KIDS SAFETY
There are many, many predators out there just waiting to prey on innocent
children. Because they are wise to the ways of the world, children are much, much more susceptible to the
lure of a possible abductor or attacker.
There are certain things you can do to help your child recognize the signs of a potentially
dangerous person and to protect them from becoming a victim. Consider the following suggestions:
1. Establish a "family password" and drill your kids so that they understand that if anyone
ever comes to pick them up at school "because Mommy or Daddy is sick" that person MUST give them the family
password, or the child should not leave with them. Kids like family secrets, and should have no trouble dealing
with this concept.
This author used this strategy with her children and it worked beautifully. Luckily, we
weren't ever faced with a life-threatening situation, but I can remember one day my daughter becoming very adamant
about everyone saying the "family password" before she would even talk to them!
2. Tell them success stories about kids defending themselves, such as the 12 year old girl
who was recently accosted by a man with a gun on her way to school.
He told her to get into his van. She was more afraid of the van than the gun (wise child), and
managed to break free and run away. He didn't shoot at her, and was later picked up by police and charged with
several child murders.
The point is that it is important to resist strongly and early in the interaction, not to go
along (in the van, for example), hoping that the situation will somehow get better later on.
3. Role-play with them in a low key way, so that they really know how to respond to a
variety of situations.
One girl who was walking home from school when she was accosted, and had trouble running away
because she was afraid to drop her schoolbooks, fearing that her father would be angry at her if she lost the
books.
Parents spend a lot of time trying to get kids to understand and adopt our usual adult
priorities, and it is very important that kids understand that all those normal rules are suspended if they are in
personal danger!
4. Give them a bit of training about firearms. A good message to convey is that if you see
a gun, don't touch it, leave the area immediately, and tell an adult. This is critical for even very young children
to understand, since they might come across a firearm in the home of a friend.
5. Far more important than formal classes are the attitudes about self-protection that
parents convey to kids. If Mommy is alert, unafraid, and self-reliant, the kids will tend to be so, too.
Teach them that it is OK to scream, really loud, if they are in danger. If someone covers their
mouth, teach them that it is alright to kick and scratch (not wildly, but targeted areas such as groin, eyes,
throat and knees).
6. Don't have backpacks and clothing with the child's name visibly on it. It allows a stranger to call the
child by name, and kids are less suspicious of (and more likely to obey) someone who knows their name.
7. Remember that the media strive to entertain as well as inform, and horror stories
involving children get a huge amount of press and air time, because they sell a lot of papers and make people watch
the TV, NOT BECAUSE THEY HAPPEN OFTEN.
Kidnapping is every parent's worst nightmare, but it is NOT a common crime. It may not be
increasing, though the "extensive media coverage" may make it feel that way.
While teaching your children how to protect themselves from that, don't forget to teach them how
to protect themselves from much more common threats, such as school yard bullies, friends experimenting with drugs,
pedophiles, purse snatchers, etc.
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