't honourable!
I find the court's findings in feeling they know better than Justin's parents to be quite bizarre and have to wonder whether the result would have been the same had not national representation at a sport been involved.
Legally, parents are responsible for their children up to age 18 in NZ, and when my son was 17, I restricted his human rights to nil after a series of "incidents". Looking back over the past four years and now seeing a responsible young man, I'm confident the "toughlove" approach has its merits, but now, a court has over-ruled the right of parents to make those rules.
Am I right to be disturbed by this, or do you feel that at 17, he can make his own decisions and live with the consequences? If so, where do parents' rights end?
(The legal age of sexual consent in NZ is 16)

