I'm not a parent, but I'll throw in my perspective as a "kid" so to speak (23).
My issue is though, I've had other parents, and more or less these are the parents of acquaintances. The friend of a girl I'm crushing on. A guy in high school who I know but don't hang out with regularly. I've been to parties hosted by these "random" people for lack of a better term, and their parents are out partying with the kids, granted, they don't really know all of them, but since their kid is having a party at their house, they might as well get lit/loaded too. They'll ask their kids to find them weed, and just in general "hang out" at the whole party drinking and smoking with their kid and "the party."
These type of parents, the first few times I thought it was the coolest thing ever. Hey look how cool these parents are, they're just getting loaded with us! But as I got a bit older, really once I hit like 18, 19, these type of parents rubbed me the wrong way....what are you doing? You shouldn't be supplying your kids with alcohol/weed or asking them to get you drugs....it was actually kind of sad how immature these "adults" acted.
It's a fine line, I really enjoy my one friends parents who let us drink/smoke at their house....they just always gave us our space and never tried to "fit in" with the kids by smoking or drinking....they were just doing the same thing on their own time inside! So I implore all you parents, don't smoke with your kids unless its 1v1 or its with a kids childhood friend, you may feel like the "cool" mom or dad at the party, but inside all your kids friends are thinking, "What's up with this guy?"
HWS --- Thank you for putting into words what I didn't mention but should have. It wasn't until my kids were adults that I got comfortable with a reduction in my role as 'their strict but loving father' and combined it with a new role as 'their friend'. I was never the father who was willing to sacrifice respect for being liked. This may sound harsh but I believed when they were much younger, that it was important to earn their respect more than being liked because its hard to love someone you don't respect. Some of us are old enough to remember Homey The Clown ... at a school function my daughter kiddingly said 'Homey Don't Play That' and a adult jokingly said 'Why Not'...without missing a beat she said 'Because my father said he can't'. It wasn't all stick and no carrot but my wife and I were consistent even though it hurt at times to hear the inevitable 'I hate you'.
I have a 15 year old girl right now that doesn't have much use for me . . . She knows I'm disabled, on chemo, and vape. She is not interested. The 22 year old I have is obviously older and a different story. Before she got serious in nursing school she was consuming with friends. I helped answer some questions for her but thats about it.I can't wait someday to have my own teenager who will inevitably hate me lol.
you may feel like the "cool" mom or dad at the party, but inside all your kids friends are thinking, "What's up with this guy?"
And here was a good kid who grew up with it all around. He said he didn't think it mattered what we did as long as it brought us closer as a family. That really stuck with me in all kinds of decisions, not just this one. In the end, just try to handle any situation in a way that makes the family closer and not more divided.
You are correct, delayed initiation is the key, not mindless prohibition. However there are a lot of other substances that will hinder your development as well like alcohol for instance. Its easy to look at the unintended consequences of cannabis use by youth but for some reason people don't seem to see the unintended consequences of prohibition to weigh against accordingly.One thing that's not being discussed here is the potential damage that weed can cause on a developing brain. Recent MRI and other imaging studies have shown that it can have lifelong negative affects on young, developing brains and that ranges all the up to 25 years old. Also, these affects, lower IQ and reduced white matter, apparently doesn't occur when usage begins as an adult. Just some food for thought here.
Reading some of the responses to this thread i get the impression that some actually think that using cannabis in front of kids is inherently wrong
Whether we like it or not, our default parenting styles come straight from our parents.
No, I don't think using cannabis in front of your OWN kids is inherently wrong. I think that's a judgement call that parents must make based on the age and maturity of their kids. However, I do think it would be inherently wrong to use cannabis in front of other people's kids without their prior approval. I don't feel you have a right to do that.Reading some of the responses to this thread i get the impression that some actually think that using cannabis in front of kids is inherently wrong
Do you think it's wrong to use coffee in front of kids too? It's psychoactive too
Sadly this is why I have chosen not to reproduce. I am still recovering from the psychological scars of my upbringing, and have no inclination to pass on the kind of dysfunction that I was raised with.Whether we like it or not, our default parenting styles come straight from our parents.
No, I don't think using cannabis in front of your OWN kids is inherently wrong. I think that's a judgement call that parents must make based on the age and maturity of their kids. However, I do think it would be inherently wrong to use cannabis in front of other people's kids without their prior approval. I don't feel you have a right to do that.
Although I see your point on the coffee analogy, I think it's a flawed analogy. Coffee is a mild stimulant and yes it is also mildly addictive. Coffee has not been shown to effect ones IQ or brain development in adolescents while cannabis has been linked to those effects. So, yeah, I have no problem if my kids drink coffee and I certainly use coffee in front of them as well as their friends.
I think the best analogy for your particular argument would be alcohol. I think most of us on this thread would agree that alcohol is a much more dangerous substance as compared to cannabis. Yet, people drink alcohol in front of their kids and their kid's friends all the time. It is simply more socially acceptable. Even very conservative parents would usually not care if you drank a couple glasses of wine or cocktails in the presence of their children. However, I doubt very much they'd feel the same way about cannabis. Now that's a valid example of the hypocracy of it all!