Prosecuting parents for teenage drinking
Saturday, April 28th, 2007My name is Veronica and I am a reformed alcoholic. And I don’t want it to happen to you too, which is why I have trained as a therapist and have launched a training programme.
Today’s media has highlighted a proposal by Alcohol Concern urging the prosecution of parents who allow under 15-year-olds to drink. However, I don’t believe prosecuting adults this way is the right approach. I remember when I was a teenager; how anything that was forbidden immediately became more attractive and desirable. What I feel is needed is investment into young people’s emotional lives; we need to look at the root causes of why people drink to such extreme levels.
They are absolutely right in bringing this serious issue to our attention, the massive problem we have in this country due to alcohol abuse, how we have indeed created a culture where binge drinking has been so normalised that most young people see this behaviour as acceptable and emulate it. This isn’t the odd person from a bad background drinking too much, this is the majority of the population who drink, drinking more than is good for them and many too dangerous levels.
However, I don’t believe prosecuting adults this way is the right approach. I remember when I was a teenager; how anything that was forbidden immediately became more attractive and desirable. What I feel is needed is investment into young people’s emotional lives; we need to look at the root causes of why people drink to such extreme levels.
I was a teenage binge drinker, I remember lying in the gutter in my own vomit after pub closing time, the reason I drank was it changed how I felt, I had no confidence or self-esteem, I didn’t know how to have relationships with people. Alcohol made all of that better, it gave me confidence and bravado, I felt invincible, and then of course came the hangovers, depression, self loathing and guilt.
What I’m saying is we need to look at the reasons why young people and adults drink and start there; it has nothing to do with accessibility of alcohol. If someone has a drink problem and likes the effects of alcohol as much as I did, trust me they’ll find a way to get it.