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Vicki Iovine

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Girlfriends' Guide to Teenagers: Smells Like Teen Spirit -- All Over My House!

Posted: 05/21/10 10:44 AM ET

Last Friday, I titled my blog, "We'll Remember Always, Graduation Day" and was told several times by readers that I needed to clean up my syntax. Really?? Doesn't anyone remember the Beach Boys' cover of a song that was first made popular by my mother's heartthrobs, the Four Freshmen? It's a song title, people!

So, for those of you who may have taken a pop cultural nap over the last 20 years, "Smells Like Teen Spirit" is the title of an album and song from Nirvana. Remember them?

"With the lights out, it's less dangerous,
Here we are now, entertain us.
I feel stupid and contagious,
Here we are now, entertain us."

Anyway, I now know well what Teen Spirit smells like. It's got a kind of sweet smell that lies somewhere between a newborn's breath and vomit. It's full of health and vigor and danger and risk. All I know is, I got a good whiff of it last weekend.

I've been around the most beloved and wonderful kids who are getting named MVP and Most Like to Be Made President By Acclamation (thereby skipping the filthy business of getting elected in today's political process) and matriculating to good colleges or graduating college and taking up their adult journeys. Some of them might be my own offspring and others are dear to me as part of the community that helped raise them, but I've been told I'm never to name names so ...

Last weekend, the daylight hours were devoted to end of season lacrosse barbecues and religious instruction for Confirmation and other such moving and inspiring illustrations of hope and faith in the generation I helped populate with my own contribution of two boys and two girls. I actually made Tollhouse cookies from scratch and did some of their laundry and was grateful for the privilege.

But, to quote Mick Jagger, "The sunshine bores the daylights out of [teenagers]" and I saw the smoke signals over my own home that an ill-conceived party was brewing somewhere in my village. This was a party at a house that was rented for the day. No parents, on the premises or not, and certainly no homeowner's insurance to cover accidental death or maiming. As if that weren't bad enough, the kids throwing it were charging admission.

Parents of tweens, take it from me: Parties that start after 10 p.m. and charge admission are Bad News. There are millions of them on your horizon and most of them are as risky as you fear. Kids who throw parties when their 'rents are out of town or are completely naive about what kids will do "with the lights out" almost never charge for admission. Teen promoters are well aware that they can only demand money if there are no people with fully developed frontal cortexes involved and way too many kids with no ability to successfully predict the consequences of spontaneous and silly decisions are invited, in the hundreds.

Not only was I once a teen that believed no party was complete until someone threw up in technicolor from all the wine drinks with screw tops that looked like Kool-Aid, but also I'm no stranger to parenting teens. I have a nose for that kind of teen spirit. Nonetheless, I'm also resigned to the fact that three of my kids are now "legally" adult (who the hell thought 18 years on earth indicated a sound mind?) and I try to give privileges where deserved.

Go ahead and throw the first stone; I know I'm indulgent and weak-spined at times where my kids are concerned. Chalk that up to decent kids who have stayed out of jail and not made me a grandmother prematurely, mixed with the effects of brain damage and fatigue at mothering four teenagers at one time.

Still, forewarned as I was, I hired a driver to deliver my kids and stand right outside the door to stack them and their friends inside his car like cord wood if necessary to bring them all safely home. But at 2 a.m., I was wide awake, texting my kids till my fingers smoked and learning that they hadn't found the driver and that they'd found other rides home. Do you know what that feels like to a mother?

Other rides home? That's like getting a text that they've swallowed glass and don't know yet if it will slice through their esophaguses! All you can do is wait and pray. These are the times when I couldn't care less whether my precious children shake hands with adults and look them in the eye when introduced or hand-write thank you notes in a timely fashion. All I want is for them to LIVE!

Once again, they did live, and I am truly grateful. But here is what I learned from this agony: Teen parties are sometimes as horrifying as I imagine. Just as I learned that rock festivals like Coachella are a lot tamer than those of my own youth, I learned this weekend that teen parties are more outrageous than those of my own wild youth in their yearning for extremes. More sex, more alcohol and more MORE characterize these "revels."

I don't know if our kids are more easily bored, more protected and hovered over by us Boomer and Gen-X parents, or more insanely pressured by a world that looks as though there is no abundance in their future--only shortages of work, of the assumption of safety and continuity, and of natural resources. Sometimes I worry that teen spirit occasionally smells like fear, and that us grownups are partly to blame.

 
 
 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Debby Carroll
Author, Raising Amazing Children
01:01 PM on 05/24/2010
Yes, teen parties are a fact of life and dangerous. But, your control of them started long ago when your kids were little. Empowering your kids to make the right choices later begins with how you parent them from day 1. They will attend these parties, that can't be stopped because they can't always be under your thumb unless you lock them in the house. But, how they act once they get there is something you can influence by teaching them to stand up for themselves and to think before they act. Finally, why didn't they phone a parent when they were desperate for a ride? I applaud your forward-thinking move to hire a driver but why didn't they feel that they could phone home in a pinch? Teaching our children to trust us to help them without judging is pretty important in these situations.
http://raisingamazingdaughters.wordpress.com
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charon
Censorship is the betrayal of democracy
08:50 PM on 05/23/2010
If my place smelled like teen spirit I'd evacuate immediately and call to have it tented and fumigated.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charles Page
05:14 PM on 05/23/2010
Vicki, I had a lot of things to say and spout at you, but I'll just say this; I really, REALLY, relate to lacrosse barbecues.

Are you kidding me? Let me guess, you live in suburbia, have 2.5 kids, a beige monstrosity of a house, a husband who you henpeck, and lots of girlfriends who live the same kind of existence that you do?

The fact that someone gives you money to write your books, just tells me that the Judgment of Man cannot come fast enough.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Liz DeBagara
08:48 PM on 05/23/2010
Ok sheesh. You don't relate to her life. That's not her problem, and the article clearly wasn't targeted for you. Chill. Out.
01:50 PM on 07/06/2010
Actually, she lives in an exclusive LA neighborhood, and while married to a billionaire lived in a house the size of a hotel had nannies to raise her kids - and she writed PARENTING books. Anyone smell hypocrisy here?
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KCM7
“I am of a sect by myself, as far as I know”
02:19 PM on 05/23/2010
"(who the hell thought 18 years on earth indicated a sound mind?)"

The military.
Old enough to carry a gun in a foreign country and represent the USA. But too irresponsible to drink a beer in their own country.
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10:36 AM on 05/23/2010
When I was a teen I was always home by 10pm, only had high-academic achieving "nerd" friends of my gender, did what I was told, and was even voted most likely-to-succeed my senior year. Today I'm 30, working on my PhD, never been in a serious relationship, somewhat socially isolated, hoping to meet the woman of my dreams and start a family after I'm fully employed when I'm 32-35, like it's some sort of career hurdle. I never had any serious fun. There are thousands of others like me, who all "followed the rules". Is that really what all you parents want?
02:44 PM on 05/23/2010
that's rhetorical question ~ right?
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05:02 PM on 05/23/2010
No, I actually want an answer
09:27 AM on 05/23/2010
So what happened to the bone-head driver?
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
08:44 AM on 05/23/2010
OMG...what universe is this woman living in anyway??? LOL. "Lacrosse barbeques and confirmation instructions"?? Really?? LOL.
07:17 AM on 05/23/2010
Smells Like Teen Spirit was named after the deodorant. Perhaps we need to apply some now?
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
03:50 AM on 05/23/2010
Kids are kids -- let them be kids. If it doesn't kill them it makes them stronger. The only saving grace i can think of for a kid coming into the world now is you can't miss what you never had. I have a lot of faith in gen y. I don't think they are going to let me down.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ekata
07:22 PM on 05/22/2010
Where's the rest of this article? This was a fantastic intro/set up... where's the part that takes this experience and goes deeper? What actually HAPPENED at that party? What did her kids do/see? How did this change her what is she offering to the rest of us? Is. "look out, parties are wilder now" all she wanted to say?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DK in MS
Reinstate Glass-Steagall
12:01 PM on 05/22/2010
Once again I am reminded what great parents I had.
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yoyodyne666
is it friday yet?
06:37 AM on 05/22/2010
Drivel ...is this blog some sort of therapy?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Skeptical Cicada
08:48 AM on 05/22/2010
Yeah, after wading through six paragraphs and finding her still rambling--at that point about baking cookies or something--I stopped reading this pointless, stream-of-consciousness drivel.

The idea of having to read an entire book by this rambling, self-centered woman is just terrifying.

Beginners' Writing Lesson No. 1: HAVE A POINT.
Beginner's Writing Lesson No. 2: GET TO THE DAMN POINT.
04:40 PM on 05/23/2010
I have read her books and have cried with laughter. She has taken me through pregnancy, birth, babies, toddlers, playgroups, pre-schools and getting my groove back after surviving all that.
Man, why are you so up-tight? Loosen up a bit. You don't have to go around tearing strips off people - especially people who write humorous columns about the craziness of family life. A bit of laughter makes the world a better place, especially when you are a parent.
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HST
Conservatism = selfishness
06:22 PM on 05/23/2010
"Yeah, after wading through six paragraphs and finding her still rambling--at that point about baking cookies or something--I stopped reading this pointless, stream-of-consciousness drivel."

Yet you found time to write a response to this "drivel". Curious, that.
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yogini4
Think deeper!
12:21 AM on 05/22/2010
I've blogged recently about the antidotes to tween/teen parenting faux pas . You can find Old Saws for Modern Parents here: www.insightouthealing.com.
11:26 PM on 05/21/2010
Smells Like Teen Spirit was not the name of a Nirvana album. The song was on Nevermind. I stopped reading there..
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progressivestance84
The Right is Wrong.
11:08 PM on 05/21/2010
Partly to blame? More like totally responsible.
03:01 AM on 05/22/2010
How totally wrong you are.
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progressivestance84
The Right is Wrong.
03:28 AM on 05/22/2010
Really todays parents coddle their children to the extreme. Maybe its due to guilt for destroying the planet and turning America for the past 25 years into a den of corporation control and fascism. The only things parents of this generation need to be afraid of is how bad they have failed the newest generation of Americans in healthcare, education, and job opportunities. Greed has dismantled the very fabric of the United States of America. On second thought you should be afraid.