Pubdate: Sat, 29 Oct 2005 Source: Ledger-Enquirer (GA) Copyright: 2005 Ledger-Enquirer Contact: http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/enquirer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/237 Author: Chuck Williams, staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/red+ribbon+week SPEAKING OUT Students From Spencer, Shaw, Smiths Station And Beulah Share Their Thoughts On Peer Pressure And Addiction Ramon Williams may only be a 15-year-old Spencer High School sophomore, but he has already read his obituary. It was posted at the school. He died in an automobile accident after drinking his first beer, the obit stated. He hit a tractor-trailer truck. Williams, president of Spencer's Students Against Destructive Decisions chapter, even came to school late the day the obit was posted. "The first thing someone said was, 'I thought you were dead,' " Williams said. The confident teenager is far from dead. But the practice of writing an obituary before its time is used to teach students the consequences of doing drugs or under-age drinking. "It is very effective," Williams said. All week, students across the Chattahoochee Valley have been studying about the impact drugs can make on their lives. Red Ribbon Week is a time when the anti-drug message is taken into the schools. As part of Red Ribbon Week, the Ledger-Enquirer published a week-long series about methamphetamine use in Columbus and the region. Wednesday and Thursday, the newspaper talked with students from four area high schools about drug use, peer pressure, destructive decisions and parental involvement. The students from Spencer, Shaw, Smiths Station and Beulah shared their thoughts and experiences. Whether they were in rural Lee County, Ala., or next to the main gate to Fort Benning, many of the students said if parents are involved in their children's lives, the children are less likely to do drugs. "Parents make a big difference," said Shaw junior Brittny Shackelford. It's about choices Students say they have a better chance to stay away from drugs if their parents are involved in their lives. That involvement includes asking tough questions. Most of the students interviewed said they welcomed their parents questioning their actions. Trey Davis, a 17-year-old Smiths Station senior, said his parents have been talking to him for years about making the right choices when it comes to drugs and alcohol. "You don't realize it until you face a decision," Davis said. "But the decision is already stored in my brain: 'You don't do that.' " Davis, who plays on the Panther golf team, said when faced with a decision about "harmful substances" he thinks about his future. His goal is to become a doctor. "I always think about what this is going to do to my future," Davis said. "Will it mess up my life? I am not going to mess up my life." But the bottom line is the responsibility for making that decision rests with them, many of the students said. "You make your own choices," said Chantell Roberts, a 17-year-old Spencer senior. "Your mother can teach you right from wrong. But she can't make your decisions for you. If you go to the candy store and you don't have the money, you know in your heart it is wrong to take it." One thing parents can do is lead by example, Roberts said. "Don't do anything you wouldn't want your kids to do," Roberts said. "You can't tell someone not to do wrong and you're doing it yourself." Peer pressure Peer pressure is a critical element in someone making a poor decision regarding drugs. "There are two kinds of people -- people who are easily influenced and people who are not," said Mario White, an 18-year-old Spencer senior. "If someone who is easily influenced hangs out on the street, that person is more likely to do drugs." Money is also a factor that leads some people into drugs, White said. "Some people are all about the quick money," White said. "Why work for $5.15 an hour when you can go out and sell and make $100 in five minutes?" That peer pressure can also come at parties. Abby Vaughan, a Smiths Station senior who is Miss Phenix City, remembers her first high school party. She was a freshman and excited about going. That excitement didn't last long. She said she saw drinking and other activities of which she didn't approve. "I called my sister and said, 'Please, come get me,' " Vaughan said. "I got made fun of." But she didn't regret the decision. Beulah students are no different from other students in the Chattahoochee Valley. They face the same pressures when it comes to decisions about drug use. "It exists," said 18-year-old senior Leslie Rudd. That pressure is more intense away from the campus at parties, Rudd said. "There is the possibility it is going to be there," Rudd said. "I don't go to these kinds of parties. I don't want to be in that situation." Some say extra-curricular activities such as sports, band and clubs help keep them out of trouble. Many of the students the newspaper interviewed were athletes. Shaw junior Marisa Gray, who runs cross country and plays soccer, said athletics is one way to steer clear of trouble. "I would not want to use something that would hurt me and cause me to start slacking," Gray said. Different times "Times have changed -- and they have changed a lot," said Spencer's Roberts. "A lot of parents can't see and feel what we are going through. Not everyone can go talk to their parents. You've got to give respect to get respect. Buying us shoes and clothes is not being our friend -- that's just spoiling us." Different times mean decisions on more lethal and addictive drugs. This week, students have read where top drug enforcement agents have said methamphetamine is the most powerful stimulant on the market. "Meth is cocaine times 10," said Sherri F. Strange, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration special-agent-in-charge for Georgia. "Cocaine is a naturally occurring stimulant; meth is a synthetic that is 10 times more powerful." That concerns Anita Chambliss, an 18-year-old Spencer senior. "Crack has been around since the '80s," Chambliss said. "We all see people who get hooked. But if you smoke crack, that is your business. You're crazy. Why would you smoke meth if it is 10-times worse than crack? Why would you want an eight-hour high? Why not just go jump off a building, die and don't worry about it?" Some students have been impacted by methamphetamine. Katee Self, a Shaw senior, said she has seen the drug destroy someone she knows. "When I first met him, he was a nice guy," Self said. "He went crazy and couldn't do anything. Nothing seemed to matter. His kids didn't mean anything to him." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin