Pubdate: Tue, 26 Aug 2003 Source: Island Packet (SC) Copyright: 2003, The Island Packet Contact: http://www.islandpacket.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1514 Note: Originally published in the Chicago Tribune THE PARENT'S JOB Study: Life Itself Can Cause Problems For Teens Columbia University's National Center on Addiction says its annual study of American children and parents identified boredom, stress and extra money as pathways to substance abuse for young people. Why does this sound so intuitively wrong? Could it be that it's time to stop spending money on surveys that seem to miss the point completely and only add more murk to subject matter that is already murky enough? Judging from the results, the way to raise children in America is to keep them abjectly poor (25 uncommitted dollars a week seems to be the danger point), occupied in mundane tasks and, essentially, isolated from the realities of life, which are inherently stress-producing. Locking teenagers in the basement and forcing them to work on needlepoint and craft projects, for example, with the only payment being three hots and a cot, may sound progressive to the people at Columbia, but in the American heartland, we find a pocket moderately full of earned jack, some free time to spend it in, a handful of good friends and a little healthy stress is the recipe for a perfect adolescence. Parents might look to their own life experience as predictive for their children's behaviors. If you spent your teen years wrapped around a bong, for instance, it might be prudent to watch for that behavior in your children, have a genuine, thoughtful conversation with them, and move quickly to address the problem. The same holds true for alcohol and tobacco, both frightfully damaging to young people and worthy of all the concern and response we can muster. What obviously has little value is to ask children every day whether they have the red-flagged $25.40 in their pocket, are too bored and feel so much stress that they find the only adequate alternative is to smoke, drink or use other drugs. It is also better, Columbia reported, to go to a nice little high school instead of a huge high school. Students at schools with more than 1,200 students are twice as likely to abuse substances as those attending schools with fewer than 800 students. And there you have it, the formula for well-adjusted, substance-free teenagers. Keep them totally busy, totally broke, privately educated and, quite mysteriously, totally happy. That's totally not going to happen, of course. Drug and alcohol abuse, much experience indicates, doesn't generally involve a snap decision that flows from boredom, prosperity or too much stress. These are behaviors that shift from the experimental to the gradual to the profoundly involved state over a period of time. But even as they snake along their course, for the children who are most likely to face big substance problems over time, they present clues. The parent's job is not to ponder whether it was too much cash or too much stress or boredom (the perpetual condition and complaint of most teenagers) that caused the problem. It is to know how to watch for substance abuse problems and to know how to respond to them. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk