Pubdate: Tue, 09 Nov 2004 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Calvin White Note: Calvin White has a degree in counselling psychology and has worked with teens for 30 years Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) STONED TEENS MISS OUT ON LIFE, VITAL ASPECTS OF DEVELOPMENT Administrators and counsellors rack their brains over how to educate students about drugs and alcohol yet still teach preventative strategies. It's a losing battle -- for many teens, partying means trying a substance. Alcohol remains the preferred means, with marijuana a close second. Due to the changing values of Canadian society regarding pot, there have been an increase in school suspensions for marijuana in the past two years. Kids translate the bid to decriminalize as meaning marijuana is not so bad, that smoking dope is no big deal. But it puts schools in a bind. Reefer madness warnings long ago shifted to the missive that marijuana was a gateway drug that leads to harder drugs. It was bad for you and illegal, to boot. Police and addictions speakers lead seminars, drug sniffing dogs are brought into schools, surveillance vans try to catch unwary tokers. But what's the point? Students caught using are suspended. School officials wag their fingers, parents express consternation and the kid walks out not swayed one iota. Of course, for every kid getting high, an adult is doing the same; parents, celebrities, star athletes, teachers. Kids know it. It adds up to widescale and unhidden modelling. Lots of things are potentially harmful -- bungee jumping, trans fats, icy roads, and unprotected sex. Marijuana isn't even near the top, and it yet it offers comparable pleasure. Should schools care? If schools let nature take its course, what will the outcome be? The unfortunate reality is that the teenage body is a developing one - -- so, too, the teenage mind. Kids need to be nurtured; their personalities and psyches need healthy cultivating. The maturity leap between Grade 8 and Grade 12 is huge. Ditto between a Grade 12 student and a 30-year-old. Research suggests marijuana use has adverse physiological consequences, but little of the research involves teens whose brain chemistry is relatively delicate. Getting high is like checking out of the day's offerings. A kid who regularly gets high is not learning nor experiencing what the day offers. Perseverance, motivation, self-confidence, acuity of analysis, discernment of severity, and depth of interaction -- vital aspects of development -- diminish when a kid is stoned. A stoned teen is not fully there, not fully present. Thus, when a youth uses marijuana at school, significant gaps are created. It's like a television show being interrupted by power outages. Is this what we want for our children? Whenever we change a law, dismissively use the words "it's only pot," or laugh about someone being stoned we should reflect on the message to our kids. Mature adults may be prepared for frequent marijuana use but, frankly, our kids are not. Cannabis needs to be recognized and understood as more dangerous for our kids than we might want to believe. As adults and parents we need to step up to the plate and stop blurring the lines. We need to team with community and school officials to figure out ways to respond. As passionate as we are regarding our right to choose for ourselves, we need to be equally passionate about nurturing our youth. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin