Pubdate: Sun, 26 Jun 2005 Source: Era-Banner, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 The Era-Banner Contact: http://www.yorkregion.com/yr/newscentre/erabanner/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2678 Author: Martin Derbyshire DRUGS CARRY HEAVY COST FORMER STRAIGHT-A STUDENT TURNED TO PROSTITUTION TO PAY FOR HABIT Five years ago, Jessica Weihrich was a straight-A student from an upper-middle class family without a care in the world. No one would have suspected she would soon be strung out on heroin and crack and selling her body to feed her addiction. "I was a normal teenager. I had it all and I threw it all away for drugs," the Ottawa resident told a smattering of concerned parents and teenagers at a drug and addiction forum in Aurora Thursday night. Now 18 and clean for the past year, Ms Weihrich said her downward spiral started with a few drinks on Christmas, New Year's Eve and her birthday. Like a lot of teenagers, she smoked pot a few times in Grade 8. She tried ecstasy and started having sex with older guys. Later that year, she became pregnant. She had an abortion, but missed a lot of school and her grades suffered. In Grade 9, there would be more pot and even LSD, but the big changes came when she made friends with street kids in downtown Ottawa. "I always used to put all this pressure on myself to do well in school. I looked at these street kids and it was like they didn't have a care in the world," she said. She found a boyfriend on the streets, dropped out of school and started getting into harder drugs such as PCP, a white crystal powder that can be snorted, smoked or ingested. One night she overdosed and it took her two weeks to start speaking normally again, but it wasn't enough to scare her straight. It wasn't long before morphine and heroin became her drugs of choice and the street became more than just a place to hang out, it became a home. In and out of several drug treatment programs and back on the streets, she spent the better part of three years using heroin daily until she added crack cocaine to the mix. When panhandling wouldn't pay for the drugs, she turned to prostitution. "I came from a normal middle-class family. People who knew me back then would never imagine I would be living like this," she said. "But I'm here to tell you it can happen to anyone." Jessica's story is the extreme of what can happen when teenagers experiment with drugs, said Carin McLean, a youth outreach services supervisor with the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. But if York Region parents think their children won't be faced with some of the same choices, Ms McLean said they should think again. The last Ontario Student Drug Use Survey showed 66.2 per cent of all high school students have experimented with alcohol. Almost 30 per cent have tried pot, 19.2 per cent tobacco, 4.1 per cent ecstasy and 1.4 per cent heroin. According to the survey, teenagers are most likely to try drinking and smoking when they're 13 and marijuana at 14. The survey shows two thirds of teenagers will try some drug while in high school, yet less than a dozen parents attended the forum Thursday. "The biggest challenge in dealing with parents on these issues is denial," Ms McLean said. "They refuse to see their teenager could be engaged in some of these risk-taking activities." While you may not stop your child from experimenting, you can help make sure they don't abuse drugs by talking to them about the issue, she said. If your goal with your children is complete abstinence, you're probably going to fail, Ms McLean said. A more realistic goal would be just making sure your teenager is making an informed choice. "Scare tactics and telling your children to just say no isn't going to work," she said. "The chances are you're not going to be there when your kids are faced with these choices. But if what we want is when we're not around for them to hear us, we can do that, just by talking to them." Since the average age children start experimenting with drugs is 13, it's never to early to begin that dialogue, she said. Jessica's mother, Heather Hilts, said she never talked to her daughter about drugs until it was too late. "That's the best advice I can give," she said. "Educate yourself early and talk to your kids. Don't wait until you think or know you have a problem." For more advice on talking to your children about drugs, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health is on the Internet at www.camh.net - --- MAP posted-by: Josh