RIGHT TO PRIVACY
Parents
often struggle with the boundaries of their
children's privacy. When a mother is cleaning
a child's room or putting away some clothing,
the temptation to look at that crumpled stack
of papers on the desk or flip through an unlocked
diary or poke around the closet can be too
strong to resist. Especially if there's any
cause for concern. And what do you do if you
actually find something? Will you destroy
your child's trust if you admit to an invasion
of privacy? These are tough questions. I believe
it is important to respect a child's right
to privacy but only up to a point. Your child's
safety is always the primary issue and concern.
Of course, the difficulty is trying to determine
if your child's health or survival is actually
at risk. Therefore, you need to be educated
about the signs of substance abuse or depression
such as marked changes in behavior or mood
and/or onset of sleeping or eating problems.
Learn as much as you can so you can recognize
the serious problem that probably your teenager
is hiding. One of the best ways to manage
this is to spend time alone with your child.
This will provide opportunities for your child
to share, when he or she is ready, what is
actually going on. Remember, teens are scared
and they will want to talk to you if they
can believe you will really listen and not
judge them harshly.
Privacy is important. Teens want special space,
usually their bedroom, which will reflect
their moods, interests, and search for a sense
of identity. However parents need to set some
guidelines up front. Tell your child his privacy
will be respected unless his behavior strongly
suggests there is a serious problem, which
he is denying. Open communication is always
the priority. But, if there are strong signs
of trouble then you have to be strict and
firm. Thus respect their privacy as long as
it is not harmful, but a sign of trouble you
must take the problem head on.