Wake up and smell the champagne
- Share via
FLO MARTIN
Steve Bolton’s Aug. 15 cartoon of an elderly woman sipping her
morning coffee while scanning the headlines inspired a loud guffaw in
our household. My first thought was: “Lady, wake up and smell your
coffee! Maybe in your day, accepted behavior for 19-year old boys included staying away from alcohol, drugs and teen girls. Nowadays,
only in your dreams.”
As a parent of teenage kids 20 years ago, I had the same
delusions. Not my kids, no way. They don’t do drugs. They don’t
drink. They are being raised in a good home where alcohol and drugs
are not a factor. Boy, was I naive! That proverbial wool really
blocked my vision to the point where I was blind to the truth.
The truth? Even as pre-teens, our kids could get a hold of beer.
Kids would hide in the bushes on a local grammar school campus and
hit the bottle. Ah, the delights of forbidden fruit. And the scene
didn’t change much through high school. Dad knew the score and warned
the kids of a fate worse than death. Mom, on the other hand, was
totally clueless!
Once in college, “entertainment drugs” hit the scene. Going to
parties, getting drunk and getting stoned was a regular thing on
campus. One of the kids even quit a fraternity at UCLA because he
couldn’t stand the overwhelming party atmosphere there.
As a teacher of teenagers from the late 1970s to 2003, I witnessed
drunken and drugged behavior in my classroom. One such incident
involved a young sophomore boy who kind of rolled into class, slid
into his seat near the front of the room, lay his head down and
promptly passed out. This was the last class of the day, so I figured
he needed some sleep and just left him alone. At the end of class, he
was still out, so I motioned to the rest of the students to leave
quietly. My evil plan worked. He awoke about 30 minutes later, jumped
out of his seat yelling, “I’ve missed football practice! Boy, is
coach ever going to be mad!” Oh, well, too bad, so sad.
Another of my students missed class right after lunch. At the end
of the day, a vice principal entered my classroom and informed me
that the girl was found completely drunk after lunch and had to be
“poured” into a family car and taken home.
On many, many occasions, students strolled into my classroom
feeling very mellow. And, believe me, my nose isn’t extra-long for
nothing. This nose really works! It has a life all its own. Wafts of
marijuana didn’t go unnoticed. I was on the phone to the vice
principal so fast, the kids didn’t know what hit them. One kid
apparently was a repeat offender and ended up in a military school
somewhere out of state.
These types of events often prompted me to use the “teachable
moment” and just sit down with the class and talk about drug and
alcohol abuse. Often, I would put out the question, “How would you
feel if I came to class drunk or stoned?” and then encourage
brainstorming and discussion. Regularly, the kids would suggest a
feeling of disappointment, of feeling cheated or angry. Eventually,
they would understand that adults feel the same way -- disappointed,
cheated, angry -- when young people take advantage of their parents’
trust.
At both of the high schools where I spent my 26-year career, some
parents openly condoned teen drinking. Some parents rented limousines
for the kids for a prom and provided booze to drink. Another bunch of
parents actually rented a full-sized bus and helped the kids load
huge picnic coolers full of liquor onto the bus. Thank goodness, a
vice principal insisted on climbing onto the bus before the kids left
the school parking lot and literally uncovered the contraband
bottles. Many of my chaperone assignments were school dances, which
included “girls’ bathroom” duty. I can’t tell you how many girls I’ve
seen drunk and vomiting into the toilets. Sick, sick, sick and way
too young.
These kids were also way too young in other ways. Some of my
students confided to me of rape and pregnancies. Current statistics
show that the U.S. has the highest rate of teen pregnancies of all
industrialized nations. In 2000, California ranked seventh nationally
in teen pregnancy rate, 23rd in teen birthrate and fifth in teen
abortion rate. My guess is that if we considered only Southern
California, the statistics would be even worse. You can see the
statistics at https://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/
state_pregnancy_trends.pdf.
We parents need to wake up to the reality that our kids need us.
The three young men accused of gang rape are just the tip of the
iceberg. Our teenyboppers are having fun in the sun (just check out
the beach after hours), in the surf, on the beach and in our homes.
They are “hooking up” to “friends with benefits.” We need to put down
the morning paper, set the coffee cup back into its saucer, get rid
of that “ho-hum” look on our face and find Junior (Miss).
* FLO MARTIN is a Costa Mesa resident and faculty member at Cal
State Fullerton.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.