Pubdate: Wed, 8 Oct 2003 Source: Metro Santa Cruz (CA) Contact: 2003, Metro Publishing Inc. Website: http://www.metroactive.com/cruz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2346 Author: Jessica Neuman Beck Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) TRUTH OR D.A.R.E. Meredith Maran says America is long overdue for a rethinking of how it deals with teens who use drugs We all remember the old commercial: "This is your brain." Crack. Hiss. "This is your brain on drugs. Any questions?" Trouble is, it's answers that are lacking, not questions. In fact, parents have plenty of questions when it comes to dealing with adolescent drug abuse. Questions like "How do I tell if my child is an addict?"--which, it turns out, may be entirely the wrong question. "I don't use the term 'drug-addicted teens,'" says Meredith Maran, who'll discuss her book Dirty: A Search for Answers Inside America's Teenage Drug Epidemic Oct. 8 at Capitola Book Cafe. "Teenagers should never be labeled as addicts. We throw these terms around in conversation and it doesn't make that much difference, but in treatment it makes a huge difference. Addiction treatment involves believing that the person who's an addict can never again use any chemical substance without falling again into a pit of addiction. If a 40-year-old wants to say 'I'm an addict' and saying that is a big step toward their own peace of mind and their own ability to function, that's fine. But to call a teenager an addict is a pretty serious indictment." Dirty follows three real-life teens, Mike, Tristan and Zalika (not their real names, naturally). They're drastically different kids from drastically different families, but with one thing in common: drugs. Mike has been busted for doing speed. Tristan's drug of choice is pot. Zalika, the youngest, has been a crack-dealing prostitute since the age of 12. The three kids are in different treatment programs, each one designed to rehabilitate. The problem is, the kids aren't completely convinced that they need rehabilitation. And neither is Maran. "I think kids should be judged by a different standard, and the research supports that. If you meet a 40-year-old who's smoking pot every day and having two drinks every night, the odds are when he's 50 he'll still be doing that. If you meet a teenager who's smoking pot every day, and drinking every weekend, the odds are when he's 30 he won't be doing it. People don't really factor that in." That's not to say that the substance-abuse problems teenagers face aren't serious. One of the kids in the book, Mike, is physically addicted to methamphetamines. "It's a very addictive chemical substance, and you can't pretend that it's not an issue," Maran says. "But at the same time, I could have a car accident and get addicted to Vicodin or codeine, and then get off it." Dirty also chronicles Maran's struggles with her own son, Jesse, and his teenage drug problems. Jesse is now chemical-free and working as a minister and counselor to drug-abusing teens. "He said he felt he had been through a long dark tunnel, and that when he got out the other side, his responsibility was to go back in to the tunnel and pull some more people out with him," Maran says. "He's really amazing." Ideally, Maran would also like to see more programs that combine academics with counseling. "Why should a kid have to get arrested and get in trouble with drugs and get kicked out of their parents' house before they get to be in a classroom with 10 kids instead of 40?" she says. "I've never met a kid who couldn't benefit from that." The prevalence of drugs and the peer pressure to experiment with them is a very visible problem, but Maran says there's another side to it--one that can be just as harmful to adolescent development. "One mother called me and said she was trying to put her kid into residential treatment because she found out that her daughter smoked pot once a month or so on weekends," Maran says. "Parents are freaking out because they find out their teenager is using drugs without understanding how that drug use fits into the teenager's life and whether it's having a negative effect on their kid or not." In Maran's opinion, the best thing a parent can do is keep believing in their kid. "It's really hard to do. It was hard for me at times with Jesse. I think parents really need a lot of help, and in this society the way it's set up we don't have the whole village anymore," she says. "One of the main things I recommend is to have other adults in a kid's life that a teenager can talk to and trust." For Mike, Tristan and Zalika, that adult has been Maran. She's still in contact with them. "Tristan is doing really well," she says, "and the other two are still pretty much doing what they were doing." It's hard, she says, but at the same time good things have come out of the experience. "Mike's mom and I have become really close friends," Maran says. "She actually has become a big part of the whole book promotion. She came to the first reading, and she's going to come to all the readings. She said it's actually become her healing to talk about this, which is really brave of her. I couldn't have done it myself." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk