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TEEN CHALLENGE
- Parents Guide
A Parents Guide on Drug Abuse
This is a guide for parents which we are always updating with the latest
information available. One of the most effective ways parents can prepare
themselves to combat drugs is by learning about drugs and drug abuse.
Whether it's the latest street lingo or a list of signs that your child
is using drugs, this is your one stop source for information that could
save your child's life.
These days kids are experimenting with a wide variety of drugs. While
most people don't associate cigarettes with drugs, surveys as well as
our own residents in Teen Challenge report that nearly all people who
have used drugs started smoking cigarettes as youngsters before they first
experimented with drugs.
"No step on this path is inevitable, but this 'gateway' principle
makes clear that the best way to end new addictions among the young is
by drawing a line on the abstinence side of marijuana use, underage smoking
and drinking," the report said.
This is not to say that everyone who smokes cigarettes today uses drugs
or used to use drugs. But when children begin to smoke, this is an early
sign of rebellious behavior -- especially if your family does not smoke
cigarettes.
If you discover that your child is smoking cigarettes, you have to ask
yourself -- why? If your child is smoking, his friends probably do also.
The most common reason a child smokes is to feel "cool" or to
be accepted by his friends. According to those who began using drugs as
teenagers, the groups of kids at schools who smoked were also the ones
most likely to use drugs and alcohol. We can try to deny it and say, "but
Johnny's not a bad kid." But the reality of the situation is that
those kids that smoke cigarettes are more likely to get into other kinds
of trouble as opposed to those groups of kids that have other kinds of
activities that are wholesome and that do not include smoking cigarettes.
Children will usually begin experimenting with drugs that don't seem dangerous
to them, such as alcohol and marijuana. But once the thrill of these drugs
wears off, they will often graduate to drugs like speed, LSD, and PCP.
Later on, as experimentation turns into addiction, kids may turn to cocaine
and heroin.
Always be on the lookout for obvious signs that your child is using drugs.
When being smoked, marijuana has a very distinct odor and kids will often
burn lots of incense to cover up the smell. Often after smoking marijuana
kids will go on an eating binge.
Drugs such as speed will cause your child to appear very hyperactive and
to stop eating and sleeping for long periods of time. If your child seems
to be losing a lot of weight and is looking skinny or emaciated, there
is a strong possibility that he or she might be using speed or cocaine.
When confronted about drugs many kids will say, "I'm just smoking
a little pot (marijuana)." But if you see drastic physical changes
such as: extreme weight loss or extreme changes in sleep patterns (too
much or too little sleep), these are signs that your son or daughter is
using much stronger drugs than marijuana. Marijuana will cause some tiredness
but not to extremes as the harder drugs will.
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