T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
856.1 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Thu Oct 05 1989 10:56 | 23 |
| Ken,
Kids often do not pick up on what is meant by a stranger, i.e. if
the person you are with knows the person, then it is not a stranger,
or another kid near them in age such as this case, couldn't be
dangerous.
I recall when I saw my son (then about 16) talking to two very
unsavory looking characters who were in a car out in front of
our house. I went out and spoke to them and they said they
were looking for houses for sale. (I called the cops and it
turned out they were drug dealers looking for isolated or
abandoned buildings). Yet we often have lost people stopping
on our rural road and asking directions. It was just these
two gave me an immediate case of the creeps.
We talked after wards about trusting ones hunches, and that if
someone made the kids at all nervous to clear out fast.
Have you considered also entering this note in the parenting notes
file (terza::parenting)?
Bonnie
|
856.2 | Scarey thought... | SUPER::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Thu Oct 05 1989 15:46 | 25 |
|
I gave up on the "stranger" routine...
The rule is...
"You don't ride with ANYONE unless Mom or Dad said you could.
Period. End_discussion. Under any circumstances. Walking will most
likely not kill you....
It has lead to one [I thought amusing] occurance when Eric refused a
ride from the local minister. The Minister was appalled....I was
pleased. Eric got rewarded...after all, The Reverencd was not on my
list of folks that its OK to ride with.
...I'ld-a been scared to death too....but STRANGER is such an
ambivilent term...I just trashed it all together. *I* had trouble
defining it sifficiently without relying on my ADULT judgement [as
Bonnie was saying...the "creeps"]...so I felt I could not expect Eric
to successfully do so.
FWIW...
hugs
Mel
|
856.3 | The right words work! | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | Letting Go: The Ultimate Adventure | Thu Oct 05 1989 21:40 | 25 |
| re - .2
My dad did the same thing to me, after I geve him the same type of
scare as .0's daughter when I was 10. I was walking home from the
corner store and this man in uniform offered to give me ride home.
He asked me my name and I told him. He told me his name and that he
knew my father so I accepted the ride. I was *very* lucky to get
home without incident. My dad had *never* heard of the guy. From
then on, I was forbidden under penalty of death or worse (no TV) to
accept rides from anyone unless my parents gave explicit permission
before hand.
This definitely impressed me deeply! When I was in my last year of
high school, I was walking home with a friend when a pick-up truck
stopped and the driver yelled "C'mon! We'll give you a ride!" My
friend started to get in the truck bed. I was appalled and told her,
loud enough so the driver and his friends could hear, "We can't accept
a ride from a stranger!"
She gave me an odd look and said "Get in! He's my brother!"
But I still don't ride with strangers.
Carol
|
856.4 | My $.02 | PMROAD::JEFFRIES | | Fri Oct 06 1989 11:37 | 23 |
|
When my children were young, I made rules with for them that weren't
complicated. Never get into anyones car, never open the door to
any one. My kids were alone a lot because I was a single parent,
but I lived in a three decker in the city and my land lady was always
home and kept an eye out for them. One day my mother came to visit
before I got home and my daughter wouldn't let her in. The rule
was "don't let any one in no matter who they said they were, even
if they said it's mom. " My mother understood the rule and went
and sat in the car and waited for me. My kids were school aged.
what today they call "latch key kids". This was in the days before
all the publicity about child abduction and abuse.
When making rules for kids, keep them simple and don't make a lot
of exceptions. Most parents make rules and then (usually for there
own convience) start making exceptions. It's right down to the simple
things like "no sweets within a specified time before dinner" this
only works if you are consistent with "no", the first time you give
the kid a cookie because you are tired and you can't stand the
whinning, you have made an exception, the kid has changed the rule
and now is in control. This is one reason why kids sometimes have
a problem following rules.
|
856.5 | Tell 'em what could happen.... | TRNPRC::SIGEL | Welcome to Your Life | Mon Oct 16 1989 09:52 | 5 |
| I know when I was a kid, my mom and dad warned us about taking rides
from strangers, because they told us what the CONSEQUENSES could be if
we did. Yep, it scared the living daylights out of my brother and I.
Lynne
|
856.6 | It isn't always strangers | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | When do I wake up??? | Sun Apr 29 1990 02:48 | 11 |
| It has been statistically shown that most child molesters are known to
the child when the molester first approaches a child for sex.
While the warnings about taking rides, etc., from strangers are still
good advise, children should also be told to tell a trusted adult
(a parent in most cases. If a parent is not available/is the
instigator, a teacher or police officer.) of various forms of
uncomfortable touching. Friends and neighbors can harm or kill a child
Beth
|