- Joined
- Jul 14, 2008
- Messages
- 6,464
- Points
- 0
Generally many people migrate to provide their kids a headstart.
Aussie Thoughts
Ever thought what if kids get into trouble?
Today's kids are faced with so many challenges.
1. What if they are not used to their new school environment or classmates?
Fortunately, when kids are young, they get used to the new environment easily. There may be occasional fights at school because of the Singapore accent. Chances of bully are present too, I am not surprised that it is the Singapore kids who are the bullies - judging from the number of times my relatives have to meet up the school teachers.
And then ... kids grow up
2. How to deal with drug issues? I know a Singapore kid who tried weeds - he stayed over a friend's place and older brother was using a bong. He curious so tried once.
OK. Singapore is a "clean" place, parents may not even know how drugs look like, let alone talk to their kids. I used to be 100% against any form of illicit drugs until I realise that tobacco is also a drug. I cannot explain away the mental & health issues caused by smoking tobacco, so I decided to find out more about drugs.
But so the Singapore "kid" tried weeds, and know how to use a bong

There are 2 good outcomes from this. phew!
2.1 He thinks it is not cool
2.2 He is not going to try weeds again or experiment with schedule 8 (I think it is 8 anyway) drugs - eg heroin,cocaine or party drugs, XTC, purple, Meth, etc
Reason: He wouldn't talk to his parents on certain things but he will talk to my partner these little secrets knowing that she will not betray him. So, it is a relief that Singapore kid has someone to confide in and my partner will provide the appropriate guidance.
I think parents will be relieved to know that son is not finding out mis-information from internet or friends, but my partner and I will not let them know that their son is in good hands. In order not to betray Singapore kid.
It is important to realise that the world does not fall down when parents find out their kids are experimenting with drugs. It is important to know what kind of drugs are involved and whether they have serious consequences.
It does not matter where the person live. In high society suburbs like Nedlands and Dalkeith, drugs use are still present. Of course it is best if kids do not know or see drugs, but it is not easy to shield kids. Best to educae them.
In Perth, there is even a dedicated Parent's Drug information program to support parents. Nationally, there is a family support line. These people are good because they are set up by people who lost kids through drugs and want to help others.
http://www.druginfo.adf.org.au/contact-numbers/help-and-support
Real story below.
= = = = = = = =
WA top cop says he loves his jailed son
By Angie Raphael, AAP
September 2, 2011, 4:57 pm
tweet
West Australian Police Commissioner Karl O'Callaghan says it is a "tough day" for him as a father after his son was sentenced to 16 months in prison over a drug lab explosion.
Russell Joseph O'Callaghan, 30, was sentenced in the Perth District Court on Friday after pleading guilty in April to attempting to manufacture the prohibited drug methamphetamine.
O'Callaghan was arrested and charged following a clandestine drug lab explosion on March 20 at a Department of Housing unit at Carlisle, in Perth's south, in which he and four others suffered burns.
Two children, aged three and four, escaped injury.
O'Callaghan spent more than two weeks in hospital for treatment to burns to his head, shoulders and arms.
Two other men were charged with similar offences and their cases are still before the Magistrates Court.
Mr O'Callaghan told reporters on Friday that he had seen "enormous" progress by his son, who had become a mentor for other drug addicts.
"He has made some enormous steps forward in the past few months and he needs to continue to move in that direction if he's going to return to a normal life," the commissioner said.
Mr O'Callaghan said he had last spoken with his son on Thursday night over the phone and said he was "in a good space" ahead of sentencing.
"The last thing I said to him was that `I love you' and I said that because we both knew that there was a very high possibility that he would go to prison today," he said.
Mr O'Callaghan said he hoped his son could continue to receive treatment in prison so that he did not relapse.
He said that, as police commissioner, he believed it was an "appropriate" sentence for what was a "very dangerous and foolish" act.
During sentencing submissions on Thursday, O'Callaghan's lawyer Mark Andrews told the court his client had an on-off addiction to drugs which began in his teenage years.
Mr Andrews said O'Callaghan's father had tried to "effectively rescue" his son in 2009 by inviting him to stay in his home as long as he severed ties to his former drug associates, but O'Callaghan eventually relapsed.
He said O'Callaghan had a "relatively peripheral role" in the offence by driving the group to a chemist to buy cold and flu tablets and did not actually manufacture the drugs.
In sentencing on Friday, Judge Felicity Davis said she accepted that O'Callaghan was producing the drugs for his own use and not for commercial gain.
The judge also accepted that O'Callaghan had cooperated with police and was remorseful, even suffering from post-traumatic stress.
However, she said the offence was too great to warrant a suspended prison sentence.
"As you know from your own experience, it (methamphetamine) is a dangerous and addictive drug," Judge Davis told O'Callaghan.
She said the need for general deterrence was important because illegal drug laboratories posed a serious danger in the community and "people must be deterred from bringing it (drugs) into existence".
O'Callaghan had his sentence reduced by six months after he agreed to testify against two other men allegedly involved in the attempted manufacture of the drug.
Judge Davis ordered that O'Callaghan be eligible for parole after eight months.
Outside court, Mr Andrews said he was confident O'Callaghan would continue his rehabilitation.
"He's made great strides in that regard already and I have no reason to believe that he won't continue this as best he can during his period of incarceration and thereafter," he said.
Mr Andrews said the sentence handed down to O'Callaghan should serve as a warning to others.
Last edited: