Parenting

Thursday, December 10, 2009

When is it OK to tattle on other parents?

A few months ago, I was in the bargain zone, going through the racks at my favorite department store when my attention was sharply diverted from the row of adorable denim swing coats in front of me. It takes a lot to get me to look up from a trendy coat on clearance, but there is something about a mom talking a little too loudly on a cell phone that can make even the most inveterate shopper snap to it.

The mom, one arm loaded with tube socks and men's khaki pants and the other flipping past swimsuit after swimsuit, had her phone wedged to her ear with her shoulder. Her attention seemed everywhere, but the conversation was clearly about prom. Or more specifically, post-prom activities at her house.

"Well, yes," she said so most of us in the women's department could hear her, "but our kids are good kids. They get good grades and don't get in trouble. They're not trouble-makers! I'm sure they will just want to come back and watch movies and crash on the floor after prom, which is so responsible of them! They're good kids!"

She sounded more like she was convincing herself than the other mom obviously on the line. She went on to explain which kids from her son's group would be there and how she wouldn't let them drive too late and how many sleeping bags and air mattresses they had in the house. She nodded and rolled her eyes and then smiled a courtesy smile as the other mom responded and I tried not to stare.

When the conversation was mercifully over, a large, loping kid carrying more pairs of khakis came over and did a "wassup?" head tilt at the cell phone mother, now completely overloaded. With clothes and irritation.

"MICHAEL!," she attempted to quietly yell, "you've got to tell me all the kids who are coming over and what they are telling their parents! You're going to get me in trouble with their parents! I don't want to keep covering for you."

I can't decide whether I hope she heard me gasp or not. But I did. And probably at the same decibel level as her previous conversation. I felt the same as I do when I pull up at a stoplight and see that the kid in the car next to me isn't strapped into a car seat or even a seatbelt. I was horrified.

She was lying? To the other parent? Then who was in charge? Was getting away with whatever was planned (and whatever was "planned") for after prom worth all that? And what in the world would you do if you were either parent in the situation?

Since it was prom and most of us probably have some bad prom behavior in our background, I can only assume the trifecta of drinking, drugging and doing are involved. And while that seemed logical to most of my friends when I was a senior, I see it a liiiiiitle more cautiously now that I'm a parent.

I thought of all this today when I read this article about when to rat out tweens or teens to their parents when you witness bad behavior. The question is interesting and the comments are certainly heated. But it makes me wonder, is it just as important to talk about when it's time to tattle on another parent?

I am not the parent of a tween or teen, but one day I will be. My son isn't going to prom anytime soon, but the dating and hair gel gods willing, one day he will be. And while I've certainly done things as a parent I swore I'd never do, like sit my kid in front of Elmo for an hour so I can be on a conference call in peace or let him wear a Cars t-shirt three days in a row, I hope I don't ever find myself acting out this gasp-able situation when my son's in his teens. I also pray that the parents of his friends know better too.

Am I being naive? Or was this prom cover-up tame or tattle-worthy?

What would you do if you found out another parent was enabling kids' post-prom partying? Would you call other parents and tell them what's going on? Or would you just make your own child sit this one out?

I guess it comes down to this: When is it OK for one parent to tattle on another?



[photo credit: Getty Images]
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Comments 11-20 of 38
  • Cursed Romantic's Avatar
    Posted by Cursed Romantic Wed Aug 20, 2008 8:10pm PDT

    Honestly if I was a parent of one of the other kids, I would definitely not be trusting that mom from the get go. I mean regardless of what bs she was trying to lay on me as a parent, if I ever remember any sports events or music events that she wasn't at or any parent teacher conferences, she never attended, I sure as hell wouldn't be trusting her. Because how in the world would she know her kid or anyone else's kid is good or not if she hasn't been there for her own? So I definitely wouldn't trust her with mine.

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  • RetroMom's Avatar
    Posted by RetroMom Thu Aug 21, 2008 7:21am PDT

    In today's age of suing someone for sneezing in your general direction, I would think a parent would think doubly hard about lying to other parents. Outside of this it is morally irreprehensible!

    My son is no where near old enough to go to prom, but I do know that when he reaches that age I will absolutely have to know everything about an activity like this. My Mom always called the other parents and knew what was going on; for the most part. As I got older she relaxed just a little because I had proven that I wasn't going to do something stupid or illegal.

    Can you imagine if someone were to get hurt or killed doing something stupid and this woman covered for them? Could she live with that for the rest of her life?

    In cases like this, I think it is a parent's duty to "tattle" to all other parents with kids involved. Telling the truth doesn't always make you popular, but it is almost always the right way to go.

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  • Disgruntled's Avatar
    Posted by Disgruntled Thu Aug 21, 2008 9:00am PDT

    I'd hate to be the killjoy but if it were me, I'd definitely want to know if my son was going somewhere were there would be drinking and other things going on. If I knew the parents of the some of the other kids I would probably call them and my son would definitely NOT be going to that house. (My son is 15 so prom time is not far away for him.) You've also got to consider that there is a possibilty of not only underage drinking but kids drinking and driving so I'd also be tempted, if I knew the name of the kid who was holding the after prom party, to call the school and give them a head's up on the whole situation. Yeah, their prom fun might be spoiled but at least no one will die from drunk driving or binge drinking. I've always been the safe parent, not the cool one so being the snitch wouldn't bother me much.

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  • Natasha Diamonds's Avatar
    Posted by Natasha Diamonds Thu Aug 21, 2008 9:10am PDT

    DO NOT LET YOUR KIDS SLEEP AT PEOPLE HOUSES YOU DO NOT KNOW!

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  • C's Avatar
    Posted by C Thu Aug 21, 2008 9:18am PDT

    bookfrog3 - like you, I had the "meanest mother in the world". And similarly, I thank her many many times now that I'm grown and understand that she was my mother, NOT my friend. By no means am I naive or sheltered, and there were some things that even the meanest mom in the world couldn't keep me from, but overall, I learned and made it to 20 relatively unscathed.

    Now, the question at hand: Would I call the other parents or just make my teenager sit this one out? I would call out the parent in question for enabling potentially illegal activity, I would call any of the friend's parents that I knew, and my teen would not be doing anything at this "parent"'s home, again.

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  • Ranee C's Avatar
    Posted by Ranee C Thu Aug 21, 2008 12:12pm PDT

    If it was my child going to the party (which, thankfully, he probably won't be doing for another ten or more years...) I would really want to know. Like everyone else, I think that if you know the parent you should 1) call them on it, 2) tell them you're going to let the other parents know.

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  • Mmgirl's Avatar
    Posted by Mmgirl Thu Aug 21, 2008 1:53pm PDT

    I remember my prom and I think they are all looking at trouble here. If I remeber correctly its illegal to supply alcohol to minors unless that minor is your child in your own home. (Yup its a clause) By supplying anything to the other children and misleading the other parents this woman stands to be charged with several crimes if the party gets raided. What are we teaching tomorrow's generation? These kids are going to be out in the work force soon. They need better parents. I would tell sorry but I would. Too many teenagers die on prom nights not to.

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  • LYNDSEY's Avatar
    Posted by LYNDSEY Thu Aug 21, 2008 3:18pm PDT

    As someone who left my teenage years behind not so long ago, I just want to say that personally I don't understand why some parents are so afraid to tell their kids no? Realistically your child is (most of the time) not going to hate you because you occasionally wouldn't buy them certain things or wouldn't let them go to every single party.

    Too many parents refuse to impose any sort of limits on their kids and consequently I've seen several people I went to school with fall into a spiral of narcissism when they didn't get what they wanted.

    Parents exist to guide their children. It is not necessary to be your childs best friend. Instead be their PARENT that is waht the really need you to be. Instill some common sense, and some responsibility in them and they will be much more appreciative down the road.

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  • Alexis's Avatar
    Posted by Alexis Fri Aug 22, 2008 7:05am PDT

    I THINK THAT YOU SHOULD DEFENTLY SAY SOMETHING. WHAT IF THAT WERE YOUR KID? IF SOMETHING HAPPENS TO THSE KIDS SHE WILL BE HELD ACOUNTABLE FOR THEIR ACTIONS. CHILDREN ARE SO PRECIOUS, IT WOULD A HORRIBLE THINGS TO HAVE TO LIVE WITH IF I LIED TO ANOTHER KIDS PARENTS AND THEY ENDED UP HURT OR WORSE. NOT TO MENTION WHAT THE OTHER PARNET MIGHT DO. THINK ABOUT YOU SON. I HAVE A 4MONTH OLD, EVEN THOUGH PROMS AND OTHER TEENLY EVENTS ARE YEARS DOWN THE ROAD, I INTEND TO LET EVERYONE KNOW I WILL PROTECT MY CHILD AT ALL COST AND I EXPECT THEM TO RESPECT ME AND MY WISHES.

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  • Dkhalid's Avatar
    Posted by Dkhalid Fri Aug 22, 2008 9:21am PDT

    hi hello dk ok tok to me rigth now

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