Pubdate: Wed, 01 Mar 2006 Source: Province, The (CN BC) http://www.canada.com/theprovince/news/story.html?id=0debbec7-f5ba-4838-990a-5f5bb2ca8565 Copyright: 2006 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Joey Thompson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) IS IT NATURE OR NURTURE'S FAULT WHEN KIDS GO BAD? Parents Swear Their Kids Had It All; Experts Tend To Disagree The parents you're about to meet all claim their kids were brought up in loving, attentive families where honesty, hard work and caring for others was held up as an example and rewarded. But while some grew into every parent's dream child, still others wound up in youth criminal court or on the streets freebasing drugs. Proof, they say, that you can't pin the blame for wayward youth or killer kids on poor parenting. People like me who argue otherwise "display a complete ignorance of the realities faced by troubled teens, their parents and child-care authorities," said a Coquitlam dad. Steve, whose name is altered to protect his troublesome daughter, is a church-going, law-abiding kind of guy, who like many other parents I heard from, offered his parenting experience in a bid to bolster the theory that parenting styles do little to shape youths' behaviour: nature trumps nurture. He said his daughter studied piano, pulled in good grades and showed great potential. Until puberty took over. "It was like a time bomb went off. It was like we had a kid [who] dropped down in the middle of the night from another planet, completely out of control." She split the school scene and starting playing around with nasty guys and even nastier drugs. Everything she did contradicted everything she was taught, he said. "The law was useless. The age of consent being 14, she could hang out with any vermin, and there was nothing we could do unless we could demonstrate to police and the children's authorities that this kid was either a danger to herself or the people around her." Different circumstances, same outcome, says a Penticton retiree who watched his sister raise two boys the same. One became a responsible, hardworking dad who coaches his boys' hockey teams while the other shifted to the dark side and landed in jail. Exactly where a frustrated Cranbrook mom fears her 17-year-old, privately schooled son is headed. Shannon says her boy was raised in a loving, extended family home where everyone knew the difference between right and wrong. "He is becoming harder and harder to control and guide. I find myself dreading the next few years, just hoping he survives. "Smoking a joint laced with crystal meth or making the choice to take it starts the kid on a downhill slide that few parents can stop." Ah, but positive changes are possible with the right upbringing, diet and experiences, say some top experts in the fields of genetics and behaviour psychology. "There might be genetic differences between children that make one more temperamental, but with upbringing you can erase those differences," says McGill University Prof. Moshe Szyf. "That puts a certain responsibility on the shoulder of parents. They cannot say, 'I've a kid with bad genes.' " Yes, we emerge from the womb with certain traits and tendencies, but the consensus among experts is, with the right guidance and direction, they can be altered.