Just Say Know
As prom season looms, one dad shares
his
unusual dive into The Drug Talk.
By Ransom W. Stephens
I would have been perfectly happy to lie to my kid if I thought
it would’ve
worked. Instead, I did one of the scariest things I’ve ever done. All
I can say now is that it worked. She graduated from high school magna cum laude
and will graduate from college with similar honors next June.
We started talking about drugs when she was a little kid—just like the
ads on TV say you should. Still, as she approached high school, I found myself
gripping my worry rip cord tighter and tighter.
A month into ninth grade, Heather did something we rarely expect of our teenage
children. She broached a conversation. “High school’s kind of weird,” she
said. “In middle school there were just freaks, preps and jocks, but
in high school the jocks are huge, and there are goth-freaks and stoner-freaks,
prep-geeks, band-geeks, drama-geeks and school-geeks.”
I said, “At my high school there were just jocks, stoners
and geeks.”
We were walking out to the car, headed for the megacinaplex to see as many
movies as we could cram into one Saturday afternoon.
She fiddled with the CD player as we pulled out of the driveway. I hoped
that she’d volunteer an answer to the obvious question. If I had to
ask, there was a good chance the conversation would end.
I waited.
Oh well, risk-reward and all that. I asked. “What category
are you?”
“
I’m leaning toward freaky gothic band-geek.”
Before I could digest this, she added, “What were you?”
This is the hard part. I wanted to lie, but if she caught me in a lie, I
was afraid she would discard everything I said. The truth was hard, but I
told
it: “I was a stoner.”
She said, “I figured.”
Apparently, over the course of her childhood I’d managed to betray my
ill-spent youth. I tried to recover. “In ninth grade everything felt
out of place, you know? So I started smoking—it was a stupid thing to
do.” What I didn’t say was that my ninth grade memories revolve
around sex and drugs—desperate pursuit of the former and a deep dive
into the latter.
The windshield wipers tried to keep up with the goth metal
on Heather’s
CD. At a stoplight she said, “So there’s this weird guy at school.
He wears sunglasses all the time and a suit jacket.”
“
Sport coat like a new-waver?”
“
Yeah, and he’s always stoned.”
“
What makes you think he’s stoned?” I tried to stay calm.
“
The way he meanders around the halls at school.”
“
What’s his name?”
“
I call him ‘Stoned ‘70s Guy.’”
“
What’s he like?”
“Well I’ve never actually talked to him. I’m sort of stalking
him.”
My daughter was stalking “Stoned ‘70s Guy?” It was going
too fast. I wasn’t ready. I couldn’t help it. I yanked my worry
rip cord and watched my parental parachute billow up and around us. Frayed
around the edges and with no shortage of holes, it looked like the blanket
Heather carried around until she was five. I didn’t recognize it until
the first few words came out, but once I had begun it, there was no denying
what it was: The Drug Talk.
When a parent initiates The Drug Talk, it tends to raise a teen’s defiant
ire. It’s a cause-and-effect relationship as reliable as the breeze in
your face when you jump off a cliff. Fortunately, we were in the car and she
couldn’t get away. I opened with sarcasm:
“ So are you getting stoned
between classes?”
“Not just between,” She replied.
Any reply was good. A reply in the same spirit was a gift. I tossed back: “Burnin’ numbers
in back of the classroom?”
“
And shootin’ up.”
At the instant I started to believe she was open to The Drug Talk, the very
second I started to relax, she turned and stared out the window.
“
When I was in high school, drugs were everywhere,” I said. “Just
like you’ll have to do, I had to make decisions.”
I paused for a reply, but didn’t expect or get one.
“Like any other decision, you need to know what you’re doing.” I
tried not to speak in a boring monotone. “Recreational drug use falls
under the category of Stupid Things To Do. About half my stoner friends ended
up having serious problems with cocaine.”
I didn’t know if I was screaming into the wind or guiding her to a gentle
landing. “I had three rules that kept me out of serious trouble. The
first rule? Know what you’re doing. Kind of obvious, but when you’re
hanging out with friends and someone’s passing a joint, or a bottle,
or a mirror, or sugar cubes—”
“
Sugar cubes?” she said, with more than a trace of contempt.
“Yeah, they used to put LSD on sugar cubes. They probably don’t
do it anymore, but that’s the point: Drugs come in many forms. I heard
of a guy who put acid on his eyeball.”
“
That’s gross.”
That I had her attention made it scarier. What if my advice encouraged her
to become a junkie? All I wanted was to help my little gothic cherub survive
and fulfill a fraction of the potential she’d had at ten when she wanted
to be president.
“Doing drugs is stupid, okay? I’m just saying that if you decide
to try something, be less stupid than everyone else. The first rule: Never
take something you don’t know about. You can learn the effects of drugs
at internet medical sites, in magazine articles, and don’t ignore what
you’re taught in school. You can confirm the facts in your own research.
The second rule is this: Before you ever take something, watch other people
on that drug and ask yourself if you really want to be like that. My last rule
was to prevent addiction: Pick a number and never do a given drug more than
that many times in a year. The point is, just say know—k-n-o-w. Know
what you’re doing and go forward with caution.”
“
What if the number I pick is a hundred?”
I swallowed the lump in my throat and said, “I trust your judgment.” It
came out shaky. She probably thought I was lying. She was probably right, but
all I had to hang on to was the parachute of hope that the parental voice somehow
penetrates the teenage skull, despite all contrary evidence. The Partnership
for a Drug Free America says it does.
How Honest Should You Be?
For answers to this and other parenting questions, plus
tips to help you have the Drug Talk with your own tween or teen, check out
our Online Extras this month at SacramentoParent.com.
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