Be There For Your Kids
Be There For Your Kids
To the Editor:
In response to Josh Hull, on the issue of unsupervised kids in Newtown homes. The school board should never consider your personal schedule when making decisions on school start/dismissal times. It is your responsibility as a parent to be sure one parent is available to greet the children when they come home no matter what time that is. I realize there are extreme circumstances when families are left with only one parent to shoulder the burden of providing income as well as the child care/supervision. That is surely the exception and those families will need to access extended family, friends, neighbors, and community services for assistance as well as making personal sacrifices.
I agree with Paul Fortugno that the Board of Educationâs requests for increases are destructive to the town. Giving more money to the board will not help deter heroin use or the use of âgatewayâ drugs. It will not even provide your child with a better education. Some of the greatest minds ever to grace this earth were not nurtured by an expensive education but by an available and involved parent. We donât need an extensive study to see that the majority of kids who get in trouble come from homes with uninvolved parents. Your involvement goes beyond words and money.
Parents in this town as well as across the country are going to have to make some sacrifices in their personal lives in order to be physically available for their kids. Look in on them in their rooms, sit in that room with them, go with them to meet friends and their friendâs family, and donât fall prey to feeling inconvenienced when you have to transport them places.
I would challenge parents to take an honest look at the time they spend in the physical presence of their child. How often are you in the same room or car with your kids, not necessarily engaged in any deep conversation or activity but just there? If itâs not at least three to four hours a day you may want to make some sacrifices.
Your child is in school eight hours. (Including travel, with any luck they get around eight hours of sleep, that leaves eight hours of âother timeâ in their day. All Iâm asking is that you take an honest look at those hours, and be sure that you use at least three of those hours as âIâm here for youâ time. Donât let others lift your burdens when it comes to being available for your kids. Maybe Carlie Brucia would be alive today if a parent had picked her up at her friendâs house. Itâs not money itâs personal sacrifice.
Linda Villafano
79 Mt. Pleasant Road, Newtown                          February 18, 2004