I saw this article online this week, entitled “5 Things
our Parents Did That Would Get Them Arrested Today.” It was an interesting read, albeit a bit
misleading. Some of their examples were
one-offs, or something that rarely happens now, which makes it technically
possible. Possible enough for the
click-bait headline, anyway.
Regardless, I thought I’d give it a lookover and see how
many times MY folks would have hit the pokey.
1. Taking Naked
Kiddie Photos. The article reports
of one couple in Arizona who in 2008, had the photo shop call the cops on their
kiddie bath-time pics. The judge
immediately dismissed the case. This is
one of those one-offs. I just wonder who
in the hell was still taking film photos in for developing in 2008. That’s the crime here.
The Verdict: Guilty. Just like every other parent in the 60s. Everyone took pictures of their kids running
around bare-assed, or sitting in the tub.
(In my case, I was usually surrounded by toys called “Soakies,” which
were cartoon and super-hero shaped bottles of bubblebath stuff.)
Judging from Facebook, it’s still going on now though. Cassie, you haven’t heard from the
cops yet, have you?
2. Leaving Kids Home
Alone. They mention that several
states have laws stating you can’t leave your child home alone until the age of
12. (14 in Illinois.)
The Verdict: Not
Guilty. None of us were ever left
home alone until I was in junior high.
In 7th grade, I was in a split shift school, and my shift
didn’t start until noon. Mom would go
off to work and I would get myself ready for and then off to school. No biggie.
I would also babysit for my younger brother and sister occasionally when
my parents needed a break from our bullshit went out to eat.
However, we certainly weren’t supervised once we were out of
the house. We pretty much had full run
of the neighborhood during the summer or after school. And we had watches and knew enough to get
home for dinner. There was no such thing
as a “play date.” I would die of
embarrassment before I’d let my mom arrange for me to play with some other kid.
3. Smoking in the
Car. Six states have laws on the books preventing smoking in cars with
young children, due to their still-developing lungs. Apparently it’s perfectly fine to kill your
older children.
The Verdict: Guilty. I wish they had those law way back when,
because that’s one I could have used.
Mom used to smoke in the car, and I hated it. Gave me a dizzy headache every time. It was bad enough being cooped up in the back
seat with my siblings for long car trips, where all we had to do was torment
each other and try not to get swatted from the front seat.
This one went hand in hand with:
4. Seat belts. Laws mandating seat belt use are relatively
modern, but they are prevalent. Plus
there’s the car seat thing, which mandates the use of car seats until the kid
is practically a teenager.
The Verdict: Not
Guilty. Technically, I can remember
a time in the early 60s when our car didn’t have seat belts in the back
seat. But by the mid-60s, when we got a
new car that had them, they became mandatory for us. Of course, we hated them. Nothing like being strapped down for that 8-hour car trip, with nothing to do but
torment each other and try not to die from the cigarette smoke.
Sometimes we’d try to silently release the latch for a
little breathing room, but Dad always heard the click. It was like trying to get into the candy dish
or cookie jar, only you were within swatting range.
5. Weight gain. Another one-off. Three years ago, a boy in Cleveland was taken
from his home because he was 200 lbs by third grade, and health officials said
his mother didn’t know how to make him lose weight. I don’t think this is a widespread thing… the
child removal, not having big fat kids. That seems to be an epidemic.
The Verdict: Not
Guilty. We certainly never wanted
for food… sometimes it wasn’t the food we wanted…
cough-PopTarts-cough, but we had plenty to eat.
But between the well-balanced diets, only having 4 channels on TV, and
the non-existence of video games, we ran off our extra calories by playing
outside. None of us ever had weight
problems as kids.
So that’s the five the article featured, but I’d add one
more:
6. Providing
alcohol to your kids AND all the neighbor kids.
The Verdict: Guilty. Once we moved out to the outskirts of Toledo
and my friends and I commandeered The Barn, the drinking lamp was
lit. When we had parties, everyone in
the neighborhood attended. For the small
gatherings, my buddies and I bought our own beer, but for the big events, like
New Year’s Eve parties, my parents would get a keg and plenty of wine. My friends and I were mostly over 18, (which
was all you had to be at the time), but my brother and sister, and their friends
and all the neighborhood kids were vastly under-age.
And that was just fine.
We had parties where my parents chaperoned
(when not cutting it up on the dance floor) and we collected keys at the
door. Drinking never cause a single
accident or incident at our parties.
Granted, a couple of relationships
came to a messy end, but hey, that’s life.
So in summation, we have a split decision… 3 guiltys, 3 not
guiltys. Hung jury, case dismissed. We seemed to have survived the things that would
have gotten the folks in Dutch nowadays, and the others didn’t apply.
Maybe it’s time to take off the bubble wrap and let kids go
back to being kids.
6 comments:
"Under age blahblahblah..." gimme a parental break. Talk about "INVOLVEMENT! WE WERE THERE!!
You absolutely were! And your son is raising his kids the same way... only with less beer.
We rode around in the back of my dad's Ford Econoline van. There were 2 seats, for long trips he would throw in a cooler between the seats and a bean bag. Other than that we had our choice of the floor, the rear wheel well or one of the tool boxes that were sliding around with us!
We had a station wagon for a while, and sometimes we'd get to lounge in the back, but not for long trips... too much luggage. Of course there were friends pickup trucks we rode around in, once while trying to hold an upright piano steady.
My mom ALWAYS used to talk about the naked photos she had to show to our future husbands when my sister and I were kids. What do parents possibly threaten their children with nowadays?
Embarrassing Facebook statuses?
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