Pubdate: Fri, 13 May 2005 Source: Simcoe Reformer, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 Annex Publishing & Printing Inc. Contact: http://simcoereformer.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2386 Author: Daniel Pearce Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) SEX, DRUGS & TEENS: PARENTS GET STRAIGHT TALK ON COPING TOWNSEND - Teens are reluctant to drink and drive but aren't afraid to take drugs and get behind the wheel of a car, says a local addictions counsellor. "We need to broaden the image to kids of what impaired driving is," Kim Baker of Addictions Services of the Haldimand-Norfolk Health Unit, told a group of parents here Wednesday night. "It's not about impaired driving. It's about losing your life." Young people "have got the message" about drunk driving yet they will smoke pot or take magic mushrooms and drive without fear of the consequences, Baker said. "Kids drive all the time (after taking drugs) under the impression there's no distortion in their senses," she told the information meeting. "For marijuana, there's a misconception about how risky it is because it's considered natural." She said kids are also twice as likely to get into a car with someone who has been drinking. Baker was one of two speakers who addressed about 18 parents here on how to handle teenagers on the issues of drugs and sex. Parents need to strike a balance between strictness and permissiveness with their teens, said Jayne Holmes, a public health nurse with the Haldimand-Norfolk Health Unit. "As parents we have an overwhelming desire to take responsibility for a lot of things they should take responsibility for," Holmes told the Reformer after addressing the group. Kids, she explained, need to make their own decisions so they can "learn to problem solve." If they don't experience a regular adolescence, they won't have "the information to make decisions," she said. During her presentation, Holmes suggested that fathers continue to show physical affection, including hugging and kissing, towards sons even after they reach adolescence. "When age 12 hits, (fathers) shake hands now. 'People will think I'm teaching you to be gay,'" she said. Instead, the affection makes the boys "better individuals" and they too learn to be affectionate, Holmes said. She also warned parents about the trend towards "oral sex clubs" among girls as young as 12. Often seen in the city, the clubs are one way for girls to engage in sexual activity without fear of pregnancy, Holmes said. The clubs are also a way for boys to talk girls into having sex by taking away the risk of pregnancy, she added. "It's not about not getting pregnant. It's about not having sex because you're not ready." Adolescent girls also tend to think they are infertile, Holmes said. "They have their period, have sex, they're not pregnant, so they keep having sex. What they don't realize is that it can take up to one-and-a-half years for people with no problems to get pregnant." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom