Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter says girls are juuling in the bathrooms at her private all girls school. Her group of friends supposedly isn't into it, but she says it happens at dances and on school property as well. I'm trying to reinforce how dangerous it is and how the chemicals are so bad for you...hoping that will be a deterrent, but there is no definite way to know if it is getting through....
So how are they buying it? So companies went from making people addicted to cigarettes and now they are pushing this which is addictive? Unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:Anybody heard of MS kids doing it around here? My sister teaches in a highly regarded private elsewhere and they were catching 6th graders doing it.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter says girls are juuling in the bathrooms at her private all girls school. Her group of friends supposedly isn't into it, but she says it happens at dances and on school property as well. I'm trying to reinforce how dangerous it is and how the chemicals are so bad for you...hoping that will be a deterrent, but there is no definite way to know if it is getting through....
Anonymous wrote:My US son at STA reports lots of kids at NCS and STA do it but definitely not during school much less in class. That would be impossible. Classes are just too intimate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son who is a freshman in college says it is epidemic. Literally 90 percent of the kids he knows juul.
I understand why HS kids would do it for coolness factor, but what is in it for college students? Study aid?
Anonymous wrote:My son who is a freshman in college says it is epidemic. Literally 90 percent of the kids he knows juul.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DK who switched to private this year said that it is all the rage in the old public FCPS HS where kids do it behind the teacher's back during class. You can exhale/blow it out in a way that doesn't show vapor. They tried to clamp down on it but it's seemingly impossible so now they have signs in the bathrooms giving some facts and reminding kids if they share there's a risk of mono (evidently they think the kids don't want that).
In his private school (not top 3) kids are doing it in the bathrooms not in class.
He says pretty much everyone at both schools seem to have at least tried it. Many are now addicts because the amount of nicotine in the packs is tremendous and with the taste and teen boredom the kids hit them WAY too frequently. Now they can't quit and it's expensive. They are also getting way more nicotine from what he says than if they smoked actual cigarettes.
More evil by big tobacco. I worry about popcorn lung too because they used the chemical that was banned from microwave popcorn factories.
http://www.lung.org/about-us/blog/2016/07/popcorn-lung-risk-ecigs.html
What exactly is it? Does it give you a buzz? I know WHAT it is but I don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You said you’d never heard of anything like that which speaks to your naïveté.
Have not heard of anyone doing this at OUR schools. Still have not.
So, I guess it’s not happening. Good work.
Nope it not. That is one of the benefits of a small private - teachers are literally right in front of you. They don't allow anything that looks like it in class. Sorry you have had a difference experience.
Anonymous wrote:DK who switched to private this year said that it is all the rage in the old public FCPS HS where kids do it behind the teacher's back during class. You can exhale/blow it out in a way that doesn't show vapor. They tried to clamp down on it but it's seemingly impossible so now they have signs in the bathrooms giving some facts and reminding kids if they share there's a risk of mono (evidently they think the kids don't want that).
In his private school (not top 3) kids are doing it in the bathrooms not in class.
He says pretty much everyone at both schools seem to have at least tried it. Many are now addicts because the amount of nicotine in the packs is tremendous and with the taste and teen boredom the kids hit them WAY too frequently. Now they can't quit and it's expensive. They are also getting way more nicotine from what he says than if they smoked actual cigarettes.
More evil by big tobacco. I worry about popcorn lung too because they used the chemical that was banned from microwave popcorn factories.
http://www.lung.org/about-us/blog/2016/07/popcorn-lung-risk-ecigs.html