Anonymous wrote:Yes. Absolutely. Hard drugs can lead easily to an accidental overdose. Better that you tell the parent now, then have to comfort them later because of the loss of their child.
As I parent, I would absolutely want to know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't bother. In college they will do even more drugs than ever, so even if you could stop it now temporarily, it will resume later this year and your daughter will have had a whole lot of unwanted drama. So, lost cause. You focus on her.
This. You don't want to jeopardize the relationship you have with your daughter. The chance of you exposing the heavy drug use and the parents handling it appropriately with no ugly fallout is pretty low.
Also, and this is very politically incorrect to say, but the parents likely have their heads in the sand and don't want to know. I cannot imagine one of my teenagers experimenting with coke and heroine and not having any idea. As the sister of an addict who has met many people through Nar-Anon, I can tell you that there is a lot of blaming the messenger that happens when this sort of thing comes to light.
If you expose this, don't necessarily expect receptive and appreciative parents, and be prepared to be part of whatever fallout ensues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't bother. In college they will do even more drugs than ever, so even if you could stop it now temporarily, it will resume later this year and your daughter will have had a whole lot of unwanted drama. So, lost cause. You focus on her.
This. You don't want to jeopardize the relationship you have with your daughter. The chance of you exposing the heavy drug use and the parents handling it appropriately with no ugly fallout is pretty low.
Also, and this is not a very politically incorrect to say, but the parents likely have their heads in the sand and don't want to know. I cannot imagine one of my teenagers experimenting with coke and heroine and not having any idea. As the sister of an addict who has met many people through Nar-Anon, I can tell you that there is a lot of blaming the messenger that happens when this sort of thing comes to light.
If you expose this, don't necessarily expect receptive and appreciative parents, and be prepared to be part of whatever fallout ensues.
Anonymous wrote:Don't bother. In college they will do even more drugs than ever, so even if you could stop it now temporarily, it will resume later this year and your daughter will have had a whole lot of unwanted drama. So, lost cause. You focus on her.
Anonymous wrote:Depends which drugs. Extremely dangerous, like heroin, yes. But coke, probably not.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I am so torn about this. As a mom, I would absolutely want to know. But it's hard. Some kids are 18, some are 17. If I had a relationship with the parents or knew this information first hand, I would not hesitate to tell them. But this is my adult daughter confiding in me about kids and families that I don't really know. If the danger were absolute, like suicide, I would also tell. But drug experimentation - although dangerous and illegal - is in a different category, I think, which is why i am hesitating.
I am thinking maybe an anonymous note is the way to go, just to encourage these parents to be more vigilant. Thoughts? If you were on the receiving end of an anonymous note about your kids - without any proof - how would you react?