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May 04 2008

Sense of Entitlement Growing

Published by kmils under Uncategorized Edit This

   18888257_4663aa6387_m.jpg  The sense of entitlement is wide spread across this country and many teens today fall victim to it.

When well meaning parents don’t make their children work for things they want, the kids grow up believing that they deserve and have a right to those things simply by virtue of being alive. This notion destroys the work ethic and weakens us as a society.

     Many times I have gone into a store to purchase something only to be ignored by the young cashier because she is busy on the phone. Oh, she will ring up my sale and throw it into a bag but never say a word to me or even look at me. Doesn’t she know that without me and other customers she would have no job? Most likely she doesn’t care because she figures that she’d get along just fine without the job because mom and dad will still support her and give her money. After all isn’t that what parents are for?

     My own adult children think that we are horrible and selfish people because we ask that while they live with us they work and pay room and board. They have friends that come from well to do homes and don’t have to give any of their wages to help support them. By those standards we do look like terrible people.

     The problem is, I don’t think it matters if the parents have millions .

The teens still need to learn to be self sufficient and that will never happen if parents continue to give, give, and give.

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May 01 2008

Monster Father In Austria

Published by kmils under Uncategorized Edit This

    28_04_2008-11_20_324504a.jpg    I came across a very disturbing news story the other day. A man and his wife had several children. When one of his daughters turned 18 he lured her into the basement of their home, drugged and bound. He made her leave a letter saying that she ran away from home so that no one would question why she was no longer there. He raped her and used her as a sex slave, keeping her in the basement for 24 years. 24 years!

He sound proofed the basement and installed electronic locking doors of which only he could open. The basement had a small kitchen area and bathroom facilities but no windows.

     In all of those 24 years, his wife claims she had no idea what was going on in their house. This monster father sired 7 children with his own daughter. One of the baby’s had died and he quickly disposed of it in the homes incinerator. Three of those offspring never saw the light of day. The others he brought upstairs to raise saying that he adopted them. They range in age from 5 to 19 years old.

     They were discovered because the 19 year old girl became very ill and had to be taken to the hospital. She now lays in a coma and the monster is on trial.

     This kind of story is enough to make anyone angry enough to want revenge or at the very least some justice for these poor victims of this monster. However much I hate that man for what he’s done, I have even stronger feelings towards the wife. I understand she couldn’t hear because of the soundproofing. I understand that she couldn’t enter the basement because of his special locks. I can only imagine that she was curious and suspicious but was in some way controlled or threatened or even beaten by her animal husband. Even somewhere in her most wild imagination she must have questioned the connection between all this secrecy and her daughters disappearance, and if she did, while he was busy in his basement, she could have fled to get help, It was her daughter, she could have, should have, done something.

     I have heard of many cases where their was some form of abuse and the other parent claimed no knowledge. Sorry, that is just an outright lie. The truth is they didn’t want to know or handle it so they shut their eyes while their children suffered the consequence of their selfishness. That is unacceptable. Most parents would risk their lives for their children, die for their children. Don’t ever shut your eyes. If you suspect any abuse tell someone, do something about it. Save your child from a life of Hell on earth!

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Apr 29 2008

Parenting With Eyes Open

Published by kmils under Uncategorized Edit This

1214782650_4c8d8f33f5.jpgMany parents think they know their own children and this is probably true for the most part, but no parent can be sure until they can observe their child’s behavior when the child thinks there are no adults present.

Am I asking you to be sneaky, to spy on your kids? Yes. I wrestled with this question for a long time when my kids were little. Should we respect their privacy? Should we let them have secrets and hidden places? Or do we rifle through their rooms when they’re not home? Do we hide behind bushes and follow them when they go outside?

I’m not saying to become so paranoid that you do this on a daily basis, but periodically it’s a good idea.

You don’t want to be one of those parents that when their child gets into trouble say ” not my kid, he/she would never do that “. I have no respect for those kinds of people who parent with their eyes closed. Remember that many kids who become shooters in school or murderers have parents that although living in the same house say they had no clue what their child was into.

What finally convinced me that spying was the right thing to do was when Carrol O’Connor’s son killed himself having been heavily into drugs. Carrol had done some commercials urging parents to find out what their kids were into no matter how they had to do it. Seeing the pain in that man’s eyes convinced me. It’s the parents responsibility to know what’s going on with their kids and in their homes.

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Apr 25 2008

Parents vs. Peers

Published by kmils under Uncategorized Edit This

   130659051_e78c6596a1.jpg  I read an article many years ago that made a lot of sense to me. It said that when a child is young his/her parents are their whole lives, their role models but when the child is older their peers become their major influence.

Teens and even younger children very much want and need to fit in and be accepted by their peers. The best a parent can do is to make sure the child has a solid foundation at the start and has adopted the core value system that you have worked to instill in them. This is when your child may need extra attention and guidance from you so that if they do get in with the “wrong crowd” they won’t stray too far.

     Pushing your kid to avoid those troublemakers takes some tact and a gentle touch. If you push too hard it may only serve to drive your teen closer to what you want them to stay away from. Remember that children will continually test the boundaries that you set and the older they are the more room you need to give them. It’s like a fence around your kid. You will need to expand the area inside the fence, while making sure that your child knows that there is a fence there that you will not allow them to cross, and moreover they need to know that you are forever at that gate to watch. As most of us parents know it’s not an easy job and there are never any days off!

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Apr 24 2008

A Good Start

Published by kmils under Uncategorized Edit This

774682_04535ab837.jpg The most important thing a parent can do is to love their children and be solid and consistant. Let’s explore what each of these three things really mean.

Love your children - Most parents do love their children, but is that enough? No. Your children must know and feel down to the core that they are loved. Children can be very trying sometimes and it’s easy for a parent to become frustrated and angry at times. In those cases it’s difficult for a parent not to lash out and maybe do or say things in the heat of the moment. When that happens the parent gets their chance to vent and knows that they didn’t mean to take it out in that way. The problem is that the child takes the words or actions at face value, not understanding it’s just venting and that the parent really didn’t mean it. If you find yourself doing this stop immediately and talk to your child about it and reassure them. Learn to control yourself and you’ll be able to better control your child.

Be solid - What this means is that your child needs to know that you are there for them and as much as is possible, will be there for them. These days many parents are single parents and that presents two potential problems. One is the single parent may spend time away from their children due to having to work, the other is that parents get lonely too and often go out with friends or date. If you’re lucky you may be able to work the hours your child is in school, or work at home, if not you’ve got to make the time available be quality time with the children. That means don’t just be home with them, but do things with them, talk to them, make them feel that they are worth your time and they are important to you. I have strong feelings about dating and going out when you have kids and those are that an occasional date is OK, or once in while meeting friends over dinner and a drink is OK. If you’re dating one person try to include your children in a zoo trip or picnic. You’ve got to make those you date understand that you are a parent and you and your children come as a package, together.

It’s never alright to let your kids see you come home drunk, to go out to bars often, or to bring different dates home regularly. You decided to bring the kids into the world so deal with it.

Be consistent - Discipline only works when the rules are clear enough to the child so that they understand what’s expected of them. The same goes with the consequences of breaking the rules. Do not discipline out of anger, and make sure they know why they are being punished.

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Apr 23 2008

Teen Hunting Season Open In Chicago

Published by kmils under Uncategorized Edit This

     The forecast for last weekend in Chicago was warm and bloody. 37 people were shot, two were stabbed, and of them 7 died mostly as a result of gang violence.

Mayor Daley has made curfew 30 minutes earlier to get kids off the streets, but that has been a futile attempt to stop the violence. He has been urging parents to know where their children are and to help enforce his curfew. Parents and community leaders have taken to marching down the streets in protest to stop the killing of their children.

This is all well and fine but will stop nothing. First,638927302_e946f76f28.jpgwho do they think is killing these teens? I’ll tell you. Other teens! These other teens are their children too, and their classmates, and their neighbors. This makes you think that the problem can be solved if parents watched their teens better. That makes sense because everyone knows that teens follow their parents rules and even though they might be a gang-banger who has just shot and killed someone, they will certainly listen to their mother when she tells them they’re grounded or have to be home by 10. “Yes Mom, let me put my 45 away first”.

So we look to the parents to be better, to take control, to be responsible. That’s what they should be doing but here’s the problem. Our government has so tied up the hands of parents, that those who have out of control teens are left impotent. Once again picture it. The gang-banging, drunken, cracked out, murdering teen is getting into trouble and all his mom can do is ground him? take away his video game? tell him to behave?

Yes those things should have been done when he/she was very young, but they either weren’t or the discipline and rules weren’t strong enough to withstand the outside influences of gang life. It does no good just to play the blame game.

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Apr 21 2008

About Teen Trauma

Published by kmils under Uncategorized Edit This

th_mz0301_10029303278-4.jpgHello everyone! I would like to introduce this blog “Teen Trauma” and tell you a little bit about myself.

First, I would like you to know from the start that I am not a counselor, psychologist, or psychiatrist. I am a mother of two adult children, a boy and a girl, 21 and 23 years old.

I raised my kids in a changing neighborhood on the south-side of Chicago and I have seen my kids and their friends go through things no one should have to experience. Yet here we are at the end of that dark tunnel of the teenage years and we have not only survived but have become stronger for it.

I’m going to write about throw away kids, drugs, school violence and gangs among many other things. At the least you’ll know if your family is facing the same problems, that you are not alone, and at the most you may learn from my experiences and my mistakes.

I hope you will check in here often and that you find a friend in these articles and continue to have the patience and courage that it takes to see that your own teens make it to that proverbial light at the end of this teen tunnel.

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