Pubdate: Tue, 23 Mar 2004 Source: Scotsman (UK) Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 2004 Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/406 Author: Juliet Lawrence Wilson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) DRUGS, SPROGS.. IT WASN'T LIKE THAT IN MY DAY Last week I was lamenting the fact that I am getting older. There are advantages, however. Like other older people, I can worry about the state of the world and say: "It wasn't like that in my day." This is terrific fun and really gets up young people's noses. Yet it is only a matter of time until I am expected to settle down and have a family. This notion is something that women in their late 20s and 30s seem to find increasingly difficult "these days", but teenage schoolgirls manage with aplomb. Though having said that, Stockbridge is a hotbed of conception, such are the numbers of women with bumps and three-wheel buggies. As I am sure you are aware, Stockbridge is one of those areas in Edinburgh with a plethora of delicatessens and charity shops. Down this way we suffer from social problems such as marinated goat's cheese shortages and Kalamata olive turf wars. We therefore feel it is only fair to characterise ourselves as "bohemian". This manifests itself by having the men pushing the prams. The other day I spotted two men walking down the street, both pushing prams and talking about nappies. My mum tells me that my father would only push my pram if nobody was looking and I can't help but think there is something admirable about his reluctance to turn into "a big girl's blouse". I suppose many of you have read about the 17-year-old girl who has had three children by different fathers. I had never realised parenting could be so worrying. Always presuming young girls to be like myself at that age - in other words, scared of boys - I would have thought that keeping your children child-free until they at least reached the grand old age of, say, 18, would be relatively easy. But these days it isn't only teenage pregnancy that parents have to worry about. My stool pigeon at the school gates tells me that many teenagers have been dabbling in drugs. In my day we were so thick that we wouldn't have known where to get drugs. In fact, we thought that smoking was extremely naughty, never mind any of the stronger stuff. In fact, the reason I have managed to reach the mature age of 29 without having a drug habit is because the Government constantly reminds me that smoking is still really naughty. Yet if you are worried about your sprogs taking drugs, you will soon be able to buy a kit from your chemist so that you can test them for illegal substances at home. Yes, you can ignore the fact they are coming home at four in the morning pie-eyed. Pay no attention to the fact that the video recorder and hi-fi are missing - it's the testing kit that will put your mind at rest. I would imagine that telling your teenage child that you are about to test them for drugs just might result in a little argument. Only a hunch. What parents need to do is start testing them young. Obviously five-year-olds are not taking drugs but they are inclined to consume substances which should be illegal, such as cheese in the form of plastic string and high-sugar drinks masquerading as vitamin-fuelled fruit juice. And what of the teenage mothers? How do we stop this problem? By telling young girls that if they have children, they will be given their own house, will live off benefits and never have to work. They will be forced to spend the whole day sitting in front of the telly watching cable TV. This will put them off going out with boys for life. Young 'uns, these days - they don't know what's good for them. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager