|
What Does Back To School Really Mean to
Me?
Entering junior high / high school and college
can be a very difficult time of life. Just as one is starting
to feel independent, the influence of people their age is especially
powerful and can influence the way they feel, act, dress and
behave. It is simply a risky time for adolescents and young adults.
For some, it is not just the time when they
will learn algebra, geography, science, and English, it is the
time when they learn to develop a trusting relationship with
drugs (alcohol is a drug).
My colleagues and I have seen many adolescents
and young adults who have developed substance abuse or addiction
in a period of time as short as 6 months from their first experience
of intoxication, or immediately if they are genetically predisposed
to addiction.
You would think that school provides the necessary
structure to inhibit this progression, but in reality, school
is the drug store for many users.
As a drug dealer told me during the summer,
"I sell drugs and make a lot of money, but not right now
because school is out." And just about any adolescent you
meet today will tell you that they can buy drugs on their campus.
While this speaks to the risks for people
who have not used drugs at this time, how does returning to school
effect the person who is drug-abusing or addicted?
The answer is that they will not only continue
to use drugs, but they will progress (without treatment).
Many parents, who have been struggling with
their child's behavior at home because of their drug use over
the summer, erroneously believe that when their child returns
to school, things will somehow all return to normal.
Many parents think returning to school means getting back to
the books, studies, homework, the grindstone, and life. However,
this is not what returning to school means for the drug user.
For the drug user, returning to school is
a time to reconnect with old friends, share "war stories"
of the summertime parties, and diligently keep the summer alive
by planning activities and parties on the weekends to use drugs.
For some it is deciding where to get high at 4:20 p.m. ("420"
is a time when drug-users use with the belief that it creates
some sort of connection with everyone in the world getting high
at that time or date) Visit my website to learn about "420".
The easiest way to look at this for your child
in treatment is that returning to school means returning back
to old friends and places that might be associated with their
drug use history. Any association with drug use history can be
what we call a "Trigger
for Relapse". It is important to be clear about your expectations
and consequences for unmet expectations during this time.
COLLEGES ARE WORKING TO ADDRESS THE ALCOHOL
AND DRUG PROBLEMS ON CAMPUS
California State University's adoption of
a series of policy recommendations on alcohol use recently provided
a window into current thinking around campus alcohol prevention
The Cal State recommendations give schools
in the California system alot of leeway in implementing changes,
and some might argue that the policy document recommends more
studies and meetings than proscriptive changes.
But by focusing on a broad range of environmental factors that
influence alcohol use on campus, and calling for assessment of
the changes that are implemented, the California school system
is moving in the direction that experts like William DeJong,
Ph.D., call the current state-of-the-art in campus alcohol prevention.
"Because of the publicity around alcohol-poisoning deaths,
college administrators are feeling pressure to focus on this
issue as never before," said DeJong, director of health
and human-development programs at The Higher Education Center
for Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention. All over the country,
he said, college presidents and other high-ranking officials
are putting their considerable abilities and political connections
to work in forming campus coalitions to work for environmental
change.
Increasingly, educators have been adopting some of the innovative
strategies coming out of the community prevention field, such
as intervention education and social-norms marketing.
Some schools, for instance, train students in coping strategies
and refusal skills, while others conduct brief motivational-feedback
interviews to show students how their drinking compares to the
campus norm.
|