Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I heard kids joking about drugs I would shut that down right there and say that in real life, it’s not funny. People die, and their parents are left sobbing, their siblings fall apart, and their grandparents are so stressed they die early.
I also would start much earlier than the teen years talking about how you don’t know what’s in something and how your brain can be affected. We don’t do enough education on that.
I’d have them watch a show or two, or documentary, about kids dying from drugs. I’d have their doctor talk to them at every checkup.
If I had a teenager who I thought would be a risk taker or who hung out with friends that I didn’t know well, I’d drug test them regularly. I know a family where the teens told their parents that because they knew they would be drug tested regularly, they always said no to substances with that explanation, and it worked.
The role playing is exactly right, and teach them to stand up for themselves.
I'll be honest. I feel like this is all really bad advice.
First, the loss of trust with a parent. You want to be their partner in navigating these scenarios. Not some heavy-handed enforcement type.
Also, at that age, especially boys, they feel invincible. The concept of death is too big to be an actual deterrent. So it has to be something like "they'll kick you off the soccer team" or "it makes you smell weird and girls won't like you" or "that senior trip will be cancelled"
Anonymous wrote:If I heard kids joking about drugs I would shut that down right there and say that in real life, it’s not funny. People die, and their parents are left sobbing, their siblings fall apart, and their grandparents are so stressed they die early.
I also would start much earlier than the teen years talking about how you don’t know what’s in something and how your brain can be affected. We don’t do enough education on that.
I’d have them watch a show or two, or documentary, about kids dying from drugs. I’d have their doctor talk to them at every checkup.
If I had a teenager who I thought would be a risk taker or who hung out with friends that I didn’t know well, I’d drug test them regularly. I know a family where the teens told their parents that because they knew they would be drug tested regularly, they always said no to substances with that explanation, and it worked.
The role playing is exactly right, and teach them to stand up for themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Sure you can google all kinds of information on how to approach this, but in reality is there any evidence that any method is better or worse than the other?
While there's no guarantee, I've taken the position with my kids (3 of them, the youngest is 16) of knowing who your kids' friends are, who they're hanging out with. And knowing those parents.
Anonymous wrote:If I heard kids joking about drugs I would shut that down right there and say that in real life, it’s not funny. People die, and their parents are left sobbing, their siblings fall apart, and their grandparents are so stressed they die early.
I also would start much earlier than the teen years talking about how you don’t know what’s in something and how your brain can be affected. We don’t do enough education on that.
I’d have them watch a show or two, or documentary, about kids dying from drugs. I’d have their doctor talk to them at every checkup.
If I had a teenager who I thought would be a risk taker or who hung out with friends that I didn’t know well, I’d drug test them regularly. I know a family where the teens told their parents that because they knew they would be drug tested regularly, they always said no to substances with that explanation, and it worked.
The role playing is exactly right, and teach them to stand up for themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Every time there is an overdose in the news or in one of our local schools, I show them the article/coverage. We are in Arlington and there have been a handful already the school.
Anonymous wrote:We also don't focus on the lecture and instead, soft 'talk past the sale.' By that, I mean that the conversation assumes that they won't want the vape or the beer or even worse (to be fair, my kids are 14 and 12, so more focus on that).
So we don't lecture about the dangers. Instead, we talk strategy about what to do when (not if, but when) they get offered a cig or a vape or an alcoholic drink.
And then we role play it. Which is super corny and the kids roll their eyes for sure. But earlier this year, my 8th grader came home and told me about the conversation he had in the boys bathroom about getting offered "a hit off a vape" and he said/did exactly what we had role played
We told him to keep it simple & not get on a soapbox, and to quickly change the subject.
So a "Nah, I'm good. Yo, how messed up was that history quiz? I didn't know any of the answers"
Anonymous wrote:I hear ya OP. The movie Gia in the 90s was enough to scare me to death to never touch that stuff!
Is there something on that same level that they can watch nowadays?