From the monthly archives:

April 2007

Drug Trends

by admin on April 25, 2007

The world outside has not become less real just because the prisoner cannot see it.”  J.R.R. Tolkien

In last month’s newsletter, we outlined a four part series on trends and how we as parents must pay attention to what is shaping and affecting our children.  A goal of this ministry is to make parents aware of what we learn working with our young men so that we as parents and as a culture can anticipate what our children might  be facing now and in the future.  (To read last month’s article click here)

Recently, several officers from the Sheriff’s Department of a large Georgia city talked with our staff concerning the drugs they were seeing emerge on the streets.  As they spoke about what they were witnessing and how drugs were being made, I was struck by one of the officer’s comments:  “We will never be able to do anything but play catch up.  People who want to use drugs will always be ahead of us.”

What a sad commentary, but how true it is that individuals who want to get high, will make every effort to do so, often with that which is most accessible.  So what is a parent to do?  How are we to know what might emerge next or how can we protect our children?  Think how each decade has represented a new era in drugs.  In the 50’s it was alcohol, the 60’s marijuana, the 70’s psychotropic drugs like LSD and mushrooms, the 80’s cocaine and crack, the 90’s chemically made drugs like ecstasy (MDMA), and since 2000, it has been a litany of new chemically concocted drugs.  A stimulant that is making much of the news lately is Crystal Methamphetamine.  One of the officers, when talking about Crystal Meth made the comment that in the 80’s he had thought crack would be the death of this country.  Now he would say that Crystal Meth has become far worse than crack ever was.  What is even more disturbing is that people are now using fruit flavoring to entice and attract new users.

In looking back over the decades, we as parents must realize that this trend is a natural progression. The economic concept of supply and demand does an effective job of teaching us what we should expect would happen.  Think of it this way:

  • There is a demand/desire to get high for the following reasons:
    • Trying something new
    • Experiencing peer pressure
    • Associating with undesirable peers
    • Filling a void that is in their lives
  • The problem, however, is that there are laws/constraints concerning the drug supply
    • So people seek ways to avoid the laws/constraints

For many individuals, since scarcity exists, they seek that which is the most available…what is accessible and easy to get their hands on.  Is it any wonder then that people get high by ingesting nutmeg or abusing what is in the medicine cabinet, get drunk and overdose on over the counter drugs like Nyquil, huff gasoline fumes, or use everyday items to make Crystal Meth?  There are reasons that Sudafed is locked behind the pharmacy counter and you can only buy a limited quantity of batteries at a store.

There are a number of explanations for why consumers try products, but what is obviously different about drugs is that they alter reality, but after that initial experience, the, “first time” can never be regained, so new drugs are abused to regain that high.  A current cultural trend is to see chemical drugs, taken from what is not illegal, but made into something that alters reality and provides a new experience.

The data we keep here at the Paul Anderson Youth Home reinforces the drug trends and the age that usage occurs. During the last 10 years, our young men have gone from mainly abusing alcohol and marijuana in their later teenage years, to using prescription drugs like Oxycontin, Ritalin, and Vicodin at earlier ages.  These are our current statistics for when drug usage begins:

  • 82% by age 14
  • 63% by age 13
  • 44% by age 12
  • 10% by age 10
    • (Our youngest drug use occurred at age 7)

The supply is available at earlier ages, and what is being supplied is different than it used to be.  For most of our young men, while the first drug remains marijuana, the escalation moves very quickly from there to what is most available or what can be supplied with the least resistance like cough syrup and prescription drugs.

Could the contents of your medicine cabinet or your neighbors’ be ways that a child could get high?   Look at what is around your home, change your perspective on what is being abused.  As Tolkien said, “the world outside has not become less real just because the prisoner cannot see it.”

Parent's thanks for retuning, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks again for visiting!




100 % of the proceeds from these products helps support rehabilitative
ministries for troubled teens at the Paul Anderson Youth Home. For
more information, or to order products by phone, call 1-800-559-PAYH.

  • Share/Bookmark
Parents Related Websites
  • Meet The M-Network Friends: An Interview With Madison From My Dollar Plan. Now that I have wrapped up all the interviews with all the M-Network members other than myself, I decided to expand the series a little and include all the friends of the M-Network who participate in our group projects and forums. Up this week is Madison from My Dollar......
  • Legalize And Tax Pot Marijuana is a cultural icon in the last 50 years.  When you talk about pot some stereotypes jump into your head.  For most of us, it’s the crowd for Grateful Dead hippies that rock tie-dye shirts and work in places where flip-flops are the norm.  But weed, is so much......
  • The Value of Healthy Eating for Children Healthful eating habits are most commonly formed long before kids are even able to choose their own foods. Little ones can adopt the same eating habits that their parents exhibit. Parents and child care providers alike are the first role models that children will ever encounter when it comes to......

{ 0 comments }

Teach your Children to Be Prepared for Tragedy

by admin on April 25, 2007

We as a nation have recently experienced another tragedy in the horrible murder of 32 students and faculty on the Virginia Tech campus. Not long ago we were horrified by the heinous killing of the young Amish school girls. The fifth anniversary of the massacre at Columbine High School has just passed. These and others are tragedies to the nation or community because of the large number of people affected in a location where killing is never expected. Death in a war such as Iraq and Afghanistan is not unexpected though it is still tragic. The mass killing at Virginia Tech came as a shock and left us with many questions and fears.

Tragedy is not uncommon, though we wish it were. Perhaps it has not struck in your own family, but most are familiar with tragedy among their extended family, friends, or neighbors. We all know someone who is all too familiar with the pain and shock of what we call “tragedy.” My wife and I recently experienced profound sadness in the drowning of a little 1 1/2 year old boy very dear to us. This is a tragedy in our lives and family as much as Virginia Tech’s massacre is to the nation and the families of those who were murdered. We normatively use this word “tragedy” to refer to the sudden, unexpected loss of a family member, a loved one, or someone very close. It may speak of the death by accident or crime of a number of persons in our life or community. We label any variety of painful events in life “tragedies,” even when the loss is less than human life; whether health, possessions, freedom, or livelihood.

Tragedy and God are not foreign to one another. Most Christians understand that God is good, and tragedy is bad. So what do they have to do with each other? When tragedy happens, some may be quick to blame Satan, the purveyor of evil. Seldom is God left out of the picture, because we expect that if He is all powerful, He could have prevented this. Tragedy can turn some to anger toward God, an anger that lasts in some cases a lifetime. Some even cease to believe He exists. Ironically enough, they retain anger toward Him even while claiming His nonexistence. Job was angry with God, but he never doubted His existence. In the tragedy of his life, he came from knowing about God to the place where he truly saw Him. Tragedy can evoke blame toward God:  “God, if you are good, if your promises about our care and protection are true, if you can prevent evil from overtaking us, why did you allow this to happen?” Why 9-11, why Hurricane Katrina, why Virginia Tech, why Columbine, why my child?!

Why, indeed! “Why” is always THE question with which we struggle after tragedy; it is usually addressed to God when we can find nowhere else to place blame.  This is a part of our human nature, to assign blame, but tragedies often leave us with no one to blame, and so we wrestle with God.

In tragedy and its aftermath remember that it is not a bad thing to wrestle with God. For it is always and ultimately Him with whom we have to ask the question! He, not Satan, is the anchor of all life; the only One who can and will answer all our questions.

I believe the book of Job is the primary text God has provided for the problem of evil and for dealing with tragedy in life. Not that there are not many other texts in the Bible helpful to us at such a time. But it is the story and lesson of Job that God in His wisdom uses so that we might wrestle, and come by faith to an understanding of tragedy, pain, and the “evil” of suffering. On purpose I have placed “evil” in quotation marks in describing suffering. This is because both the Bible and our spiritual experience teach us that suffering in life has a beneficial purpose. If not immediately, eventually we come to understand its nature in increasing our faith and deepening spiritual maturity. This is the message of such texts as Romans 8:18-39 and Hebrews 12.

However, we certainly do not pray for tragedy in our lives. We pray for protection from it. We ask God to keep it from us and those we love. Even Jesus prayed for God to remove the “cup” of suffering that He would undergo for our salvation, because in His manhood He was not sure He could endure it. Nevertheless, He went willingly to the cross in the strength of His utter faith and trust in His Father. No one desires tragedy, but then no one should believe that it will never come. Rather we should prepare our hearts and minds for it, and teach our children what to do if and when it comes. This should be done and can be done in a manner that does not instill a paralyzing fear of life and the future. The tragedies that have come upon us as a nation, and the personal tragedies that we have suffered closer to our own homes, or even in them, can become useful tools to teach our children about the reality of tragedy and how God uses it to bring needed spiritual growth in our lives.

In the late 1960’s I was an Infantry Platoon Leader in the Vietnam War. As I was being trained in the United States in the months prior to my departure for the jungles of Viet Nam, I was extremely cognizant of the dangers and horror that awaited me once I arrived there. I knew for example that the life expectancy of a Rifle Platoon leader was literally minutes on average in any battle. This recognition honed my attention to what I was being taught in the classroom and in the training fields of Ft. Benning, Georgia, and Ft. Sheridan in the Panamanian jungles. I knew that my ability to respond with knowledgeable instinct, spontaneously without the necessity of much thought, was vital to my survival and that of my men. The battlefield is chaotic and lends itself to what combat soldiers know as the “fog” of war. There is no time to check your notes or try to remember what you have forgotten. Your first response needs to be the right one!

There are great similarities here in preparing for the physical and spiritual realities of any tragedy. We need to know the nature and revealed intentions of our Heavenly Father, the experience and work for our salvation of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the power of the Holy Spirit. Satan desires to rob, steal, and destroy. Those who have wrestled with God know the tactics of the enemy and have prepared themselves with such head and heart knowledge: these are the people to whom those who are suffering turn when tragedy strikes.

It is not enough for parents to prepare themselves. They should prepare their children for tragedy as well. As parents, concerned about our children’s well-being and emotional health, we tend to shield them, as much as we can, from the trauma that is common to tragedy. We do not want them to have nightmares or be traumatized by specific knowledge or sight of violence, accidents involving serious injury or death, or anything we deem better handled by mature minds.

When living in Scotland many years ago our two oldest children were only one and three years of age. We came across a devotional book written for little children called Peep of Day, first published in Scotland in the 1800’s. I was struck by the honesty with which it spoke to their infant minds about the fragility of life and what could happen to their small bodies in a great fall or similar accident. It spoke to them in simple words about their bodies being wonderfully made, but also containing breakable bones, “losable” blood, and woundable flesh. It addressed the real possibility of death even at a young age. My wife and I were impressed about how naturally we parents try to shield our little ones from knowledge about the harsh realities of life–things they may very well face in their earliest days. It is just as true that we underestimate what they can understand about their Heavenly Father and His personal involvement in their lives: truths we must help them see and appreciate.

What should we teach our children in order to prepare them for tragedy? Here are ten truths that will be helpful as you speak to your children about tragedy that has happened and tragedy that is yet to come.

  1. In a fallen world, in which we live, tragedies will happen.
    They may strike near us in our community, even in our own family.
  2. Our God, our Heavenly Father, knows us, our needs, and our capabilities.
    He knows our beginning and our end. He loves us and will take care of us.
    He will deliver us from evil and the evil one. Even if we die, He will receive us into His heavenly home to be with Him forever. All those who trust in Jesus will be together again. Death cannot separate us forever.
  3. We may not know in this life all the reasons for a tragedy, but in
    Heaven we will see clearly the answers to all the questions we have now.
    Until then, we must live by faith in the promises of God. We can trust Him!
  4. Sadness and tears may last for a short while, but joy will return again.
  5. No matter what happens, God will never leave you or forsake you. He will never forget you. Do not forget Him!
  6. Stay near to God and talk to him all the time: before, during, and after a tragedy. Pray for others for God to heal them and comfort them.
  7. Help others with your kind words. Serve them without being asked, do something for them. Always be thankful if someone helps you.
  8. Remember that Jesus experienced great pain and suffering. He knows what you are going through when you hurt and are sad. He will always be with you.
  9. Pray now that no matter what happens in the future, God will strengthen you to endure and you will not fear what could come. Pray how you can encourage other people who are suffering.
  10. Always remember, nothing can ever happen, not even the worst tragedy, to separate you from Jesus and His love for you.
  • Share/Bookmark
Parents Related Websites
  • Rich Young Ruler: Challenging Bible Verses About Money Rich (Young) Man: Matthew 19:16-30, Mark 10:17-31, Luke 18:18-30 For the sake of brevity,this study will focus only on Mark’s account. This study will be shared in three separate posts. Part I (This post) – What does it say? Part II – What does it mean? Part III – How......
  • The Story of Christmas, by Gwen Ellis The Story of Christmas, by Gwen Ellis, begins the story of Christmas with Zechariah in the temple, meeting with the angel. It wraps up when Joseph and his little family go back to Nazareth from Egypt. It has appealing and friendly illustrations by a guy named Steve Smallman. It is......
  • Ryan Is Forgiven When he was presented to Hailey, Ryan knew that she was the one. She wasn't as beautiful as a few he'd known, but that was all right. She was attractive, intelligent, and easy to get along with. She admired and respected him, too. After they were married, she fulfilled......

{ 0 comments }