The Fount Online News

January 22, 2010

Teen Dating Violence

Filed under: NEWS: Local — The Fount @ 10:11 AM

The following article was forwarded to The Fount from the Domestic Abuse Resistance Team (DART) located in Ruston, Louisiana

Are you the parent of someone between the ages of 11 and 18?  Does your son or daughter have a boyfriend or girlfriend?  How much do you know about their relationship?

Most caring and involved parents would say that they make it their business to know what is going on in the dating life of their tween (ages 11-14) or teen (ages 15-18).  And yet a recent article on About.com, a NY Times website devoted to women’s issues, reported a very eye-opening series of facts about teen dating violence.  This information may be crucial for parents of young people in this age range – 6th -12th grade. With the first week of February being designated as National Teen Dating Violence Awareness and Prevention Week, I thought this would be a very timely topic for DART’s monthly column.

The first report I read on About.com was about teens.  The study states that one in five high school girls has been physically abused by a dating partner, but dating violence among their peers is reported by 54% of high school students.  This means that while only 20% of high school girls are reporting abuse, over half of high school students know that it is happening to their friends. The abuse witnessed includes punching, slapping, kicking, and choking.

As a person who has been passionate about the issue of domestic and dating violence for over thirty years, these facts, though disturbing, were not news to me.   However, the last two statements on the website revealed new information that was even more disturbing.

The first was that nearly 80% of teen-age girls who have been victims of physical abuse in their dating relationships continue to date their abuser.  This fact has me wondering whether parents, even loving and involved ones, are truly aware of what is going on in the dating lives of their sons and daughters. I can’t help but believe that if a parent knew that their daughter’s boyfriend – or son’s girlfriend – was abusing them, they would not permit them to date again.   So it comes back to my original question to parents of teens:  how much do you know about their dating relationships?

The last fact on this particular website stated that the majority of teen dating abuse occurs in the home of one of the partners.  Think about this.  This means that when your teen is in the den with a boyfriend or girlfriend, and you are in the kitchen preparing dinner, right there in your own home, abuse may be taking place.

All of the above information related to teens.  Now let me share what I learned about violence and abuse in the dating relationships of tweens. According to this study, 62% of tweens know someone who has been verbally abused by a boyfriend or girlfriend, while 36% know someone who has been pressured to do something they did not want to do.

The most shocking part of this article was the fact that tweens who engage in sexual behavior are far more likely to experience abuse in their dating relationships.  For those who have had sex by age 14, the statistics are appalling.  69% of them say that they have experienced at least one kind of abuse in their relationship. 61% report being put down or verbally abused, while 34% report physical abuse.  But sexual abuse in this age group should concern us even more.  36% of the tweens reported that they were pressured to have oral sex when they didn’t want to, and 34% reported that they were pressured to have sexual intercourse when they didn’t want to.  These statistics were almost cut in half in groups who waited longer to have a sexual relationship.  The same questions were asked of teens who waited to have sex until ages 17-18, and incidents of abuse were less than half the numbers reported above.

Another part of this study indicated that 67% of tweens are willing to discuss their relationships with their mother. However, that number falls to 49% with teens.  This makes a strong argument for parents of tweens and teens to sit down and talk to their kids.  They need to have open conversations about dating, about violence, and about sexuality.  The longer parents wait, the more they will be “out of the loop” with their child.  Parents of tweens often state that their child is too young to have a conversation about dating, abuse, and sexuality.  Yet this study also pointed out that while 67% of parents of tweens say they are very aware of what is going on in their child’s dating relationships, only 51% of the tweens interviewed agreed.

DART can make the start of this dialogue a lot easier.  We have programs on Teen Dating Violence that we can bring to schools, to church youth groups, to area clubs and organizations, to sports teams, or to other group events.  This information, though difficult to talk about, could change the lives of our young people and prevent abuse from occurring in their relationships.  Give DART a call (318) 513-9373 and set up a time for our community advocate to come and speak to your group.  Remember – communication is the beginning of change. Let us team up with you to make that happen, for the sake of our teens and the families they will one day have.

January 18, 2010

Happy Dr. King Day

“It’s another day’s journey, and I’m GLAD! I’m glad, I’m so glad! I’m so glad to be here!” These are the words to a well-known song in Black churches all across the country. On this the first holiday in 2010 hopefully people of all races, nationalities and religions are willing to celebrate God’s goodness and express great appreciation for another day’s journey He has provided us all.

This is especially true as we turn to the local and international news and see images of war in the Middle East, and earthquake devastation in Haiti. When we consider how blessed we really are – our personal problems and issues seem quite trivial compared to the real suffering others are going through around the world.

As we pause for a moment in acknowledgment of this great American hero, please leave a comment and name 1 thing how you believe Dr. King changed your life personally, and/or name 1 thing how he impacted the world. What is Dr. King’s most significant contribution to you personally?

Allow me to start this off by saying as a young child growing up, I was inspired to see a Black minister not only preach the sacrificial and unconditional love of God, but we saw him practice what he preached even to the point of being wiling to die for it.

Some of my old seminary instructors who were also Black unfairly ridiculed and criticized Dr. King for ‘leaving the pulpit’ and getting involved in civil rights/social issues, and even had the gall to say that because he died in the process of helping garbage workers – that Dr. King died in disgrace.

It is these same seminary instructors who were trying to impress upon us young ministers that our first obligation is to God, and that if we were going to be preachers in God’s church- never leave the pulpit because this is what can happen.

Believe me when I say this, those particular preachers/seminary instructors paid dearly – not so much for what they said, but because of the judgmental and carnal mindset they held which led them to say such ludicrous things.

For the record, I never accepted what they said because I knew the scriptures were very clear on the fact that the thrust of Jesus’ ministry was not in the temple – but in the streets amongst those whom the religious leaders of that day deemed ’sinful.’

In those days, we were not allowed to voice opposition or even comment during class because as students, we were taught to sit and receive what was being taught. That’s that typical ‘pecking order’ mentality that some senior preachers like to put on junior preachers because they are more concerned about the ‘lower’ preachers obeying them than they are about them obeying God – (a whole other topic!!)

While some students got chewed up and spit out for disobeying this rule, the Lord allowed me to hold my peace and He told me to watch and pray. I did just that, and over the years God enabled me to observe the rise and the crash and burn of those preachers’ ministries.

Some of them slipped off into modernity, others into iniquity and God revealed that He fired certain ministers without them even knowing it. Now that’s a bad place to be – like the mighty Sampson – to believe the power and presence of God is with you when indeed He is not!

I’m not saying they are bad people, just lost in their theology. What they didn’t grasp and were actually teaching against was the fact – that like God Himself, Dr. King was not a people-pleaser; he was no respecter of persons, and whoever needed help, he was willing to do his absolute best for them as God laid that burden to do so on his heart.

Ministers are not kings or celebrities, and God’s people in the Church don’t belong to them. We are God’s servants who serve God by serving His people for His purposes and not our own, according to God’s design and not the expectations of ANY man. And we especially can’t afford to look down on anybody for the life they lead because that’s a boomerang we don’t want coming back!

Though Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. be physically dead, his life of Love and personal sacrifice still speaks:  “By faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain, by which he obtained witness that he was righteous, God testifying of his gifts: and by it he being dead yet speaketh. Hebrews 11:4″

A Christ-like Servant

Dr. King was a man with faults just like the rest of us, yet that which he did for Christ lasts forever. I pray each of you stick to the convictions God has placed on your heart no matter what the religious naysayers say, because the persecution and ridicule they put on you will all fade away in the end and they will end up LOOKING UP at what God is doing through you!

Many Blessings Abound To The Faithful!

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