An Open Letter to Cool, Enabling Parents (Warning, I ain't so nice)
My boys insist that teenagers are worse nowadays than they were when I was a kid, that virtually no adolescent avoids dabbling in drinking or drugs or “doing it” as we like to say. I see their point, but I also know that in history there are many generations from all sorts of cultures that lived so foul, it’s a wonder the Almighty didn’t wipe us all from the map. I do agree it appears that more kids, even Christian kids, live morally ambiguous lifestyles (Mammaw called it “sinful” but that is too mean of a word for our sensitive feelings), but I think the real problem is with teens, they aren’t worse, their parents are.
When I was 16 there was this lady, we’ll call her Mrs. Ellis (a name I’ve changed), and while most parents I knew worked hard to teach their kids to not drink before the legal age and to wait until marriage for sex, Mrs. Ellis opened her home for students to drink beer, play quarters, do shots, and who knows whatever else. I was invited once to go to this countryside “Neverland” but I listened to the better angels of my nature and went home. Tons of my friends went and had their fun in a “safe environment” because, as Mrs. Ellis argued, “teens are going to do it anyway, so at least they can drink here and stay off the roads.” I guess she didn’t foresee the friends that developed a drinking problem during their high school years, a problem I can’t help but think was, at the very least, aggravated by her “safe zone.”
Mrs. Ellis isn’t the only parent that has pulled this stupidity and I’ve heard rumors here and there of a folks in our town that do the same, but it wasn’t until this past homecoming weekend that I’ve realized the parent enabling is a lot more common place than I once thought. I know of some folks that dropped off a kid at a home and witnessed high schoolers from all walks of life (athletes, artists, band, AP students, etc.) walking up with three and four bottles of whiskey and beer and who knows whatever else to party the night away while the adults took their keys and supervised. I know another parent who confiscated their kids’ phones and found pictures of drug use and drunkenness with nearly all of the pictures appearing to have been taken in the game rooms of houses.
I don’t know, maybe I’m just old fashioned, and pardon my language, but what the hell are these parents doing?
You know, it’s hard enough to raise kids to make moral decisions and do the right thing. I’m the first to admit my kids aren’t perfect and I know they are surrounded by peer pressure. On top of that, we have leaders and states who have decided that marijuana, although agreed by so many is a “gateway drug”, should be legalized. And now, I have to deal with an increasing number of parents who not only feel the same way, but are willing to give my kids an avenue to be delinquent? Are you serious?
So, here’s the deal, if you are reading this and you happen to be one of those parents that think you are doing my kid a favor by giving them a place to do “what all teens do” then pay attention to my tome. If you are reading this and agree with me, then maybe something I say will help you as we struggle to raise our kids to be great men and women in a struggling society
1) Being cool ended in high school, grow up and be courageous.
If I heard it once, I heard it hundreds of times that Mrs. Ellis was cool because she understood just how real teens live. The reality is, Mrs. Ellis had a significance issue in which she needed teenagers to give their approval of her, and why wouldn’t they? Heck, she was giving them an avenue to do what they weren’t allowed to do anywhere else. She needed to grow up, get counseling, and stop trying to be popular. We are adults, folks, and we are raising kids in a tough world; THEY DON’T NEED COOL, THEY NEED COURAGE! It takes courage to stand up for what is good, to do the right thing when all others won’t. Our kids need us to have the courage to be un-cool, to tell them no and to show them right way despite their protests.
2) You willing to accept liability?
Mrs. Ellis argued that since teens were going to do those things anyway, they might as well be safe at her house and not potentially on the streets. How noble… until a kid suffers from alcohol poisoning or the police catches you and carts everybody off to the station. Was Mrs. Ellis going to pay all the tickets? Was she going to help out of the costs of babies conceived under her watch? Was she willing to accept responsibility since she was watching the kids so closely? I have my doubts.
See, here’s the deal, my kids know if they are caught doing something illegal that will send them to the “clink”, they are going to have to stay there until the fine is paid in “time” because I’ve taught them to do right and they know better and I ain’t got the cash to fund their disobedience (yes, I just butchered the language for emphasis). So, if you are reading this and you are a “cool” enabling parent, pull out the checkbook, cause you can pay the fine.
3) Thanks for undermining authority; I’ll be sure to repay the favor.
By giving a safe haven for kids to break the law and disobey their parents, you, as a parent, just opened the door to all sorts of rebellion. You, by your act that just undercut my rules for my kid, have just communicated that it is okay to do wrong, that there won’t be consequences. You are presenting a world that isn’t real, and in the worst cases, you’re raising future criminals.
See, in my day, except for Mrs. Ellis, we got in trouble at all our friend’s houses for wrongdoing. Mrs. Park would have spanked me just as soon as my own mom would. That fact alone helped me learn real quick that I would have to be either brilliant enough to hide the crime or stupid enough to attempt it because there were lots of parents who would be able to not only find out, but discipline me in the process. But because of you cool parents, now I look like the lone jerk and kids can find the easy route to rebellion (your house). What are you teaching them about right and wrong? About the law? So, I’ll make a deal with you, you keep up the neglect, and I’ll make sure if I get picked on you or your kid’s jury, that I’ll be just as diligent to do my civic duty.
Am I angry? You guessed it, and sadly there will be people more upset by my tone than the acts I’ve just described. Look, I’m not naïve enough to believe my kids won’t make dumb decisions. They have at times rebelled against my authority. The point is, they knew it was wrong, knew I would be displeased, knew I was just trying to raise them right. You; however, have just tossed in the monkey wrench. Kids wonder now if there is a right and wrong, now they question if dear old Dad just has silly old-fashioned opinions rather than a courageous moral stance. Thank you, cool parent, for if you’ve read any history, you’d find that when a generation questions if anything is moral or immoral, then what comes next is the collapse of a society, and that, O’ enabler, ain’t so cool.











