(mum) Nah-you dont get piss*d in the pub.
(8/9 yr old child) Why not?
(mum) cos you gotta go to the nightclub after,gotta pace yerself.
Sign of our times maybe?

leenewham wrote:Don't you find it rather sad that someone would say that to a young child Mike?
I do.
Are you saying that it's ok or a great example of parenting?
I don't.
It's interesting how the word 'snob' has changed. Is this snobbery:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JSahEDR ... re=related
Do you mean me, Annie?Annie wrote:
I take Mikes posts with a pinch of salt,I assume he has a dry sense of humour.
but the other one! beggers belief!
rshdunlop wrote:Do you mean me, Annie?Annie wrote:
I take Mikes posts with a pinch of salt,I assume he has a dry sense of humour.
but the other one! beggers belief!
Okay, let me clarify my position. I imagine that child is growing up in a house where s/he frequently see alcohol consumed, maybe to excess. Is that an ideal situation? Of course not. It's very sad. But it's probably the reality for a lot of children.
I've heard a lot recently about 'pre-loading', where people drink vast quantities of cheap supermarket-bought alcohol before they go out for the night. It's why so many young and not-so-young people are dangerously drunk on our streets at the weekend. By dangerously I mean that they are making themselves very vulnerable. Given how common this has become, I would much rather this mother told her child it was good practice to pace oneself when drinking alcohol, because actually it is.
Would it be bad advice to give to older teens of legal drinking age? I don't think so.
What's sad about the situation you observed was that a child that young is clearly being exposed to experiences we would all rather children not know about. But, given the probably reality of that child's home life, in context, and all things considered, there is much worse advice his / her mother could give.
You were not there.rshdunlop wrote:Do you mean me, Annie?Annie wrote:
I take Mikes posts with a pinch of salt,I assume he has a dry sense of humour.
but the other one! beggers belief!
Okay, let me clarify my position. I imagine that child is growing up in a house where s/he frequently see alcohol consumed, maybe to excess. Is that an ideal situation? Of course not. It's very sad. But it's probably the reality for a lot of children.
I've heard a lot recently about 'pre-loading', where people drink vast quantities of cheap supermarket-bought alcohol before they go out for the night. It's why so many young and not-so-young people are dangerously drunk on our streets at the weekend. By dangerously I mean that they are making themselves very vulnerable. Given how common this has become, I would much rather this mother told her child it was good practice to pace oneself when drinking alcohol, because actually it is.
Would it be bad advice to give to older teens of legal drinking age? I don't think so.
What's sad about the situation you observed was that a child that young is clearly being exposed to experiences we would all rather children not know about. But, given the probably reality of that child's home life, in context, and all things considered, there is much worse advice his / her mother could give.
What is shocking Mike is the lack of concern over the child.Some of the people around Sydenham are low evolved, are ill-educated and they are having children, shocking isn't it.
mikecg
jamescbrown wrote:rshdunlop wrote:I didn't say I found the conversation acceptable. I said it was sad and inappropriate. I will not let that misinterpretation of my last post stand unchallenged.
What I did say was that in and of itself, in general, it wasn't bad advice given the drinking culture we have and in which this child is growing up. Good advice to give the child when s/he is eighteen, not eight. Which is what I meant, but didn't make clear, in my first post.
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