Poll

what should i do

nothing
52 (26.9%)
tell parents
51 (26.4%)
make a situation where the parents find out
35 (18.1%)
give her a "talk"
21 (10.9%)
other
3 (1.6%)
call the cops?
31 (16.1%)

Total Members Voted: 193

Author Topic: My sister is illegally holding alcohol  (Read 35557 times)

You act as when you drink 1 drip of alcohol before you're allowed to get it that you're becoming an alcoholist bum.
Some of your guys' views on stuff are forgeted up.

If you seriously think you're ''saving'' her from anything you're naive as forget.

gee i didn't realize watching research had adverse health effects w0we
A flask of wine is going to kill her, or what? Are you handicapped, or do you just not understand how the human body and alcohol work?

I'd rat, snitch, whatever you'd call it, that having her being an addict to anything. It really isn't low at all, it's brave to speak out. Many people who keep their mouth shut end up hurting more people than if they were to tell anyone.
wow im surrounded by slippery snakes

maybe one day we will meet in person and ill give you a hint on how the world really works. in the mean time im taking notes on whos un trust worthy on this forum. surprisingly its a handful of you

but man, this thread got so much perspectives

sorry there is no way in hell anyone here believes you are in 8th grade lmao

he's 13 enough

You act as when you drink 1 drip of alcohol before you're allowed to get it that you're becoming an alcoholist bum.
Some of your guys' views on stuff are forgeted up.

If you seriously think you're ''saving'' her from anything you're naive as forget.
A flask of wine is going to kill her, or what? Are you handicapped, or do you just not understand how the human body and alcohol work?
source: http://pubs.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/AA67/AA67.htm
No matter what cause it's for, there's no reason to "learn what happens to your body" before you're 18, given that there are health risks.
If she had made it clear it was a one time thing or whatever, I'd sympathise. Not like one flask is going to kill you. But if she's resorting to stealing from her parents then there's no telling whether she'll do it again. Better to just nip it in the bud.
wow im surrounded by slippery snakes

maybe one day we will meet in person and ill give you a hint on how the world really works. in the mean time im taking notes on whos un trust worthy on this forum. surprisingly its a handful of you
I don't see how this is grounds for mistrust? He, at the very least, thinks he's protecting his sister from herself.

is 8th grade old enough to you
While you're sitting on your ass posting about your sister and her alcohol she is probably getting drunk as you type. The best way to get the alcohol out of your sister's hands is to tell your parents, secretly. Do not let her know that you or your parent know, then when she is gone, have your parents go into her room, take the canteen, and confront her when she gets home. have your parents say they had a "suspicion" because she was "acting tipsy" or some other bullstuff excuse that a 14 year old would believe. Let your parents do all of the work, it is their job to take care of this problem, not yours.

A flask of wine is going to kill her, or what? Are you handicapped, or do you just not understand how the human body and alcohol work?
One word: moderation. Young minds are much more easily conformed to stuff like this - if an addiction happens because this goes unchecked, the habit will be terribly hard to break. See: baby who smoked a pack a day and had withdrawal when they tried to take him off of it.

Also, a lot of people seem to be ignoring the fact that she's stealing.

because its easier for parents to scare their kids into a yes or no world, then to teach them the discipline to make decisions.

drinking is not a big deal. but to much of anything is bad.
instead of teaching these 2 kids how to be responsible. the parents used the scare tactics of all or none logic.

and the kids grow up naive as forget. as seen here

Also, a lot of people seem to be ignoring the fact that she's stealing.
Wanna know why?

Because it doesn't matter, everyone has been young and stole something (unless you're some goody 2 shoed rat ofc). It's not a major thing, not even when it's a little flask of wine.

One word: moderation. Young minds are much more easily conformed to stuff like this - if an addiction happens because this goes unchecked, the habit will be terribly hard to break. See: baby who smoked a pack a day and had withdrawal when they tried to take him off of it.

Also, a lot of people seem to be ignoring the fact that she's stealing.
Except this is a single flask of wine, not a pack of smokes a day.

If she had made it clear it was a one time thing or whatever, I'd sympathise. Not like one flask is going to kill you. But if she's resorting to stealing from her parents then there's no telling whether she'll do it again. Better to just nip it in the bud.
One word: moderation. Young minds are much more easily conformed to stuff like this - if an addiction happens because this goes unchecked, the habit will be terribly hard to break. See: baby who smoked a pack a day and had withdrawal when they tried to take him off of it.
If she gets "saved" from this she'll just do something else. Stupid people are stupid, there is no changing this.

Also, a lot of people seem to be ignoring the fact that she's stealing.
Stealing alcohol from one's parents is the most typical thing. How many random teenagers do you intend to arrest, lol?

So, i used to think it was something, i dunno, Strong?
Wine isnt strong, so why care about this.
Isn't it actually healthy to have a little wine?

it was wine?
what the forget is your guys issues
its god damn wine the same stuff they hand out at church

but muh law
but muh addiction studies