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How can parents guide a teen who starts quoting inappropriate jokes from online memes? 

Parenting Perspective 

When a teenager begins quoting crude or inappropriate jokes from online memes, it is often a reflection of peer influence or a desire to fit in with the prevailing digital culture. Humour is a powerful way for teenagers to connect socially, but when that humour becomes vulgar or disrespectful, it can begin to normalise values that contradict your family’s principles. The key for parents is to find a balance: discouraging the behaviour without making their child feel attacked, while also offering healthier ways to be funny and sociable. 

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Address the Behaviour Calmly 

Instead of reacting with shock or a harsh lecture, you could calmly say: ‘I noticed that joke was not very respectful. Do you understand why that kind of humour can sometimes be harmful?’ This approach opens reflection rather than causing your teenager to become defensive and rebellious. 

Explain Why It Matters 

Help your teenager to understand that constant exposure to crude or vulgar humour can reshape a person’s way of thinking and can desensitise the heart to things that are genuinely harmful. Show them how repeating such jokes, even without bad intentions, can hurt other people or lower their own dignity in the eyes of others. 

Offer Positive Alternatives 

Encourage them to find and enjoy light, clean humour. You could even share some family-friendly memes or funny videos together. This shows them that humour does not have to be vulgar to be enjoyable and that it is possible to connect with others through laughter that is pure. 

Reinforce Respect in Speech 

Make it clear that while it is normal to want to join in with what their peers are doing, true strength of character comes from choosing words that reflect maturity and values, not from blindly copying every online trend. 

By guiding your teenager without shaming them, you can help them to realise that humour is a powerful tool, and that learning to use it wisely is an important part of growing into a respected and well-liked young adult. 

Spiritual Insight 

Islam places a great emphasis on the importance of guarding one’s tongue and avoiding all forms of vulgarity. While a good sense of humour and a light-hearted disposition are encouraged, these qualities must never be allowed to cross the line into obscenity or disrespect. 

Allah Almighty states in the noble Quran at Surah Al Ahzaab (33), Verses 70: 

O those of you, who are believers, seek piety from Allah (Almighty) and always speak with words of blatant accuracy. 

This verse reminds us that every word we speak matters. As believers, we are called to be conscious of Allah and to ensure our speech is always dignified and just. 

It is recorded in Jami Tirmidhi, 1977, that the holy Prophet Muhammad ﷺ said: 

‘The believer is not one who taunts, curses, speaks obscenities, or is foul.’ 

This teaching provides a clear definition of the kind of speech a believer should avoid. It shows that using crude or vulgar humour is in direct contradiction with the noble character that a believer should aspire to. 

By connecting your guidance to these timeless teachings, you can help your teenager to understand that humour can still be joyful and creative, but that it must always reflect the respect and values of their faith. Over time, they can learn that true confidence is found not in copying inappropriate trends, but in carrying themselves with dignity before both people and Allah Almighty. 

Click below to discover meaningful books that nurture strong values in your child and support you on your parenting journey

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