Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both of my kids are athletes and have goals for their HS sports
So the threat of "you MIGHT DIE!" would get a laugh.
But the fact (not even a threat, just a basic cause/effect type of scenario) of "if you get caught, you will be off your team. and it won't be my decision; that is coach's policy. there will be nothing I could do to stop it" is enough to keep them on the straight and narrow
LOL you do not live in reality.
Athletes do drugs just like the rest of the HS population. Drinking ie alcohol is also a drug.
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?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't spend much time discussing the dangers of cocaine, weed, heroin, etc.
I just show my kids real stories of kids trying oxy or any number of drugs, and getting something laced with fentanyl and the kid died on the first try.
Those stories scare us parents, but honestly, also resonate more with my kids. When they read about someone trying it once and dying on the first time (and more likely to die since they have zero tolerance), that is enough to scare them straight.
Cocaine is a big problem in college.
I am sure it is...but the more important issue is that someone may give you cocaine laced with fentanyl. You won't just have a bad high...you will be dead on the first try.
It's just a very different discussion vs. pre-fentanyl. Yes, in the old days you could overdose if you literally took too much, or you could become addicted. However, you would never hear a story of someone dropping dead the first time they tried it because it was laced with poison.
You said you don’t talk to them about cocaine. So your just hoping they won’t do it because it might have fentanyl?
Anonymous wrote:Both of my kids are athletes and have goals for their HS sports
So the threat of "you MIGHT DIE!" would get a laugh.
But the fact (not even a threat, just a basic cause/effect type of scenario) of "if you get caught, you will be off your team. and it won't be my decision; that is coach's policy. there will be nothing I could do to stop it" is enough to keep them on the straight and narrow
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't spend much time discussing the dangers of cocaine, weed, heroin, etc.
I just show my kids real stories of kids trying oxy or any number of drugs, and getting something laced with fentanyl and the kid died on the first try.
Those stories scare us parents, but honestly, also resonate more with my kids. When they read about someone trying it once and dying on the first time (and more likely to die since they have zero tolerance), that is enough to scare them straight.
Cocaine is a big problem in college.
I am sure it is...but the more important issue is that someone may give you cocaine laced with fentanyl. You won't just have a bad high...you will be dead on the first try.
It's just a very different discussion vs. pre-fentanyl. Yes, in the old days you could overdose if you literally took too much, or you could become addicted. However, you would never hear a story of someone dropping dead the first time they tried it because it was laced with poison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both of my kids are athletes and have goals for their HS sports
So the threat of "you MIGHT DIE!" would get a laugh.
But the fact (not even a threat, just a basic cause/effect type of scenario) of "if you get caught, you will be off your team. and it won't be my decision; that is coach's policy. there will be nothing I could do to stop it" is enough to keep them on the straight and narrow
If you want to tie it to sports, maybe talk to them about Len Bias, the Georgetown University basketball star who died after trying cocaine one time (allegedly). I was in middle school in DC at the time, and it scared me silly. I've never tried drugs beyond pot (which I tried a few times and hated). My kids are a little young, but I'm definitely going to start talking to both of them about what to look out for--and to know that they can always call us and we will pick them up, no questions asked. That's what my parents did--I remember my dad picking me up at some crazy high school parties and never saying anything. Fentanyl is so scary to me and I need to figure out how to talk to the older one pretty soon.
Same about len bias. Also, a friend’s dad died of a heart attack in his 30s. I found out many years later that he had a cocaine induced heart attack. Such a waste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't spend much time discussing the dangers of cocaine, weed, heroin, etc.
I just show my kids real stories of kids trying oxy or any number of drugs, and getting something laced with fentanyl and the kid died on the first try.
Those stories scare us parents, but honestly, also resonate more with my kids. When they read about someone trying it once and dying on the first time (and more likely to die since they have zero tolerance), that is enough to scare them straight.
Cocaine is a big problem in college.
Anonymous wrote:I don't spend much time discussing the dangers of cocaine, weed, heroin, etc.
I just show my kids real stories of kids trying oxy or any number of drugs, and getting something laced with fentanyl and the kid died on the first try.
Those stories scare us parents, but honestly, also resonate more with my kids. When they read about someone trying it once and dying on the first time (and more likely to die since they have zero tolerance), that is enough to scare them straight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both of my kids are athletes and have goals for their HS sports
So the threat of "you MIGHT DIE!" would get a laugh.
But the fact (not even a threat, just a basic cause/effect type of scenario) of "if you get caught, you will be off your team. and it won't be my decision; that is coach's policy. there will be nothing I could do to stop it" is enough to keep them on the straight and narrow
If you want to tie it to sports, maybe talk to them about Len Bias, the Georgetown University basketball star who died after trying cocaine one time (allegedly). I was in middle school in DC at the time, and it scared me silly. I've never tried drugs beyond pot (which I tried a few times and hated). My kids are a little young, but I'm definitely going to start talking to both of them about what to look out for--and to know that they can always call us and we will pick them up, no questions asked. That's what my parents did--I remember my dad picking me up at some crazy high school parties and never saying anything. Fentanyl is so scary to me and I need to figure out how to talk to the older one pretty soon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Yes! Real kids makes it feel more real to them.
This. My kids stopped laughing at me being stressed about drugs when someone they knew at school overdosed. I happily and factually answered all their questions [/quote
We live in the burbs but we were down near union station and saw a person under the effects of these drugs. and it definitely stayed with the kids for a while.
Seeing is believing