Long article...... worth reading

http://getahead.rediff.com/report/2010/may/18/facebook-nightmare-a-parent-speaks.htm
Bindi Mehra* likes to describe herself as a 'chilled out mom'. At 48, the 
people this single mother bonds with best are at least 20 years younger to her. 
And while Mehra looks everything like a mother 'should', she says that on most 
occasions she's closer to her children's generation than her own. While she and 
her son bond well, with her adopted daughter things have been very different.

Last year has been nothing short of hell for Mehra. Most of her time had been 
spent making trips to her daughter's psychologist, her school counsellor and 
the police station. And it all started when the young one logged on to an 
innocuous-sounding website called Facebook.

Bindi Mehra tells her story:

Vidya*, my daughter must have been a little over 12 years old when she got 
herself a Facebook account. It started off as harmless chatting and adding 
people she was friends with. But before I knew it, Vidya was adding people she 
had never met.

I used to monitor her account from time to time, whenever I got the chance, and 
two years later, random names I hadn't heard of suddenly started popping up on 
the screen. Meanwhile, I also began to notice that money from my wallet was 
constantly disappearing. Initially I thought it was my carelessness. When it 
became a regular phenomenon, I got suspicious.

To keep track of Vidya's online activities, I created a Facebook account for 
myself too. I sent her a friend request she never approved, insisting that 
there was a virus on the site. It was after much persuasion that I actually 
became part of her contacts. Some of the names on her list were alien to me. 
But two names in that list were soon to make my life a living hell.

Of them, one was Ashutosh Sinha*, a small-time DJ and an engineering student 
who, at 18 years of age, was an adult and four years older than Vidya. I could 
never figure out how he found my daughter's profile but I knew that they had 
met at least a couple of times, if not more. It made me uncomfortable. But 
there was more to come.

My daughter would be in front of the computer screen for hours, then on the 
phone chatting with him. All attempts to get her off the phone/PC were proving 
futile.

One day I received a call from my ex-husband. He told me that she had dropped 
by at his place and asked him for Rs 5,000, which he refused. Accidentally (and 
fortunately) she had also left behind a SIM card that got him curious. He 
inserted the card into his cellphone and discovered messages from someone she 
knew in Goa [ Images<http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=goa> ] and 
had run out of cash. Looking at the message history, we realised that Ashutosh 
had been hounding my daughter for money for over two days.

Now I knew where my money was disappearing to and I confronted Vidya. She 
insisted that he was nothing more than a friend. But the idea of asking a 
14-year-old for such a huge sum of money put me off him. A long series of 
arguments, shouting and cursing followed. She had been seeing a psychologist 
(to cope with a minor learning disability) who has helped her quite a bit in 
the past. But during this phase, nothing the psychologist said or did was 
helping.

The unpleasantness at home continued; soon, months had passed since she was 
exposed. But there was no repentance or a desire to change. Money would keep 
disappearing mysteriously and arguments and bitter fights would follow. I was 
at my wits' end.

To add to the complications, I then found out that the SIM she had forgotten at 
her father's place was not the one I had given her!

This is where Ramesh Chauhan* came into the picture. Ramesh, 16, was also 
Vidya's Facebook friend. Although I never did find out how the two connected, 
they were always talking to each other for hours on the phone. The calls would 
be made in the middle of the night and would go on till the wee hours of the 
morning.

Since Ramesh didn't want to spend money, he had encouraged Vidya to buy SIM 
cards on my name, using my driver's license. She had secured about half a dozen 
cards that way and the one my ex-husband discovered was only one of them. 
During this time, my phone and Internet bills had doubled. I was paying over Rs 
8,000 per month and there was no stopping.

I knew I had to get these people out of my daughter's life. It took just a 
couple of warning calls to Ramesh to have him cut off contact with her, but it 
would be awhile before Ashutosh was out of the picture. By now it had been 
almost a year since this saga started. I had begun to really tire of it. The 
constant fights and cursing had taken its toll on me. I had to seek psychiatric 
help too. Worse, for the first time in 14 years, I had taken to beating my 
child. I was merciless and she was unrepentant. This was a regular scene at my 
house all through that one year -- money would disappear; I would confront her; 
she would lie; I would expose her; she would curse; I would beat her; her 
cursing would not stop.

Meanwhile, Ashutosh had been playing on her insecurities. He had convinced her 
that her brother was showered with all the affection, since he was my 
biological son and she was an adopted child. Vidya had become a completely 
different person. She was not the child I had adopted and seen growing up 
before my eyes. My biggest fear was that one day she'd come back home either 
pregnant or with AIDS. There were times I wanted to kill her and myself and put 
an end to our suffering. There were times I regretted having adopted her. But 
she was my daughter and I had to look after her.

Finally, I decided to go to the police. A lady inspector at the station sat me 
down and heard me out. She was the one who showed me the larger picture. I 
learned that there is a circle of boys in the age group of 18 and 21 who 
befriend young girls on Facebook so that they can influence and extract money 
from them. Ashutosh was one such boy. He'd posed as someone much younger than 
he really was and used my daughter to make money for himself.

And he was very bold. Despite my speaking to him on the phone and telling him 
to stop contacting Vidya, he refused to cower down. In fact, when the lady 
inspector telephoned him from the station, he tried back-answering her. When he 
was ordered to show up at the police station, he turned up with his father and 
a lawyer. The inspector warned the boy of dire consequences. It is illegal to 
take money off a minor and the boy was over 18, which meant he could simply be 
jailed. After a lot of threatening, he was put in his place. This was more than 
a year after he had met my daughter. He was told not to get in touch with her 
and avoid all her advances and calls.

To this day I have the SIM card containing the messages in which he asked my 
daughter for money. It is evidence; even though the stealing has stopped, there 
is always fear lurking at the back of my head.

My daughter and I are connected on Facebook but I also have a fake account 
through which I keep track of all the people on her list. Ashutosh and Ramesh 
are no longer on it.

I continue to keep track of my money. Every fortnight, I check her mobile phone 
bills and any calls made at unearthly hours are questioned. It is over for now, 
but I can never be entirely sure.

Tips for FB parents:

1. Understand the dangers of Facebook. You don't want your child having a 
cigarette at 12 or a drink at 13. FB, under special circumstances can be 
equally, if not more dangerous. Children must be taught to use it under 
supervision.

2. Do not allow them to put up their contact details.

3. Ensure they do not put up their schedules -- like where they are at what 
time.

4. Do not allow them to send invites or accept strangers' friendship requests.

5. Watch out for changes in mood/behaviour. If these changes are drastic, in 
all probability an external influence is at work.

6. Insist they add their parents, siblings or older cousins. That way kids have 
to exhibit a degree of restraint.

7. Get tech savvy.

8. Always have one ID under a pseudonym. Your son's girlfriend or your 
daughter's boyfriend may have blocked you. In that case having another ID helps.

9. Keep track of whom they chat the most with. Verify that it is a known person.

10. Don't give in to blackmail. Your job is to be a watchman. Someday they will 
be grateful to you, even if that day seems far away for now.

DISCLAIMER:
Notice : This e-mail and any attachments may contain information which is 
confidential to the addressee and may also be privileged. If you are not the 
intended recipient of this e-mail, you may not copy, forward, disclose or 
otherwise use it in any way whatsoever. If you have received this e-mail by 
mistake, please e-mail the sender by replying to this message, and deleting the 
original and any printout thereof.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"BETTER PERSONALITY GROUP" group.
To post to this group, send email to better_personal...@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
better_personality+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/better_personality?hl=en.

Reply via email to