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Britain's Youngest Mums 2006







Munkfish

Well-known member
May 1, 2006
12,090
my mates 20 and hes had his 1st at 17 married at 18 had his second at 20! pays his own rent and both of them work and have brought up the nicest little boy in the world so it can be done! they just need to try and want the best for there children and not just want a kid to push round and dress up in nike traksuits and small trainers! :nono:
 


Starry

Captain Of The Crew
Oct 10, 2004
6,733
Muzzman said:
Hmmm... Myane a poll should be posted to ascertain whether it is or is not.

Matter of opinions, I don't think they are chavs and they are doing the hardest thing in the world and all of them bar Melissa and the thirteen year old are doing a damn good job.
 








Muzzman

Pocket Rocket
Jul 8, 2003
5,457
Here and There
Starry said:
Matter of opinions, I don't think they are chavs and they are doing the hardest thing in the world and all of them bar Melissa and the thirteen year old are doing a damn good job.

I'm not even watching it.. can't see how it makes for interesting telly, but each to their own.. it's got babies into so I suppose it must be of interest to those that want them.
 




Billy the Fish

Technocrat
Oct 18, 2005
17,594
Haywards Heath
brightonfan_86 said:
That 14 year old is a disgrace, leaving her own mum to look after the baby.
I could easily be quite harsh here but I won't.
She's still a young child herself kev, do you suggest that she drops out of school? All that would achieve is a life on benefits.
 






Starry

Captain Of The Crew
Oct 10, 2004
6,733
brightonfan_86 said:
The 13 year old aint coping at all.

I'm 30 and my baby is nine weeks old and I don't cope well either. It happens. Whether you are 13 or 40. If you find it hard to bond with your baby you need support, help and encouragement not ridicule.
 


Billy the Fish

Technocrat
Oct 18, 2005
17,594
Haywards Heath
brightonfan_86 said:
She wasn't at school though, she was with her new boyfriend.
Sorry, only just turned on, I was talking about the one who was at school, she's 14 as well.
I see the one you mean now, very immature, she's got alot of growing up to do
 






Gully

Monkey in a seagull suit.
Apr 24, 2004
16,812
Way out west
Talking of monkeys, I watched the programme on Beeb2 about chimpanzees and whether they could be classed as humans as they share 99.4% of their genes with us. At the end they showed a bonobo who had developed the ability to interact with humans through one of those touch screen thingys, very clever.
 


Buzzer

Languidly Clinical
Oct 1, 2006
26,121
I know it sounds like eugenics but if you need the RSPCA to check that you are able to look after a rescue dog before you get one and considering all the legal red tape and checks that couples have to go through before they adopt is it right that any young toe-rag can get some horribly immature slapper in the family way again and again and again?

I'm sitting on the fence on this one as I really don't know the answer.
 






Goring Gull

New member
Jul 5, 2003
6,725
Huddersfield
Starry said:
Matter of opinions, I don't think they are chavs and they are doing the hardest thing in the world and all of them bar Melissa and the thirteen year old are doing a damn good job.

That Melissa look at teh types she was hanging about with - chavvy scummers - she did seem to sort herself out though by the end off the programme.
 


Starry

Captain Of The Crew
Oct 10, 2004
6,733
Goring Gull said:
That Melissa look at teh types she was hanging about with - chavvy scummers - she did seem to sort herself out though by the end off the programme.

Exactly. And it all took was a little help and support when they went away to that house. Not the ridicule that so many teenage mums are unfortunately victim of.
 


Goring Gull

New member
Jul 5, 2003
6,725
Huddersfield
Starry said:
Exactly. And it all took was a little help and support when they went away to that house. Not the ridicule that so many teenage mums are unfortunately victim of.

Big problem in society i'm afraid at a loss to know what to do about about it.

One thing of intrest though, they all seem to come from shall we say less well off backgrounds why? Or do girls from more well to do families get in the same problems and teh parents frogmarch them up to the abortion clinic?
 
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Starry

Captain Of The Crew
Oct 10, 2004
6,733
A little of both.

Ack. I have written and rewritten this a bunch of times to try and avoid offending anyone.

The parents of the girls last night - four of the mums had their first baby aged sixteen or less. And it just seemed like it was not.that.big a deal because mum did the same, sort of thing. I only know one person who has had a baby in their early teens.

I'm not sure what would make someone well to do, but my children attend a fee paying school, the children do pony club at the weekends and holiday numerous times a year, blah, blah. My sons best friend from school is the youngest of five and his oldest sister is fifteen and has a baby. It's a Catholic school so I doubt the frog march to the abortion clinic was an option! lol Also, the girl had the baby and as far as anyone looking in on the family would know the baby is not hers but her sister and is being raised by her parents. I don't know how common that is though.

I don't know really. It just makes me sad that children are having babies and the rest of society rips into them for doing so instead of giving them the support they need to make it through. Hearing Charlotte speak about not even knowing she was pregnant until she went into labour. Her parents let her down with the lack of birds and the bees chat and then there had been no form of sex education in school. My parents were very honest with us when we talked about sex, babies and periods and we all knew what was what. But Charlotte had had none of that. :/
 
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