News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Column: Who Knows What Sniffing Cow Dung Can Lead To? |
Title: | US CA: Column: Who Knows What Sniffing Cow Dung Can Lead To? |
Published On: | 1999-11-05 |
Source: | Orange County Register (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 16:22:38 |
WHO KNOWS WHAT SNIFFING COW DUNG CAN LEAD TO?
You parents out there should be aware that the young people have invented
yet another alarming trend. I frankly wonder why we, as a society, even allow
young people, inasmuch as all they ever seem to do is think up trends that
we do not approve of, such as sarcasm, tattoos, and referring to pioneering
rock-music geniuses of the '60s as "old" just because they are dead or in
comas.
I found out about the latest alarming youth trend thanks to several alert
readers who sent me an article from the Straits Times of Singapore. This
article, which I am not making up (Trademark), begins as follows:
"TAIPEI - Some young Malaysians are sniffing cow dung to get high,
according to a lawmaker. 'They look for fresh cow dung and, on locating it,
put a large tin can over it, pierce a hole at the top and sniff through
it,' Perak state assemblyman Mat Isa Ismail said on Saturday. He said that
this was becoming a trend."
Did you hear that, parents? Young people are sniffing cow dung, and it is
becoming a trend."
Perhaps you are saying to yourself: "What do I care what goes on in
Malysia? I'm an American! I don't even know where Malaysia is, nor do I
care, unless there's a mall there."
You pathetic fool. Do not be casually dismissing Malaysia just because it
is a foreign country located abroad. Today we live in a "global village,"
which means that if young people on one part of the planet come up with a
stupid idea, they can communicate it to all the other young people in the
world instantly via the Internet, or "rap" music, or wearing their baseball
caps at a certain angle. Believe me, your children know what's going on in
Malaysia! It just so happens that many youth trends come to this country
from Malaysia, which is considered by young Americans to be a very
"happening" place. In fact, when modern American youths wish to express
generic approval, they often use the slang expression, "Whoa, that is so
Malaysina."
So do not be one of those hopelessly naive parents who go around saying,
"My little Courtney would never sniff cow dung!" Instead, watch your child
closely for The Five Warning Signs of Cow-Dung Abuse:
1. Your child constantly pesters you to drive him or her to a farm so that
he or she can "do some chores."
2. When you go to the supermarket,your child asks you to bring back 1,600
pounds of hay.
3. At night, you hear loud mooing sounds, which turn out, upon
investigation, to be your husband using the bathroom.
4. But then, when you look in your child's bedroom, you find: a cow. When
you demand an explanation, your child says, "Oh, that belongs to Stacey."
5. And your child does not know any "Stacey."
In addition to watching for warning signs, you must "keep the lines of
communication open" between yourself and your child. Make a point of taking
an interest in the things your child in interested in so that you can
develop a rapport, as we see in this dialogue:
FATHER: What's that music you're listening to, son?
SON: It's a band called Limp Bizkit, Dad.
FATHER: They suck.
I always made a point of communicating with my son as he was growing up,
and it has really paid off. Now that he's away at college, he often calls
me up when he needs advice or counsel on an important matter.
"Dad," he'll say, "I have to make a decision that will affect the whole
rest of my life, and I want to be absolutely sure that I choose the right
path. Do you think you could send me some money?"
You should strive for this kind of closeness in your relationship with your
child. And remember: If worse comes to worst, there is no parenting tool
more powerful than a good hug. If you sense that your child is getting into
trouble; you must give that child a great big fat hug in a public place
with other young people around, while saying, in a loud, piercing voice,
"You are my little baby and I love you no matter what!" This will embarrass
your child so much that he or she may immediately run off and join a strict
religious order whose entire diet consists of gravel. If one hug doesn't
work, threaten to give your child another.
You must be tough, because research shows that children who experiment with
so-called "soft" dungs will eventually want to try "something harder," and
I don't have to tell you what that means. It means snakes. So let's nip
this problem in the bud, parents. Let's talk to our children, and let's
write letters to President Clinton urging him, next time he has a scandal
and needs an international crisis, to shoot missiles at Malaysia. But most
important of all, let's scrape this stuff off our shoes.
You parents out there should be aware that the young people have invented
yet another alarming trend. I frankly wonder why we, as a society, even allow
young people, inasmuch as all they ever seem to do is think up trends that
we do not approve of, such as sarcasm, tattoos, and referring to pioneering
rock-music geniuses of the '60s as "old" just because they are dead or in
comas.
I found out about the latest alarming youth trend thanks to several alert
readers who sent me an article from the Straits Times of Singapore. This
article, which I am not making up (Trademark), begins as follows:
"TAIPEI - Some young Malaysians are sniffing cow dung to get high,
according to a lawmaker. 'They look for fresh cow dung and, on locating it,
put a large tin can over it, pierce a hole at the top and sniff through
it,' Perak state assemblyman Mat Isa Ismail said on Saturday. He said that
this was becoming a trend."
Did you hear that, parents? Young people are sniffing cow dung, and it is
becoming a trend."
Perhaps you are saying to yourself: "What do I care what goes on in
Malysia? I'm an American! I don't even know where Malaysia is, nor do I
care, unless there's a mall there."
You pathetic fool. Do not be casually dismissing Malaysia just because it
is a foreign country located abroad. Today we live in a "global village,"
which means that if young people on one part of the planet come up with a
stupid idea, they can communicate it to all the other young people in the
world instantly via the Internet, or "rap" music, or wearing their baseball
caps at a certain angle. Believe me, your children know what's going on in
Malaysia! It just so happens that many youth trends come to this country
from Malaysia, which is considered by young Americans to be a very
"happening" place. In fact, when modern American youths wish to express
generic approval, they often use the slang expression, "Whoa, that is so
Malaysina."
So do not be one of those hopelessly naive parents who go around saying,
"My little Courtney would never sniff cow dung!" Instead, watch your child
closely for The Five Warning Signs of Cow-Dung Abuse:
1. Your child constantly pesters you to drive him or her to a farm so that
he or she can "do some chores."
2. When you go to the supermarket,your child asks you to bring back 1,600
pounds of hay.
3. At night, you hear loud mooing sounds, which turn out, upon
investigation, to be your husband using the bathroom.
4. But then, when you look in your child's bedroom, you find: a cow. When
you demand an explanation, your child says, "Oh, that belongs to Stacey."
5. And your child does not know any "Stacey."
In addition to watching for warning signs, you must "keep the lines of
communication open" between yourself and your child. Make a point of taking
an interest in the things your child in interested in so that you can
develop a rapport, as we see in this dialogue:
FATHER: What's that music you're listening to, son?
SON: It's a band called Limp Bizkit, Dad.
FATHER: They suck.
I always made a point of communicating with my son as he was growing up,
and it has really paid off. Now that he's away at college, he often calls
me up when he needs advice or counsel on an important matter.
"Dad," he'll say, "I have to make a decision that will affect the whole
rest of my life, and I want to be absolutely sure that I choose the right
path. Do you think you could send me some money?"
You should strive for this kind of closeness in your relationship with your
child. And remember: If worse comes to worst, there is no parenting tool
more powerful than a good hug. If you sense that your child is getting into
trouble; you must give that child a great big fat hug in a public place
with other young people around, while saying, in a loud, piercing voice,
"You are my little baby and I love you no matter what!" This will embarrass
your child so much that he or she may immediately run off and join a strict
religious order whose entire diet consists of gravel. If one hug doesn't
work, threaten to give your child another.
You must be tough, because research shows that children who experiment with
so-called "soft" dungs will eventually want to try "something harder," and
I don't have to tell you what that means. It means snakes. So let's nip
this problem in the bud, parents. Let's talk to our children, and let's
write letters to President Clinton urging him, next time he has a scandal
and needs an international crisis, to shoot missiles at Malaysia. But most
important of all, let's scrape this stuff off our shoes.
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