Pubdate: Thu, 07 Apr 2011 Source: Gonzaga Bulletin, The (US WA EDU) Copyright: 2011 The Gonzaga Bulletin Contact: http://www.gonzagabulletin.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3963 Author: Sam Lungren, Managing Editor FROM STUDENTS' PERSPECTIVE, DRUG USE AT GONZAGA WIDESPREAD There are Gonzaga students who use illegal drugs. "I would be willing to venture a guess that as high as 75 percent of students at this school have at least tried marijuana once," a male senior student said. "And I wouldn't be surprised to find out that somewhere between 30 and 50 percent use it on a regular, recreational basis." "It doesn't matter what dorm you live in," a male freshman student said. "You know someone who knows how to get weed." Though this information may come as utterly unremarkable college student behavior, it is rarely discussed in the context of Gonzaga. 12 students spoke to the Bulletin on condition of anonymity due to the illegal nature of their actions. The students agree that marijuana constitutes the vast majority of non-pharmaceutical drug use at Gonzaga, so much so that many categorize it differently. Illicit self-medication of Adderall, a prescription attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) medication used to stay awake and concentrate while studying, is also prevalent. "The two main drugs are weed and Adderall," a male sophomore said. "The motivators for those are, for Adderall, because a lot of people feel that they can't get things done on their own. And then weed because of all the stress ... People just want to relax." "Weed makes the COG tolerable," a male freshman said. The senior sees this to be in no way specific to Gonzaga: "I think it is a combination of the age group, the generation ... our generation is all about thinking for themselves, so it almost feels like a cultural thing, kind of integral for most people our age," he said. "For example, most people our age who don't smoke weed don't seem to be fazed when they are around it," he said. "It seems to be a very socially accepted thing to do. That is a combination of factors: the free-thinking generation, the stress of being in college, the open-mindedness of wanting to try different things." "I feel like most people who smoke [marijuana] are guys," a female freshman student said. "I don't like it much because I don't do it much and trip out really bad when I do." Many students point to the fact that despite the common usage, there is little to no peer pressure to do drugs. "There is the least amount of peer pressure I have seen at this school when it comes to marijuana," a senior said. "If you want to smoke, smoke. If not, hang out. To each their own. We have kind of created our own system of rules. I would say that 98 percent of students at this school don't have a problem being around it. Say if they were at a party where it was used, they would just shrug it off or wouldn't even think about it." Many point to a change in American opinion on marijuana to explain this phenomenon. The near passage of Proposition 19 in California, purposefully lax punishment for possession in Denver, former Republican New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson endorsing legalization and the ease of obtaining medical use permits all point to an evolving perception, which can be seen at Gonzaga. "For the amount of weed smoked here, the amount of maturity and responsibility, if you can even label an illegal act as being mature and responsible, is shown through the lack of peer pressure," the senior said. "No one judges, no one holds it against you." He also noted that students will often remove themselves from a party in order to smoke. He believes that this is partly out of respect for those who do not partake, and partly because they do not want to share. "We have some respectful stoners at this school. They are like, 'Let's remove ourselves in case we are bothering anyone,'" he said. "I use weed because I like how it makes me feel," the senior said. "It is relaxing, it is centering, it takes your mind off your troubles. All the same reasons people would say they go out and have a beer or something, to escape from the stressful reality." "Probably 10 to 15 percent of students take Adderall at this school. Maybe less than 5 percent of those have a prescription," another male senior said. "It allows me to do everything I want to on a given week. I can still perform well in school and party hard, too. It kind of embodies the 'work hard, play hard' mentality. You can have it all." As compared to other schools, most students agree that the recreational drug issue at Gonzaga stops mostly with marijuana and Adderall. "If you go to any state school, there is coke [cocaine] everywhere," another male sophomore said. "There is very little drug use beyond marijuana at this school," a senior said. "You get the occasional person doing cocaine or this or that, 'shrooms once in awhile. I have probably met two people who have done heroin. E [ecstasy] sometimes, but it is hard to find. Rarely acid [LSD]." "There really are not many hard drugs that go around this school, and I think the main reason is there is no supply. Pot, you can grow anywhere," he said. "Because Gonzaga is mostly upper-middle-class kids who don't really have to work or need anything that they don't already have, hard drug use just isn't relevant," a sophomore said. "We don't fit the profile of the typical hard drug user." Several students acknowledge having recreationally tried a variety of "harder" drugs, including cocaine, LSD, ecstasy, molly (pure MDMA, the active ingredient in ecstasy), magic mushrooms, Vicodin, Hydrocodone and a variety of other pharmaceuticals. Most say that these are very rare experiments, and nothing more. "You are never going to go to a college, besides BYU, that that doesn't happen," a senior said. "You would be hard-pressed to find a school where no students are experimenting with harder drugs. Surprisingly, I would say there is far less hard drug use at this school than at the average college." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.