Pubdate: Thu, 09 Aug 2012 Source: Daily Press (Newport News,VA) Copyright: 2012 The Daily Press Contact: http://www.dailypress.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/585 Author: Joe Lawlor MOTIVATIONAL SPEAKER LEARNED FROM JUVENILE COURT NEWPORT NEWS -- When Quwanisha Hines was arrested numerous times as a juvenile for crimes related to abusing alcohol and drugs, she could see her life going down the wrong path. One day, she said, she started imagining her future, and it wasn't pretty. In addition to smoking marijuana, she was drinking a six-pack of beer every day, or two large malt liquors --and more on the weekends. Normally a "B" student, her grades slipped to "Ds" and "Fs." "I saw my life flash before my eyes," said Hines, now 21. Hines is a Newport News juvenile drug court graduate, and she still keeps in touch by volunteering to speak at drug court graduations and other functions. She also tutors students for Virginia Beach schools. "I just did what I needed to do," she said. "I couldn't let myself fail like that." Drug court is an alternative to jail and prisons where attendees receive substance abuse counseling, as well as life and job skills training. Hines now works two jobs and will be an Old Dominion University senior this fall. She plans to become an attorney, and she's looking to earn acceptance into a law school, perhaps at Arizona State University. She credits juvenile drug court and her mother for getting her through the rough times. "I started to do good (in drug court), and get praise, so I didn't want to disappoint everyone," Hines said. "If they saw some good in me, there must be some good in me." Hines, who was adopted, said the death of her father, Lee, when she was 6 years old, probably helped feed her anger when she was a teenager. "I was coming home every day, having really bad temper tantrums," she said. Her mom, Delores Hines, agrees. "They were very close," said Delores Hines, whose husband died after contracting pneumonia. "You never saw one without the other." Lee and Delores Hines adopted Quwanisha shortly after she was born, when they were older, in their 50s. Quwanisha said when she was in her teens, she exploited the age difference. "I thought that because my mom was so much older, that she wouldn't understand," she said. After going through drug court, Hines graduated from Denbigh High School and went to Ferrum College for a year before transferring to Old Dominion. She stopped abusing drugs and alcohol, and her grades turned back around to "As" and "Bs." "I'm very proud of her," Delores Hines said. "We didn't give up on her." Hines said she's now able to sometimes give some of her money from working to her mother. "I felt like I always had it in me to do well," Quwanisha said. "I just needed a push." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt