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Teenagers

What do I say really to my boy that has been playing on train tracks

28 replies

Shinyshoes1 · 12/05/2013 07:56

He's 16 next month FFs . He knows the dangers yet he still found the need to playing in HIGH SPEED Tain tracks

I don't want to be calm I want to punch him in the face for his idiocy

I don't want to give the whole " I'm disappointed " speech

I don't want to talk to him at the moment for fear of losing my temper

Stupid stupid stupid boy

He's grounded for life ( obviously not for life ) but he's not going out as far as I can see anytime soon. I've taken his phone from him I don't know what else to do

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OnTheNingNangNong · 12/05/2013 07:59

Can you contact the British Transport Police! I know they'll be happy to tell him about the body parts spread for miles etc...

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OnTheNingNangNong · 12/05/2013 07:59

? Rather than ! Sorry.

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SillyBeardyDaddyman · 12/05/2013 08:00

I agree. The BTP might be able to introduce him to someone who's been involved in an incident.

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Shinyshoes1 · 12/05/2013 08:01

Yes I could what a good idea . I could get in touch with them

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Babybeesmama · 12/05/2013 08:03

I'm sure if you google it you could find some stories online of things that have happened to people who did same thing? Might shock him? Scary tho isn't it! You just want to keep them safe! X

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UnChartered · 12/05/2013 08:05

Agree with letting Transport Police tell him how many pieces they've had to pick up, and maybe some drivers too, to recount the terrifying experience of seeing a person a few hundred yards ahead when they have zero chance of stopping.

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lisad123everybodydancenow · 12/05/2013 08:05

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ClaraOswald · 12/05/2013 08:08

When I was a teenager, the toddler brother of a school friend was hit a killed by a train. He had wriggled through a gap in the fence on a family walk. The family nearly d

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ClaraOswald · 12/05/2013 08:08

Destroyed itself.

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LynetteScavo · 12/05/2013 08:14

I would be shouting and giving him the "you are a fucking idiot" speech.

Every year before the summer holiday we were shown a film/given a talk about the dangers of the railway. Partly because there had once been an incident near the school. It really got to us. I think your DS needs something similar.

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Bigwuss · 12/05/2013 09:24

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JugglingFromHereToThere · 12/05/2013 09:35

As well as all these great ideas could you help your DS get into some other thing that definitely didn't involve train-tracks. I'm thinking of something like skate-boarding or BMX biking at a skate park (my DS enjoys that alot)
Talk to others he goes there with and their parents ?
Just a few more ideas.
Good luck !
There's quite a good "ad" on TV at the moment about a girl getting distracted at a crossing and getting hit by a train, has he seen that one ?

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CheeseStrawWars · 12/05/2013 09:38

American, but recent - a 17 year old boy was killed by train after playing "chicken" on the tracks with 3 mates. He died almost exactly a month ago. Tell your son you don't want to be watching a video talking about his death:

www.examiner.com/video/teen-struck-by-train-may-have-been-playing-chicken-1

So stupid. So avoidable.

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StoicButStressed · 12/05/2013 10:15

Tell your son if he is not 'lucky enough' to be killed instantly by a train, he will suffer agonising and life changing injuries.

Tell your son if he is not 'lucky enough' to be killed instantly by stepping on a live line, he will suffer either an excruciating death or be left with 3rd degree burns and probably either loss of limbs and/or senses as could lose sight or hearing c/o the burns.

Tell your son you don't want to bury him or have to be his carer for the rest of his life.

Tell him that if he thinks 'he' will 'never' be one of those statistics then he is being - in teen speak - bare thick.

Tell him that, him and you apart, he will haunt a train driver forever as trains CAN'T SWERVE; CAN'T STOP QUICKLY; ARE NOW SO SILENT YOU DON'T HEAR THEM COMING UNTIL IT IS TOO LATE.

Tell your son other Mums - who doesn't even KNOW him - share your 'want to punch him in the face for his idiocy'. That he HAS risked his life and put YOU in a place where you could be burying him.

Sorry for brutal bluntness but my brother in law works on railways and has had to supervise pieces (of what was an alive & well teenager a few seconds previously) of what was left of a body off the track.

Would also suggest you slam him in front of PC and watch the 'Perspectives' vid at //www.rail-life.co.uk (& poss the Professor Green too if he thinks it's just parents who are boring enough to know the horrifyingly real risks of train tracks).

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stargirl1701 · 12/05/2013 10:25

Help him recognise that his judgement is impaired with regard to risk because he is a teenage boy? Agree on a 'risky' hobby he can pursue to get the adrenalin rush - rock climbing, bungy (sp?) jumping, sky diving, etc?

Is there an older male he could chat to? Uncle, older cousin, youth worker? It's often easier to talk to someone outside the family. My aunt has asked me to chat through some things with my younger cousins on occasion. I'm not mum and I'm closer in age to them but, hopefully, with a bit more common sense!

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flow4 · 12/05/2013 10:55

Don't contact the transport police unless you are prepared to deal with them prosecuting him. Round here they always press charges if they can - for at least trespass and sometimes for something like reckless endangerment. You may intend for your son just to get a good talking-to, and instead find he gets a police record. Make sure you think that's a price worth paying.

You also need to know why he was so stupid. The boys round here who do this are always off their heads. Skunk and m-cat are widely-available drugs, and powerful disinhibitors, making them feel they can do anything. Is this a possibility in your DS's case?

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StoicButStressed · 12/05/2013 11:12

He's under 16 so if that occured flow, suspect worst he would get is a caution rather than a 'police record' (& doubt that would occur anyway in a scenario where it was a parent ringing to ask them to help educate their child).

Agree with you 100% re the why but knowing the why won't - on it's own - prevent him being the next statistic if he/his mates do it again.

In a straight choice, I'd rather my DS had a caution; WAS shown the reality of fatalities; and never risked it again rather than my DS have no expertise from the BRP/no major wake-up call and end up another victim. 38 people were killed in 2011 on railway lines and hundreds more left with 'life-changing' injuries. Of those fatalities and injuries, the highest single % bracket is boys in that age range.

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OnTheNingNangNong · 12/05/2013 11:20

At the end of the day, he's not got a care about losing his life on the railway, but a caution may show him the error of his ways?

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MrsDmitriTippensKrushnic · 12/05/2013 11:21

My sister is a Project Manager for Network Rail - she deals with the people who scrape up teenage boys from the sides of tracks/trains for a living and the drivers who are too traumatised to work again after hitting them... She might have some good ideas (after she rants at me for a while - she gets very wound up about this sort of thing) Will come back to the thread later.

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MrsDmitriTippensKrushnic · 12/05/2013 11:34

Okay she's just text me back...

She says that generally NR do their educational spiel in Primary Schools but she'll have a look tomorrow as they have some pretty graphic and hard hitting safety videos that they use in training. Also, one of her work friends is a NR Community Officer. She goes to teach/educate kids who have been caught trespassing the dangers so DSis will see what advice she has for you. She also says, does he understand what the impact of 400 tonnes of train hitting him at 80mph will do to him (exploded bodies and little pieces to pick up) because it scares the crap out of her!

I remember how shocked DSis was after she did her track training. They had to stand 1m away from the edge of the track as a high speed train passed, so they understood the forces involved. She said the feeling of being sucked towards the train (plus the noise and sheer presence of the train) was absolutely terrifying.

If she can come up with anything to pass to you, I'll PM you. Smile

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MrsDmitriTippensKrushnic · 12/05/2013 11:41

Also... (she just text me again) if you PM me your general area I can give you the contact details for your local NR youth worker Smile

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Shinyshoes1 · 12/05/2013 14:26

Thanks all mrsdimitri

I'm in Romford , Essex

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Shinyshoes1 · 12/05/2013 14:27

That would be appreciated very much

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Shinyshoes1 · 12/05/2013 14:30

It just makes me sick to my stomach the absolute idiocy of it

He volunteers at a centre and has a work placement that looks after vulnerable adults and children with learning difficulties he wants to go into this field when he grows up

How can he be a role model when he behaves this way ?

Also he forfeits everything if he gets a caution that will flag up on his crb

Stupid stupid boy

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Nehru · 12/05/2013 14:30


PLay him this - will work better than you ranting
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