Pubdate: Thu, 09 Feb 2006 Source: Hope Standard (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Hope Standard Contact: http://www.hopestandard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1397 Author: Simone Rolph Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) HELPING PARENTS SEPARATE FACT FROM FICTION Has your teenager ever turned to you in a fit of anger and let you know in no uncertain terms that you don't know anything? Ever sit back to realize that with times moving so fast that perhaps he or she is right? When it comes to talking to your kid about drugs, are your kids better educated on the subject than you are? Studies show that parents are a powerful force in helping kids stay off drugs - but without informed communication on the part of a parent, mom and dad's influence quickly dwindles and the influence of peers floods into the void. With standing room only at a showing of the local drug video, 'the CBC Passionate Eye documentary, by local filmmaker Eva Wunderman, dealing with Crystal Meth and its impact on Hope youth,' two things became clear... the first was that families care, and the second is there is a real need out there for some concrete direction. Now a program is being introduced by the Fraser Cascade School District to help parents learn myth from fact, learn skills to help you to react when you suspect a child is using drugs, learn how not to exacerbate the problem, learn how and where to seek out help, and how to support a person down a long road of relapses to recovery. But the first thing the program facilitators what you to know is that they are not professionals just two caring parents, who have been there, and who stand behind the success rates of Focus on the Family programs. For twenty years, Andrew and Dawn Bernardi, who recently moved to Hope to take a position with Camp Kawkawa, have been involved in the programs, and heard the families' cries that night for answers to questions on drugs? Does finding Gravol in a young woman's bedroom signal drug use? Could it be a possible abuse of alcohol? Could it be the Gravol high itself and not crystal meth? Could there be other reasons... How do you react: when a tiny 'baggie' surfaces in the wash water, a burn knife is found under a bed, a small blow torch is a regular accessory in a backpack.... pressured by fear and disappointment the parent clashes with the kid. The kid recoils back to his peers... And peers are a powerful force, agree Andrew and Dr. Mate Gabor, co-author of 'Hold onto Your Kids,' and who found himself in that passionate and painful question and answer period at the January 19th screening at the Hope Cinema, as families reached out in desperation for solid answers. Now an educational resource for parents, offering practical ways to identify drug use behaviours, called 'How to Drug Proof Your Kids," is being offered in Hope. The program was created by the non-profit organization Focus on the Family as a way to support Australian families seeking the same answers. The two-day interactive seminar is for parents, guardians, grandparents, foster parents, any adult in care of a youth. The seminars run February 17th and 18th and again on February 24 - 25. There is a maximum of 20 - 25 participants. A cost of $20 covers the cost of the workbook and materials for parents. "It is not a lecture, it is about an exchange of information and feedback between parents in an environment that encourages discussion, says Andrew Bernardi. "I am so passionate about this course I could run it every night... if there is a need, this is just a start for us." The couple who are not paid for their services, do not advocate fear mongering and do not carry the view that Crystal Meth is rampant... what could be considered rampant is the use of marijuana, that sits at 50 per cent usage amongst youth according to 2002 statistics versus 10 per cent for all amphetamines. "Whatever you are using to alter your personality is a gateway drug," adds Andrew, whether it is Ritalin, smoking, alcohol, the "high becomes" the person's "normality." And another gateway to drug use is your peer group. One day you ask a friend if have any pot... and the answer is no but why not try this.... "The very first thing you have to get rid of the friends and that is a really lonely thing to do." "Your friends aren't really friends" they are just people who you do drugs with.... The dynamic and warm, Bernardi, quickly breaks down the barricade formed by his rough and ready look, and in an instant opens up to his own days as a youth who abused alcohol and drugs... starting with smoking cigarettes stolen from his friend's father, ending in a long struggle to control his addictive personality.... He quickly flashes back through those feeling on being an outsider as a kid, the need to fit in, the good feeling drugs gave him... before they starting taking away so much. As a co-facilitator of the program, his wife Dawn, is a great connection for parents, says Andrew, as she saw him through his many lapses and relapses of recovery. "She was instrumental in my success," says Andrew, leaning over to give her a shy hug. "One of the keys to recovery is having an accountability person, that is there after a relapse but does not come down on you. During recovery it is not a point of if there is going to be a relapse, but when there is a relapse, and families have to know how they are going to deal with it... " With a nudge under the table, she brings the conversation back to the details of the course they will both soon be leading. "What scares him the most now is that there is going to be a parent who says right now, I am in trouble and where do I go?" adds Dawns, questioning the long waiting lists for drug rehabilitation programs yet when immediate action is a known key to success. "Ok, so now we finally have awareness and we still can't do anything?" Although their course is not a magic solution for any parent... the more knowledge the better. The course will cover Canadian drug use statistics, drugs in the community, what parents can do, factors leading to drug and alcohol misuse, knowing your child better, the facts on drug use, a parents' action plan, ways to identify drug misuse, prevention tools, parents' reactions to drug use, the intervention process, communication, and surviving a relapse. Registrations are being for "How to Drug Proof Your Kids' are being taken at C.E. Barry Middle School. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom