Pubdate: Sat, 29 Mar 2008 Source: Metrowest Daily News (MA) Copyright: 2008 MetroWest Daily News Contact: http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/619 Author: Julia Spitz Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Salvia WHY I JUST SAID NO TO SALVIA "That's peer pressure," said my son. No, that's journalism, or at least one school of it. And it took me a couple of hours to figure out what to do. Agreeing to write a news story about salvia was a no-brainer. It's news. It's my job to report news. The fact it was designated a Page One story didn't hurt either. The dilemma came when colleagues suggested I try the legal, but potentially hallucinogenic, substance. I tried a few stores I thought might carry it in some form, and was pretty relieved when I couldn't find any. Problem solved? Well, no. I could try a little harder, drive a little farther or order it off the Internet. After all, columnists are supposed to do this kind of thing. I've taken the controls of a small plane, shot the civilian equivalent of an M-16, ridden around with undercover police officers, accompanied the Air National Guard on a mid-air refueling exercise, walked through downtown Framingham alone at night, all in the name of getting a firsthand experience to share with readers. Why draw the line at trying salvia? It's not as if I haven't polluted my body with cigarettes for the better part of 50-plus years. It's not as if I'm completely unfamiliar with the concept of self-medicating. My drug of choice is white wine. When it comes to pharmaceuticals, my beliefs are about three steps short of Christian Science. I'll take antibiotics if a doctor is convinced I have an infection. If I have a bad cold, I'll take medicine to make myself less offensive to others. I have no desire to treat problems with pills pushed on peppy TV ads that include potential side effects like bleeding from the ears, driving while asleep and tuberculosis. I have no desire to alter my consciousness with drugs I can't control. I also didn't want to explain to my 13-year-old how this was something I can do because it's my job, but he can't because it's wrong. Justin was on my mind a lot while I was deciding what to include in a news story on salvia. Does writing about a drug, particularly one that's still relatively obscure, put something in a young mind that wouldn't have been there otherwise? What about naming the Web sites that sell salvia? Is that just drawing a map for a kid, or is it a piece of information a parent could use? Up until a few days ago, I would have assumed salviadragon.com was some sort of computer game site. If a parent sees that name on the list of recent visits, or purplestickysalvia.com, there might be reason for concern. Should I mention there are videos of kids taking salvia "trips" on YouTube? Or have preteens figured that out already? Many of the people I talked to for the story had similar qualms. At Framingham State College, about half of the dozen students I interviewed had never heard of the stuff. A few others only learned of its existence when it became the subject of news stories because legislators are looking to outlaw it. Would I just add to the problem? "To some extent, it seems the media tends to portray salvia as this huge threat to our youth," said Daniel Siebert, who runs a Web site dedicated to the plant, but it's media attention that "creates a desire to seek it out." As a somewhat responsible parent, that's exactly what I don't want to do. I don't want any kid surfing the Web and ordering some hopped-up version of a plant even Siebert said can produce "strange and weird" feelings. "I don't think (reporters) have given it a fair look," he said. "It's something that produces a deep state of inward awareness." Would trying it for myself and reporting on the effects constitute a fair look? Probably not, said Siebert, because the effects vary widely depending on the individual's state of mind and the potency of the drug. I could get "a tool for meditation," or, thanks to salvia sellers who up the chemical content, I could get the product with "a danger of (users) hurting themselves in a highly altered state." Not something I want to do. Not something I'd want a child to do. "It's a matter of raising awareness," said Ashland Police Sgt. Greg Fawkes, and parents need to be aware of what's out there. That's my job. Trying a drug, even a legal one, is not. Even when a peer tells me I'm wrong. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath