Summer is often a season filled with plans. Camps, vacations, pool days, boating trips, family gatherings, cookouts, sleepovers, and long weekends can quickly fill the calendar. For many parents, this season can feel exciting, but it can also feel stressful. There is pressure to create memories, keep children entertained, manage schedules, and make everything feel special. But sometimes, in the middle of all the planning, we forget something important:
They are not only listening to what we say. They are watching how we live. They are watching how we handle stress, how we talk to one another, how we spend our time, how we celebrate, how we relax, and how we cope.
Our words matter, but our environment matters too.
At National Family Partnership, we often talk about prevention through conversations. Those conversations are important. Children need clear messages about alcohol, drugs, vaping, peer pressure, and making healthy choices. But our message does not begin and end with our words.
It is wrapped up in the overall environment we create.
If we tell our children not to drink, but they see alcohol used as the center of every celebration, they notice. If we tell them to make healthy choices, but they see us using substances to manage stress, they notice. If happy hour is the weekly routine, and we come home affected by alcohol, they notice.
Children are always learning from us.
That does not mean parents have to be perfect. None of us are. It does mean we must be aware. We must understand that the examples we set can either strengthen or weaken the messages we are trying to give.
This is especially important during the summer months, when alcohol is often present at adult gatherings, parties, holidays, and boating events.
Boating and drinking is one example that deserves our attention. Many families spend time on the water during the summer, and children are often right there with us. They are watching who is drinking, who is driving the boat, who is making safety decisions, and whether adults are treating alcohol casually in situations that require responsibility.
The message we send in those moments matters.
We cannot tell young people to make safe choices while modeling risky ones ourselves. Prevention must be consistent. It must show up in what we say, what we allow, and what we demonstrate.
Our children need to see adults enjoying life without making alcohol the focus. They need to see us handle stress in healthy ways. They need to see us celebrate without overdoing it. They need to see us set limits, make safe decisions, and take responsibility for the environment around them.
This is not about judgment. It is about awareness.
Every parent and caregiver has the opportunity to pause and ask:
What message is my child receiving from my actions?
What does our home environment communicate?
What do our weekends teach?
What do our celebrations model?
What are my children learning from the way I handle stress?
These questions are not always easy, but they are important.
At National Family Partnership, our book Our Children Are Watching reminds us of this very truth. Children are shaped not only by what we tell them, but by what they see every day. They are paying attention to our choices, our habits, our tone, our priorities, and our example.
The good news is that small changes can make a big difference.
We can create homes where connection matters more than busyness.
We can create gatherings where fun does not have to revolve around alcohol.
We can create summer memories that are safe, meaningful, and healthy.
We can show our children that joy, rest, and celebration do not require risky choices.
Prevention begins with awareness. It begins when we recognize that our influence is powerful, even in ordinary moments.
This summer, I encourage every parent, grandparent, caregiver, and community member to slow down and consider the environment we are creating for our children. We do not have to plan the perfect summer. We do not have to fill every day with activities. We do not have to add more stress to our lives in an effort to create memories.
Sometimes, the most meaningful thing we can do is be present, be consistent, and be mindful of the example we are setting.
Our children are watching. Let’s give them something healthy, steady, and strong to follow.
With gratitude,
Peggy B. Sapp
President
National Family Partnership