Pubdate: Sun, 06 Mar 2005 Source: Langley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 BC Newspaper Group and New Media Development Contact: http://www.langleytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1230 Author: Natasha Jones Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) 'THEY BLOCK OUT REASON' Drugs are fun. They give pleasure. They feel good. And no amount of hounding that they'll fry the user's brain, ruin lives and destroy relationships will make the slightest difference. That's because illicit drugs - marijuana, heroin, coke, meth - are seductive and powerful, and all the messages of doom and condemnation will fall on deaf ears. The drugs' addictive, seductive power gives users a false sense of belonging, confidence and euphoria that block out common sense and reason. That, in a nutshell, summed up a Wednesday Drug Awareness Forum presented by Parents As Partners in Learning, a committee comprised of representatives of the Langley school district and a number of local agencies, and parents. The group's mandate is to provide up-to-date information to help parents in a number of areas, including drug use among their children. In the forum, which was moderated by Barry MacDonald, a registered clinical counsellor with the Langley School District, a panel of speakers, including a doctor, former teen drug users and a police officer, shared information with several dozen parents and a handful of students. After the meeting, MacDonald said that one of the strongest messages emanating from the forum was that the drug problem is not an enforcement issue. "This is a community issue and we have to join together and glean from the expertise in the community," he said. MacDonald told the forum: "We have to face the reality that kids use drugs because it feels good. We live in a North American culture that is addicted to making things good, including a quick fix, but there is no quick fix to this." The best experts may be the drug users themselves, at least once they have kicked the habit. The forum heard from several of them and they had important advice for parents whose children are taking drugs. Monica, a Grade 12 student from Langley, told parents how they can make a difference to their drug-addicted children: "Just be supportive. Learn what your kids are doing. Educate yourself. Don't get mad . . . be gentle." Monica should know. She got into drugs as a young teen and described how she loved the good feeling they gave. She couldn't believe that they could harm her until she started doing harder drugs and things began to go downhill. She told how she "stopped having a relationship with my Dad . . . he chased me down the street. When I was doing drugs, there wasn't anything anyone could do (until) I got to the point where I asked for help." She also lamented the lack of long-term detox centres in the Lower Mainland - - she got clean at a Prince George facility. Among the audience members was Langley City Councillor Terry Smith who feared that crystal meth "is worse than all the other drugs." Dr. Judy Higginson, an emergency ward physician at Langley Memorial Hospital, explained the effects drugs have on the body, and allayed some of Smith's fears about the extent of damage to the health of someone using crystal meth. The attraction of meth is that it's good for 12 hours, she said. "You don't have to eat, you don't have to sleep," Higginson said. The forum heard shocking facts about the age at which children start doing drugs, and how easy it is for them to buy drugs. Towards the end of the evening, MacDonald asked the students the age drug use starts among school children. It usually begins in Grade 8 and 9, but as early as Grade 7, one of the teens on the panel said. Where can drugs be bought? MacDonald asked. "Everywhere," one of the teens replied. Ray and Nicola Hall formed From Grief to Action after the harrowing experience of living with sons addicted to drugs. They urged parents not to pull the wool over their eyes, but to acknowledge and grasp the fact that people take drugs because it gives them pleasure. "We lose credibility by not recognizing the short-term benefit," Nicola Hall said. A strategy to approaching children on drugs is essential if parents are going to have a positive impact on them "even if you're not speaking their language," her husband said. The couple spoke of having to install locks on their bedroom doors to prevent their sons stealing items which they would sell to finance their drug habit. Cpl. Dave Fleugel of Langley RCMP's drug section spoke of the pervasiveness of drug use and trafficking, reciting figures that show how the problem has escalated in only a decade or so. He said it is a "sad reality" that today, someone can order drugs from home and have them delivered more quickly than a pizza. Fleugel said that in 2004, 29 crystal meth labs were discovered in Alberta and B.C. - half the Canadian total. A bigger problem lies closer to home - he revealed said that for every meth lab discovered in Langley, there are three or four discovered in neighbouring Surrey. A second forum will be held at Brookswood Secondary on Thursday, March 10, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Call 604 534-7891 to register. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth