Pubdate: Sat, 07 Aug 2004 Source: Arusha Times, The (Tanzania) Copyright: 2004 Arusha Times. Contact: http://www.arushatimes.co.tz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2943 Note: The writer is professional swimming coach and a sports consultant based in Arusha Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) HOW DRUG USE BECOMES A HABIT In too many cases the young experimenter takes drugs until he is "hooked." Assume that in a teen-ager's home, one or both parents smoke cigarettes and use alcohol. The teenager interprets this as his parents' permission for him to do the same. Thus he is easily vulnerable to the appeals of his fellow teen-agers when they urge him to join them in experimenting with cigarettes, liquor, and even marijuana. These three practices smoking tobacco, drinking liquor, and smoking marijuana are tragic combination. Using them, the teen-ager becomes tolerant of this kind of conduct and may try the more potent drugs. Not everyone, of course, who smokes cigarettes and drinks liquor, indulges in drug abuse as we usually define it. But practically every person on hard drugs first used cigarettes, liquor, and marijuana. Teen-agers are often cautioned to be on guard against adult drug peddlers. However, it is the teen-age pusher who usually supplies the drugs high school students' use. He not only encourages his friends to experiment with drugs, but also profits financially. Once a person has used a drug enough times to experience its effects, he no longer has to be persuaded. what are these effects? The drug influences his thinking, his attitudes, and his moods. They make the circumstances of life seem different from reality. They make him feel comfortable, peaceful, and secure, in spite of his problems, his anxieties, or his lack of ability. The teen-ager or young adult struggling with unsolved personal problems is the most likely candidate for drug addiction. But drugs do not help him face reality with courage. On the contrary, they make him less willing to cope with life's difficulties and stresses, or even unable to do so. Why should he put forth the effort to solve his problems when, under the influence of drugs, his problems seems to vanish? It is said that the typical drug addict is a 17-year-old male who is out of school, out of work, and ashamed or embarrassed because of an impoverished family background. This does not mean, however, that the teen-ager who comes from a respectable family is immune to the danger. Young people from "good families" have their problems too. There may be unresolved tensions between the young person and his parents. He may be lonely, even though a member of a respectable family. He may feel unable to live up to his parents' expectations. He may feel guilty over some previous misconduct, or feel betrayed by someone of his own age. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake