Pubdate: Fri, 22 Jun 2018 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2018 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Calvin White THIS IS WHO WE ARE, UNFORTUNATELY Seldom a day goes by when financial pages don't highlight new developments in the marijuana industry. So, this is who we are today. Former B.C. Health Minister Terry Lake is now on the corporate board of a major marijuana company. Former Toronto police chief and current MP Bill Blair is a point man on marijuana legalization. Former B.C. Solicitor General and West Vancouver Police Chief Kash Heed is a consultant for marijuana companies. The list of government and policing honchos who have jumped on the bandwagon is substantial. For decades, RCMP officers have visited schools across the country to conduct sessions of the D.A.R.E. program - the initials stand for drug abuse resistance education. I don't know how many times I've heard police officers telling kids of all ages the grave risk of marijuana, the dreadful gateway drug to the big baddies! Similarly, earnest school principals have tried to inculcate the same message. Those kids toking up were considered the school detritus. Flash forward to now, and seldom a day goes by when financial pages don't highlight new developments in the marijuana industry, either mergers, stock issues, technology, hirings, or start-ups. I'm getting fed up with it, not that any argument, no matter how cogently spelling out the falseness, will matter one whit. The glee and total buy-in to this phenomenon is effusive. It's as though the decades of rigid and self-righteous counter attitudes and behaviour never existed. This absolute and shameless U-turn driven by the gleam of unending lucre as the public flock to the delectable range of edible and smoking variety possibilities is repugnant enough, but the consequences are in another league. There is the continuing academic debate over the possible detrimental health effects of marijuana usage - early inducing of latent psychosis, negative ramifications to intellectual functioning, reduction in motivation, etc. - all of which evoke both concurrence and dissent, yet acknowledgement that more research is still needed. All of us who work with kids on a regular basis know another deeper and lived truth. We know marijuana usage is of serious harm to our young. The scientists can study the physiological results, but we who daily interact with our young know how their development is altered. Virtually no kid uses marijuana on any kind of frequent basis unless it is serving a distinct purpose. They use it in order not to feel what they would feel if they did not use it. They use it to feel good, often to escape emotional pain. They use it to fit in and have friends or a peer group. They use it because they are bored or isolated from meaningful or stimulating activity. They use it because they are habituated to its effectiveness. And now that it's about to be legalized and all the leading adults are grinning from ear to ear, it's been given an official seal of approval. Go for it kids. No more need for 4/20 celebrations. Feast your developing minds, brains, and personalities on delicious gummy bears and brownies because not only do they not harm your lungs, why no one will even smell that you are stoned. School will never have been so much fun! The problem is that kids, by definition, are in the process of growing, learning, developing, and changing. All of this is a stage of discovery and filling out. Problems arise, disappointments or tragedies happen, struggles emerge, getting along with parents or peers, navigating stress, uncertainty, self-doubt, building self-awareness, mistakes are made and consequences felt, first love relationships start and end, and much else are all the bedrock which builds them into adults. Kids need to go through these experiences au natural in order to develop a relationship with their capacity to cope, with their capacity to withstand, resolve and make sense of challenges. It's how they learn what they can do. It's where meaningful confidence comes from. Where resourcefulness and patience are internalized. The great power of marijuana is that it so effectively eases everything. It takes the edge off life. Kids feel better by ingesting rather than by learning their capability and discovering how full they are and how that natural trajectory can continue. They react to a stress by dulling it instead of figuring it out. It adds up to the same as when a doctor pushes pills every time a patient has a pain somewhere. With adults, they've already passed through their growing/learning stage. Kids are virgin to the world and thus they are cheated of their natural development. Thus, once again the adult world indulges itself to the detriment of our kids and their future. Despite every pious word from authorities uttered about protecting kids or educating them about marijuana risks, the fact is they don't really care. The kids are on their own. Calvin White is a veteran high school counsellor and master of education in counselling psychology, and author of The Secret Life of Teenagers - --- MAP posted-by: Matt