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| quote: | Originally posted by psiico111
Correction, that would be uncle of the year.
But seriously, you seem to have missed the part about her already doing drugs and drinking and skipping school, sex wasn't mentioned but I know that was going on too, as I said, I was once where she is. Everyone else was telling her not to do those things at all and she shut them all out, if anything, she got her back up about it and got worse with the way it was told to me. All I did was buck the trend and try to communicate with her in a way she would understand. Was it the best thing to do? No, but it did work. It was a better thing to do then what everyone else was doing. She's in school everyday now and from what I understand doing well plus her mother says she doesn't come home on Friday and Saturday nights out of it like she used to. This happened 2 years ago and she's still doing well. I may be a crappy uncle in your opinion but I did have an influence over her that put her in a better place then she'd have been in had she continued down the same road. I didn't tell her how to do it, she already knew, I told her how to be responsible about it. She listened to me where she wasn't listening to anyone else except her friends who I'm sure if they were anything like my friends at the time were constantly preaching to do things to excess.
If you haven't lived in a small town in the middle of no where it'd be difficult I think for you to understand how mind numbingly boring it can be to be a teen. There's nothing to do but drink, get high and screw. Add peer pressure to the boredom and it's no wonder kids in Nfld are getting pregnant at 14 and kids in NWT are hooked on sniffing glue or gasoline and drinking Lysol. And no before you freak out, I didn't say it was okay to sniff glue or drink Lysol, but kids up there do it. I knew 11 year olds who had been chewing tobacco from the age of 7 when I lived there. In Nfld we stuck to the booze and hashish, NWT kids were harsh in their habits. |
I was raised in Regina till I was 16, I know all about living in a small town.
If she's doing better, that's great.
What I’m suggesting is it wasn’t due to your 'advice' that her life improved. It sounds really mean, but I stand by it - you should never encourage a young child/teen to do drugs and drink, even if they are active and you’re trying to tell him or her to do it in moderation. It’s still the wrong message at end of the day, because you’re supporting the habbit, instead of opposing it, like you should.
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