By Lori Lite
Glee, which is watched largely by tweens and teens, featured underage drinking of alcohol at both an unsupervised party and school. The supposed alcohol awareness intention was cloaked with positive drinking messages ranging from teachers using alcohol for stress relief to the Glee Club kids being rewarded by the principal with a coupon for free ice cream. Not to be outdone by other shows that over sexualize our youth, the producers were sure to include footage of students doing a body shot. (A body shot is a shot of alcohol that is consumed from a person’s body, usually from erogenous zones such as the navel or the breasts.) I watched this show with my 14 year old and was prepared to discuss the real consequences of underage drinking like suspension and arrest, but was surprised when I realized I also had to explain how inappropriate body shots were. Many of us do not have the luxury of watching Internet, television, and movies with our children and adolescents. So I ask you, “Do you know what your children are watching?”
The following tips are real life and parenting tips that have been tried and tested with my own family. Don’t send me letters about the use of parental controls and other standard tips. These tips are what I call ‘in the trenches’ parenting tips.
Tips:
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Close your eyes, turn away, and alert an adult. Teach children what to do if they encounter inappropriate images on the Internet. The CACRC found that 66% of children exposed to online pornography are due to unwanted exposure. Pop-ups, spam email, clicking unintended search results or misspelled words are real threats in today’s technology driven world. Children are empowered when they know how to react to images that are frightening, unhealthy or inappropriate. Children can close their eyes immediately, turn away from the computer, and alert an adult. This is my stop, drop and roll of technology safety.
- Inappropriate and appropriate, healthy and unhealthy are words to know and use. The sooner your children understand these words, the easier it will be for you to discuss movies, TV, internet and issues of sex, violence, and relationships. Fighting the statistics requires diligent parenting and honest conversations. Kids can be taught what is inappropriate or not. Naked or partially nude photos are inappropriate. Know that innocent sleepovers are prime time for photo taking. (It usually starts as a joke and goes viral from there.) Talk about this with your children as soon as they have a cell phone. Know that the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy reports 22% of girls ages 13-19 have sent or posted nude or semi-nude pictures of themselves online.
- Rating systems are not parenting systems.Be aware of what your children are watching and seeing online, on television, and in the movie theaters. Parents may not want their kids to see a PG -13 movie like Easy A, which contains a scene that demonstrates pornographic style sex by minors. Stars like Ashton Kutcher and Katherine Heigle in the movie Killers, reference porn at least 6 times. While the mention of porn may not be immediately harmful, be aware that because your tween/teen heard this mentioned so nonchalantly their internal warning flag many not go up when a friend suggests they look at some porn. A study at the University of New Hampshire’s Crimes Against Children Research (CACRC) 42% of 10-17 year olds reported they had been exposed to online pornography.
- Create a code with your child, tween, or teen. Kids are often pressured by their peers to watch a movie or TV show they are uncomfortable with. It is difficult for them to get out of the situation without committing social suicide. Create a text code or verbal phrase tweens and teens can use to cue you in that they want you to call them and insist they come home. This allows them to let you know they need to come home, and save face with their friends at the same time. While we all hope our children can stand up for themselves it is wise to have a backup plan.
The American Pediatric Association says excessive TV viewing can contribute to poor grades, sleep problems, behavior problems, obesity, and risky behavior. Bombarding our youth with confusing messages on how to behave and what the social norm is causes stress and anxiety. A RAND Corporation study shows that teens are 2 times as likely to have sex or engage in sexual acts if they see similar sexual behavior in the media. The average child will watch 8,000 murders on TV before finishing elementary school. The media rewards and glamorizes bad behavior, inappropriate actions, and unhealthy choices. Parenting awareness and involvement is paramount to counteract traumatizing and damaging media messages. Children need a strong internal moral compass to navigate today’s media driven world. So I ask you with the utmost sincerity, “Do you know what your children are watching?”
Stress Free Kids founder Lori Lite is a freelance blogger, social media strategist, parenting expert, and successful entrepreneur. Her line of books and CDs are designed to help children, teens, and adults decrease stress, anxiety, and anger. Ms. Lite’s books, CDs, and lesson plans are considered a resource for parents, psychologists, therapists, child life specialists, teachers, doctors, and yoga instructors. Lori’s award winning books received national attention on Shark Tank and her sort after accessible tips have been featured in hundreds of publications to include: CNN Living, Real Simple Magazine, USA Today, Family Circle, Working Mother Magazine, and Web MD. For more information visit Stress Free Kids and for daily advice follow Lori on Twitter and Facebook.
Great advice. I am not there with my chidlren yet. We are just hearing swear words but a friend of my 7 yo’s was introduced to some seedy site and he was traumatised. Right now I monitor what he watches and what he plays on on screen. Scary stuff.
Yes, never too soon to prepare. Realizing it could happen is part of the battle. I seriously practiced the close your eyes, turn away tip….
Thank you so much for this post. I can’t tell you how many times we’ve had to make our 3 children bow out of birthday parties because the host parents decided a PG-13 movie was appropriate for children as young as 8 or 9. I’m a pretty understanding person, but I will never understand this insensitivity. If a parent chooses to expose her child to a mature movie, that’s one thing, but please don’t assume that others do. Making children feel excluded because their parents care enough to protect them from early exposure to sex and violence is the height of insensitivity.
My children were always a little embarrassed when I had to be the “bad guy” and say NO to parties, but never as much as I would have thought. I honestly think they were grateful to have parents who cared.
I so agree Janet. It is a valuable lesson for our children to see us stand up for our beliefs. I tell them that when they are parents they too will have to make decisions that keep their children safe…I know for a fact they do appreciate it….Boundaries show kids they are loved. I also have to add that 8 or 9 year olds watching PG-13 is insane. Exposure to violent, frightening, or sexual images can be traumatizing for children.
This was an interesting topic to read for me since my husband and I actually turned the show off to discuss the message that was being portrayed……….my daughter is too young to be watching tv with us still – we try hard not to expose her to too much media at all yet (she’s five) but I personally found the message to be very strong and not at all appropriate. We also discussed how mean and bullying Sue is and how this effects the entire school and could really give kids the impression that they are helpless to stop that kind of behaviour. Not the message I would want my child to be getting.
My 10 year old son with Aspergers (high-functioning Autism) squeezes his eyes shut, covers his ears, and starts yelling, “Bad show! Bad show!” until I turn off whatever is inappropriate. I know it probably sounds weird, but I am assured that he knows what is appropriate and what is not.
Thx for this great post. We (my tween son and I) were watching the same episode of Glee…I was shocked – and disappointed – at how the show chose to portray under-aged drinking. They made it seem very “okay” in some scenes and almost “approved of” by the teachers (actors) in the show. Made for a good discussion with my tween son. He’s 12 and even he nodded and said, “Yeah…they kind of made it seem cool, didn’t they?” Then he assured me that Glee usually has more positive messages for teens…. 🙂
I loved the idea you gave of the agreed code word or text with your child to help get them out of a situation without committing social suicide. Very good.
Thanks for the great advice. It is harder and harder to keep a tab on what they are exposed to. I have my aspie teen leave his itouch and electronics out when he goes to bed. I have my fingers crossed when he is outside of the house though.
I liked how you shared what research reveals. The texting idea to help your child when he/she is in uncomfortable situation, is brilliant. Thanks, Lori.
Jean