Porterville Recorder

Mom’s painful past is warning to girls about teen drinking

- Jeanne Phillips

DEAR ABBY: I am the mother of two teenaged girls (13 and 15) and have been debating whether to tell them a secret about my past. When I was in high school, I made some poor decisions. I went to a party with people I viewed as friends, had too much to drink and the evening ended with my being raped by someone I thought I knew.

I reported it to my parents and the police, but because I couldn’t remember big parts of the evening, I wasn’t considered credible and no one believed me -not even my parents. My grades dropped, my weight plummeted and the entire school knew and believed his side of the story.

I internaliz­ed everything and became a shell of who I was before the incident. It was years before I forgave myself for making a horrible mistake. Ultimately, I moved in with my grandmothe­r several states away to finish high school, far away from my parents and the pain.

Would it be appropriat­e to share this story (or a redacted version) with my daughters to help them understand the risks of teenage drinking? They are at the age when they are surrounded by temptation and curiosity, and their father and I can’t shield them from everything. Would I be doing them a disservice by not telling them? — UNDECIDED IN NEVADA DEAR UNDECIDED: You would be doing your daughters a favor if, along with warning them about underage drinking, you shared your story with them. If you do, it will help them understand that drinking can have unintended, sometimes lifelong consequenc­es. Forewarned is forearmed.

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