American Hebrew Academy
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter:  
 
http://www.goldsteinsfuneral.com/

A Failure to Communicate

In these high-tech times, dating abuse has become all too real for the younger set
March 11, 2010

Lori Weinstein
Jewish Telegraphic Agency

WASHINGTON

A few years ago, during an otherwise innocuous conversation, one of my oldest and dearest friends relayed the following story about her 17-year-old daughter:

"Sophie [not her real name] and her boyfriend were at a party last weekend, and he got mad about something she said, and he literally picked her up by her shirt and threw her against the wall."

While the incident was shocking, it was Sophie's reaction -- or lack thereof -- that horrified me. Being body-checked by a boyfriend should have shaken her to the core, but Sophie didn't seem to consider it a big deal.

That's when I experienced "that parenting moment" -- the one that flings us from the world in which we grew up into the unrecognizable reality where our children are learning to live, and, of course, to love.

We want to believe that everyone who comes to know our kids will love and respect them as much as we do. Unfortunately, about one in three adolescent girls in the United States is a victim of physical, sexual, emotional or verbal abuse from a dating partner.

You're thinking "not my kid" -- but we're talking about one in three girls. We're talking about every race, religion and community (even "nice Jewish kids," like Sophie and her boyfriend.) We're talking about a punch in the face, an erosion of self-esteem or even silent digital stalking that robs a girl of her peace of mind.

Love in a New Age
The issue is bigger and more pervasive than any of us can fathom, even for those of us who fathom it for a living.

Young love was tough enough before technology took over; today, it really is a jungle out there. In a recent Liz Claiborne study, 30 percent of teens in relationships said that they are text-messaged 10, 20, 30 times an hour by their partners, who ask where they are, what they're doing or who they're with.

Nearly a quarter of teens in a relationship communicated with their partner via cell phone or texting hourly (!) between midnight and 5 a.m.

Consider the "sexting" epidemic, and it looks even worse: One in five teen girls has electronically sent or posted nude or semi-nude photos or videos of themselves. Sexually suggestive text, e-mail or instant messages are more prevalent -- at 37 percent.

Here's where it gets really scary: Nearly one in five "sext" recipients admits sharing the images and messages with someone else -- at least one person, but usually more.

Technology's greatest trick is creating the illusion of control: Teenagers can choose (and unchoose) their "friends," decide who accesses which information, and magically conceal what they don't want their parents to know.

But beneath the passwords and preferences, our kids are actually surrendering their privacy. We are all, by action or permission, forfeiting our power.

So, what can we do, besides watch privacy and common courtesy circle the drain?

For one, start with communication: In a 2009 survey of parents, three in four said that they had talked with their teenagers about the meaning of a healthy relationship, but the majority of the teens (three-quarters of sons and two-thirds of daughters) replied that they had not discussed dating abuse with a parent in the past year.

Only 32 percent of teens in abusive relationships confided in their parents about their situations. And it's worth mentioning that teen dating abuse most often happens in one of the partners' homes.

In a 2009 Kaiser Family Foundation survey, "Generation M2: Media in the Lives of 8- to 18-Year-Olds," only 14 percent of seventh- through 12th-graders said that their parents had rules about how many text messages they could send.

And while about 25 percent of the report's tweens and teens had telephone-time restrictions, with texting currently the preferred means of communication, dating abuse really has become a more hidden problem -- a reclusive shadow over the lives of our kids.



See more articles in: Health & Science