Pubdate: Mon, 10 Dec 2001 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2001, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.fyitoronto.com/torsun.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Marianne Meed Ward Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) KIDS WILL BE KIDS That's Why Traditional Ways Of Fighting Drug Use Don't Work I have had, shall we say, a colourful past. Have I got stories! Like the time I filled a page with "I am so stoned" in my Grade 9 typing class instead of the assigned exercise. (I wasn't caught. I threw up shortly afterward, the effects of too much smoke and too little food. Trust me, no one wanted to go near my typewriter.) Or the time I went to church still drunk from the night before and passed out in the aisle. (No one noticed. It was a Pentecostal church. People fall over all the time. It's called being "slain in the spirit.") Or the time a cop chased me across a soccer field in high heels and a dress (me, not the cop) after seeing three of us smoking pot at the goalposts. We were sent to the principal's office. I threw my stash in his garbage can when he left to find the suspension forms. I don't know what the janitor did with it. I could go on. And I bet you wouldn't stop me. Because it's a good read. A scandalous one too. (What's an ethics columnist doing dishing details of her debauched debutante years? Trying saying that after the fourth martini.) You see what I just did? I entertained you for a minute. Maybe made you laugh. And maybe I made it all up, just to have a story to tell. And that's one reason why a 17-year-old girl like Nicole Malik, from a small town, who'd only tried drugs once before, might do it again, despite the risk, and wind up dead, probably from an overdose. I don't know what Malik's last hours were like, or what her motives were for anything she might have done. But I was 17 once. And I had friends who were 17. And the prime motivator for excessive, if not downright illegal, behaviour was to answer that potentially mortifying Monday morning question: So what did you do this weekend? Saying that you watched Friends with mom and dad doesn't cut it. Teenagers want to collect experiences, to live life to the fullest, and to have lots of stories to tell. They want to be interesting people with, well, colourful lives. Just like adults. And that's why all the usual ways of combatting teen drug use won't work. Like telling your kids they can't go to that bar, or that club, because drugs might be present. Kids will sneak out. And you haven't given them any protection for the temptations they might face. Or like trying to scare your kids straight with stories of overdoses, or car wrecks or date rapes, all because of drugs. Kids never believe it will happen to them. (Neither do adults, for that matter.) Or like trying to stigmatize drugs and their users. It will work for a while. Crack and heroin are considered the loser's drugs - for now. But there will always be a fashionable drug. Today it's Ecstasy - what Malik reportedly took the night she died. It's a stimulant and a hallucinogen, and it can be lethal. It has left 20 people dead in Ontario since 1998. What will work? Prepare your kids. Tell them to buy their own drinks, watch them at all times, and never accept anything from a stranger. They're less likely to get a spiked beverage that way. Educate them. Tell them what drugs do, how little it takes to get high and how to use drugs safely. Like, say, alcohol. Don't have more than one drink an hour if you want to stay standing. That type of thing. Respect your kids. They'll probably know more than you about drugs. Pool your knowledge. Provide alternatives - there are lots of drug-free ways to have a good time. Be practical. If they insist on taking drugs, suggest a buddy system, with a sober pal watching over them. Share your own stories. It carries more credibility to say "I've been there and I advise against it" than to say "Just say no." This is what I hope I'll tell my kids when the time comes. Only they will get to find out what the real stories are from my youth. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh