Trial talk: tricky and testing
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WENDY LEECE
We tend to be more upset by the news than the kids are. It depends on
the children’s age. They may not even ask. We can give very simple
answers. The news is not very good for kids to watch. Maybe parents
should watch the 10 p.m. news and not the 5 p.m. news or use the
remote to mute inappropriate parts.
It’s sad we have to anticipate our children may be molested in
spite of our best efforts to protect them. We have to prepare them
early, in a loving way, that a bad person may try to touch them. We
have to keep an ongoing dialogue as they grow up. Role playing, even
with teens, about possible scenarios makes them think about what they
might do in a certain situation.
Predators use pornography to entice children, so kids need to
learn that reading pornography is not right and is harmful. The
Internet exposes kids to pornography and online predators, so
constant monitoring of their online time is now a duty.
The Megan’s Law website shows pictures of convicted of sex
criminals who may live nearby. The Parents Television Network, Enough
is Enough and Concerned Women for America are organizations which
help parents stay alert to the dangers.
We need to make sure authority figures do not take advantage of
kids or teach ideas which says sex with kids is all right. It’s
shocking that there is an organization that promotes this idea.
The Greg Haidl trial scenario makes us ask, “Why didn’t one of the
boys say, ‘This is wrong, we need to stop’?” These kids did not have
a moral compass nor the courage or conscience to stop the alleged
rape. They are growing up in a culture where there is no moral
censure on sexual practices once regarded as perverse. The adults in
their lives, including any sex education teachers, failed to teach
them virtue and respect for women. Their behavior, and Michael
Jackson’s as well, is the end result of moral mayhem due to
relativism. We have sown the wind and are reaping the whirlwind.
* WENDY LEECE is a parent who lives in Costa Mesa and is a former
Newport-Mesa school board member.
The response to that question varies greatly depending on the ages
of the kids and parents’ individual preferences. For very young kids,
it’s probably best to try to insulate them to some degree from all
the bad news and bad behavior. They’ll get more than their fill
throughout life, so postponing it a bit by changing the channel or
the subject seems to help preserve the blissful ignorance of
childhood. Most young kids really don’t pay close attention to that
type of news, simply because it’s uninteresting to them. But if asked
directly, it’s usually best for parents to answer honestly and use
the opportunity to teach a lesson.
It’s a tougher call for older kids, in the 9- to 14-year-old
range, for example. They may pay closer attention and ask difficult
questions. Parental preferences vary, but I always believed in
providing a complete answer when asked a serious question by the
kids. The answer includes an explanation of why the stupidity or
horror or criminality in question is wrong and some words of wisdom
about how to avoid it. It’s still useful at this stage to move on
after answering. Most 9- to 14-year-olds still have pretty short
attention spans, and they still find this type of news mostly
uninteresting.
For older teens, honest discussion is the only appropriate
response. Regardless of the eventual outcomes of their trials, both
Haidl and Michael Jackson are unquestionably guilty of being idiotic
in the basic handling of their fortunate lives. That’s usually good
fodder for some life-lesson discussions, though Haidl’s dragging of
standards to new lows can sometimes be a problem. Even the dumbest of
teen tricks can now be defended with, “I may be pretty crazy, but at
least I’m not as bad as Haidl.”
* MARK GLEASON is a parent who lives in Costa Mesa.
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