Information won’t tarnish teens
MAXINE COHEN
I was aghast when I saw the story on the front page of the Daily
Pilot. The Newport-Mesa Unified School District had decided to
prevent the display of the flier advertising Eric Schlosser’s lecture
in middle and high schools. They thought his work was too
controversial and that he might veer off topic to talk about the
subversive topics of sex and pot in his latest book.
My daughter, Barbara, and I went to the Newport Beach Public
Library to hear him speak. When I saw the flier, I knew she’d want to
go. She read “Fast Food Nation” right after it came out in 2002 and
was grossed out. She changed her eating habits on the spot. No more
fast food. No more soda.
It was an excellent lecture.
Schlosser is a professional investigative journalist, who does his
homework, and who has integrity and opinions grounded in facts he has
researched well. He is intelligent, educated, well spoken, thoughtful
and thought provoking.
To have the school district take steps to keep teenagers from
being tarnished and corrupted by Schlosser’s point of view is not
only unnecessary but overly restrictive and downright embarrassing to
this community. And to top it off, Jaime Castellanos, assistant
superintendent, and district spokeswoman Jane Garland admit that
they’ve not read “Reefer Madness”!
I think it’s disgraceful to censor and criticize what you haven’t
even read and then try to put a good face on it by saying that you
fear controversy.
Remember the 1st Amendment right to free speech? To my mind, that
also means that people, including teenagers, have the right of access
to information. One of the foundations of a free society is that
people of good faith can hold different opinions and agree to
disagree. That right extends to teenagers. Thoughts are not
behaviors. We all have the right to think what we want; we do not
have the right to behave in any way we want.
The school board’s decision is grounded in the fear that teenagers
don’t have the maturity to make good decisions for themselves. This
is true, but maturity doesn’t just fall out of the sky on your head;
you have to develop it. And the way to develop it is to be exposed to
different ideas in the safest ways possible and to have an open forum
at home so that teenagers can talk to their parents without the fear
of being criticized and told they’re wrong. What could be a more safe
environment than the Newport Beach Public Library?!
It is the developmental task of adolescents to want to know. To
experiment and broaden their horizons, to learn about and try new
things. They are driven mercilessly to do this, and as parents, try
as you may, you cannot stop them. So it’s best to allow them to learn
as much as they can in safe environments where they can then think
about what they’ve heard.
Most of all, the thing we need to inculcate in our teenagers is
the ability to think for themselves. To turn an issue over and over
in their minds, to see how it rings true in their hearts, and to come
to a judgment that is true for them. How many times have we as
parents said to our kids, “Do you always have to follow the group?
Can’t you think for yourself and say ‘no’?”
Teenagers learn to think when they have something to think about,
when they are in the middle of controversy, when it effects them and
how they want to live. If we don’t give our kids the tools to think,
and if we don’t expose them to topics worth thinking about, we will
not prepare them adequately for the complex and ambig- uous world in
which we live.
There are too many choices and too few guidelines in our culture
today. They will go forth, to college, to life, and not be grounded
in what their values and moral standards are because they have been
sheltered, kept ignorant, and they’ve been spoon fed their parents’
values.
Developmentally, adolescence is a time to define a self, to break
away from the parental mold and to experiment so that you can
discover what fits for you. If teenagers don’t do this at the
appropriate time developmentally, they will do it later, at an
inappropriate time when it disrupts the life that they’ve built so
far. But they will do it -- and with a vengeance.
So I say to parents, instead of overly censoring what your
teenagers are exposed to, go with them to something like a lecture
(at a reputable place like the library). Talk with them about what
they think about what they’ve heard. Do not tell them what you think
until you have heard them out fully. Make it a conversation rather
than making your point of view prevail. And most of all, do not tell
them they’re wrong. Remember, we are allowed to hold different
opinions, even if we’re only 16.
It’s my opinion that continu- ing to scarf down fast food and soda
will do more harm to teenage bodies than hearing Eric Schlosser’s
ideas would have done to their minds.
* MAXINE COHEN is a Corona
del Mar resident and marriage and family therapist practicing
in Newport Beach. She can be reached at maxinecohenadelphia.net or
at (949) 644-6435.
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