Originally posted by Gravekeeper
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MOre "Free Range" parents in trouble
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"Oh wow, I can't believe how stupid I used to be and you still are."
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Originally posted by Lindsay B. View PostSo, at least to some extent, I am willing to defer to the judgment of individual parents. They know their children, and sometimes they might have legitimate reasons for exercising greater caution with a particular child.
I have three kids. They are currently 15, 13 and 12, though within a few days to a few weeks of their birthdays.
My older two kids have public transit passes and roam around San Diego county pretty much at will. They tell me where they're going and who they'll be with. They tell me if plans change, and are reliably home at their curfew time. They also carry iPhones and are not allowed to turn off the Find my iPhone app so I can geo-track their happy butts. Now, when I say roam around the county, I mean the southern half of the county. I live in one of the closer suburbs of the city itself almost due east. They jump on the trolley and go downtown to their favorite library. Come summer they'll take a combination of trolley and buses to get to the beach. There's parks and malls and movie theaters and whatnot that they enjoy going to. It's all good.
My youngest does not get the same freedom, even though he's only 11 months younger than his next-older brother, and said brother has had this kind of freedom for almost a year. My youngest is vastly more immature than his older brothers and has physical disabilities that limit his ability to navigate his way around town safely. He lacks the street sense of his older brothers. It's not safe for him to have the same freedom that his older brothers have.
I am quite clearly a free-range parent, but, as any decent parent does, I base my decisions on the individual child. My older two are allowed to travel 20-30 miles from home, but my youngest can't leave the block. Different rules for different kids due to their own needs, personalities and maturity levels.
On another topic, for those who are saying there's a difference between urban and small town environments, I call hogwash. There's a different set of issues, but neither set of issues is better or worse than the other. They're just different. While traffic and crowds might be a problem in larger cities, transportation and cell phone coverage* is an issue in smaller towns.
*When I was a kid the issue was the availability of pay phones in small towns vs. large cities. The issue at hand here is really availability of a convenient means to call home in case of an emergency.
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Originally posted by mathnerd View PostWhile traffic and crowds might be a problem in larger cities, transportation and cell phone coverage* is an issue in smaller towns.
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That's exactly my point. It's not that dangers don't exist, but that the dangers that do exist are different. Being a city girl*, I'll take my chances with crowds and pickpockets over wild animals and hunters any day.
*I grew up in Miami during the days of the Cocaine Cowboys. I was allowed to roam quite a bit, though not nearly as far as my boys can today. That, however, has everything to do with public transportation. Miami's public transportation, which is still pathetic today, was even more pathetic back then. I could really only go as far as my bike would take me, where my boys can hop on a trolley and get anywhere in the county. Heck, if they planned it right and had a little bit of extra money, they could get themselves all the way to Los Angeles using only buses and trains. I wouldn't let them go quite that far, but they could do it if they needed to.
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Originally posted by TheHuckster View PostFourteen before you're allowed to be home alone in Illinois? Some 14 year olds are sophomores in high school. Are you kidding me?! The McCallisters would have been imprisoned along with the wet bandits if the movie were accurate. :P
I know if I was home alone--long before 14 BTW--I'd simply refuse to answer the door. Both of my parents worked when I was in school, and I had no choice but to be home alone. Also, I had a paper route when I was 10. That route was a 5-mile circle around the neighborhood, and I was usually carrying a lot of cash, because I'd sometimes collect monies owed. Did I ever get robbed or kidnapped? Fuck no.
Back then, I'm sure nasty things went on--there were constant reports about the "white van" (it was always some asshole in a plain-Jane cargo van) trying to lure kids into the vehicle. Still, we didn't go around being scared of shadows.
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Originally posted by protege View PostUh, good luck trying to enforce that. Are the cops going to knock on every door in town?
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Originally posted by Racket_Man View Post
http://www.rock95.com/news/news/all-...sical-activity
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