Parenting

Wednesday, December 9, 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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From the Community…

Comments 31-38 of 38
  • Barbara's Avatar
    Posted by Barbara Mon Aug 25, 2008 5:08am PDT

    most parents ususally wont worry about other kids unless theirs are in the mix with theirs .blame usually comes easy toward other people because people or parents wont admit their faults when it comes to their kids.Parents rather be friends to kids these days than real parents with disaplan and letting their children be children,thats the easy way of parenting because their is usually no control.It all comes back in the long run when the kids grow up and the parents wonder what went wrong and point the finger elsewhere.

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  • Barbara's Avatar
    Posted by Barbara Mon Aug 25, 2008 5:29am PDT

    If parents raised their kids right they wouldnt have to worry about them wanting to be at a party.Teach your kids values and right and wrong.I have 3 kids and a life long road to go but allowing children to do something like party and your helping doesnt say much about a parent thats just a trashy part of living on a parents part but they would be to drunk with their kids to understand the logic with that.That household should party together in jail,and if drinking is that important sounds like a trip to an AA meeting would be better.

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  • Casey's Avatar
    Posted by Casey Tue Aug 26, 2008 9:40am PDT

    AS a mother of a three year old, I dread the upcoming teenage years. I agree that we as parents need to take control and raise our children and not allow our children control us. They don't have a clue as to what they are doing, they only think they do. I didn't appreciate my mother and her noseyness until I was in college and had been able to mature some on my own. And now that I am finally a mother myself, I can totally appreciate the energy and forethought that it took for her to raise me on her own and to keep me safe from all that is out there. I only hope I can do as well with my daughter as she did with me.

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  • PeggyPineapple's Avatar
    Posted by PeggyPineapple Wed Aug 27, 2008 2:53pm PDT

    I wouldn't tattle on the woman in the store. You don't know exactly what her conversation was about, in what context, and you don't know who she was talking to. While she was in public on her cell phone, that was basically a private conversation. When I hear people on their phones like that, I act like I do in elevators. Stare up at the ceiling, pretend I don't hear, and in one ear and out the other.

    If you were involved in this person's life, knew her son, or something like that, then maybe I'd offer a different opinion. I just think even thinking about tattling on a stranger based on idle cell phone chit chat is very extreme.

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  • TinySparklez's Avatar
    Posted by TinySparklez Wed Aug 27, 2008 5:36pm PDT

    I'm not sure what I would do in a situation like that. Tough call. I guess I would be honest with the parents. www.thefrenchcafe.blogspot.com

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  • Dana W's Avatar
    Posted by Dana W Wed Aug 27, 2008 6:04pm PDT

    I definitly say to tell, what is this world gone so crazy and polluted that parents can't depend on other parents to do the right thing!!! I have 4 children and my oldest is only 9 but i'm pretty damn strict and my children aren't and wont be allowed to go to any friends parties unless i'm there or there dad is there!!! Because of jerks like that it will stay that way until my kids are 18.

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  • kavekarst's Avatar
    Posted by kavekarst Sun Aug 31, 2008 3:51pm PDT

    I've never tattled. I've previously interviewed parents and had them strip-searched when I had reasonable cause. While tattling might seem

    like an issue to reader I got more satisfaction seeing bad parents held

    in custody until metroploitian officers transported them for booking.

    Their kids were all felons. I had reason to be suspicious. Play with matches long enough and you'll get burned, that my opinion.

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  • Straightfoward(lovely lady)'s Avatar
    Posted by Straightfoward(lovely lady) Sun Aug 31, 2008 7:26pm PDT

    I would never ever lie for my kids and they would never ask me to. They are good kids, cause i have raised them that way and mine know they can come to me for anything. I think that this woman should be very ashamed, and if she is gonna let them all get wasted or whatever, she better be ready for some serious things to happen. It is never good when one parent allows something, that another would not, and i am just thankful mine would not ask me to lie for them.....horrible times we have now being parents.

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