Tag Archives: Addiction

Adult Pot Use Affects Grade, Middle and High School Students

(Part 1  in series on older children of pot-using parents, Custody issues,  Part 2, children in BHO explosions and Part 3, children who fall.)

When Colorado fourth-graders were caught buying and selling their grandparents’ pot at a school in 2014, it became clear that the age level for first-time drug use in America has changed.   A year ago, there was also an incident when a three-year old girl brought marijuana in a backpack to a Head Start Center near Pittsburgh.

A survey released in December showed that 6 percent of high school seniors are daily pot users, a very bad omen for our children’s future. The statistics are worse in marijuana states such as Colorado and Washington.  In Vancouver, Washington, 8 percent of 8th grader, 19% of 10th graders and 27% of 12th graders report recent pot use.

Each drug has at least one quality that makes worse than all other drugs, and for marijuana it is what it does to the teen-aged brain and motivation, according to Ed Gogek, author of Marijuana Debunked.

Problems on the San Juan Islands

Kathleen Bartholomew, a nurse and a grandmother in the San Juan Islands of Washington, explains what it’s like living in an area with long-time marijuana users: “Of the 7th grade pot users, 80% received the pot from their stoner parents.”

“My own granddaughter went from being a straight-A student skipping her sophomore year in a private school to a pot-smoking 15-year-old in the public school system.  Her story started in 7th grade when a few seniors taught her how to smoke marijuana at lunch,” Bartholomew explained.

San Juan Islands
Washington’s San Juan Islands are in the Puget Sound, near Seattle and British Columbia

“After having a drug coalition for 10 years, we have made zero progress in convincing teens that pot is harmful – because so many parents smoke it in the home. Of 12th graders, there was no change in their belief system after a decade of education.” Here’s a link to the drug coalition’s marijuana education page.

Also in the San Juan Islands, a young man with mental illness issues died tragically from dehydration in jail last year.  Keaton Farris suffered from bipolar disorder; a history of marijuana use would be consistent with the tragic ending.  The risks for mental illness from early marijuana use cannot be adequately addressed in an environment that glorifies pot use.  (His mom sold t-shirts in his honor at Seattle Hemp Fest,  which doesn’t prove that Keaton used  marijuana, but suggests his family had a peculiar fondness for the weed. The family has reached a settlement in the case.)

Multi-Generational Pot use in California

California has a large medical marijuana program — full of problems.  One mother was shocked to find her son first received medical marijuana at age 11 —  three years before she knew about it.  A doctor didn’t prescribe it; he got it from someone in school whose mother had a medical marijuana card. So clearly parents pass it to children, with or without their knowledge.

Another grandmother in California described how her grandson’s father went about getting him a medical marijuana card.

Parents who use marijuana go to lengths to rationalize their use of pot.  Some say they have more patience and can play better with their children while stoned.  These parents are at risk for addiction and building so much tolerance that they will have more anxiety and anger when not using.

With many parents and grandparents using pot, we seem to be creating a multi-generational society of drug addiction.  Drug addiction today is  multi-substance addiction, making the treatment more complicated and the prognosis  worse than it was in the past.

One member of AA and Narcotics Anonymous in Chico, California, explained what happens to multi-generational drug users when they try to get clean.  “I need to teach them to dress, bathe and feed the baby, brush their teeth and floss, all skills they did not learn growing up.  They must start life anew.”   Sobriety gives them hope.

Medical Marijuana,Colorado Springs
A medical pot shop in Colorado advertised using Sesame Street’s Cookie Monster.  Parents and Sesame Street objected and it was removed.

People laud the success of anti-smoking campaigns but what has changed youth smoking rates is the lack of adults who still smoke cigarettes.  It has become socially unacceptable.  How can an anti-pot campaign for kids can’t work when more adults are eating pot candy, or smoking it, and it’s advertised everywhere?

Recently a father from Washington who drove recklessly and was stoned forced his 12-year-old daughter to walk home.  Some of these parents don’t seem to be aware of the trauma they may be forcing their children to experience.  Traumatized children will be more inclined to abuse marijuana, alcohol and other drugs.

We need to break cycles of addiction if we are to have healthier adults who don’t follow their parents’ dysfunctional cycles.   Compared to 40 or 50 years ago when alcohol was the primary problem, we now have multi-substance addiction.  If we stopped substance abuse we could end about 70% of child abuse.  We will have more success in rooting out problems by getting to their roots in substance abuse, not possible when we are normalizing drug use.

Finally, we need to comply with international treaties, especially The Rights of the Child Treaty, and as long as we allow marijuana legalization, we are out of compliance with the treaties. For more information, read On Marijuana, edited by Pamela McColl, and Marijuana Debunked, by Ed Gogek, MD.

Although many very young children die from the abuse and neglect by parents who get stoned, this series concludes that the older children won’t die because of parent’s pot use.  The risks are for their long-term psychological well-being. (Read Part 1: custody problems, Part 2: treating burns from hash oil explosions. Part 3 explains the widespread problem of parents who give marijuana to their children. See our chart of the 53 deaths related to parents’ and caregivers’ pot use. )

A Mother’s Cry of Pain for her Adult Son – Pot and Mental Illness

Mental Illness and Smoking Marijuana – The Connection is Real

I am the mother of 2 sons. My eldest is 30 now and has been in and out of psychiatric hospitals for about 7 years. He has been in trouble with the law several times, as a result of this he can’t drive. He lives at home, but makes it his purpose to blame us for everything wrong in his life even though all we have done is given him many opportunities to change.

All he wants to do is to smoke pot all day. He says it helps, but we watch him and we know it doesn’t help at all.

I am realizing every day that he is manipulating us. He acts so crazy, by walking in circles, opening and closing the door 50 times a day.

My husband and I feel alone. We feel we are at the end of our rope. In his mind, we are part of a conspiracy. When I ask him why we would try to hurt him, he doesn’t know what to say. It only makes us have the responsibility to care for him and burden ourselves into not getting on with our own lives.

Last time he was in the hospital they sent him home after 2 days.  He was the same or worse than when he went into the hospital. This is the health system that destroys lives to save money. God help all the parents that are experiencing mental illness in their homes with no hope.

Please seek consultation with a psychiatrist who is certified for addictions treatment. Please check out the sources found on the American Society of Addiction Medicine website.  If he ever used marijuana before showing signs of mental illness, it is possible that his primary problem is marijuana addiction.  If not, his marijuana use is compounding the problem and making it impossible for him to be helped. Our hearts go out to you and any parents suffering this problem or the problems of addiction.

Marijuana Addiction is Real

This is my story and among some experiences I’ve encountered with marijuana.  Marijuana addiction is real; my 17-year-old daughter started smoking marijuana consistently for almost a year.

I found out by noticing changes in her personality, cognitive behavior, energy level, diet, digestive stomach problems, and sleep patterns. I started looking through her phone which showed videos and pictures of her and friends smoking and trying marijuana in different ways through pipes, dabs, vapes, joints, etc.  Although, she’s been marijuana free for several weeks, her mind is set that it’s ok to utilize marijuana because it’s been Continue reading Marijuana Addiction is Real

Is Harm Reduction Policy to Blame for Current Drug Epidemic?

A graduate school curriculum in Drug Abuse and Addiction teaches harm reduction as a strategy to train drug abuse counselors.  Inoculating these therapists with harm reduction only is an insidious way to promote drug use, drug abuse and addiction.

Harm reduction strategy does not seem to be curbing the current drug epidemic.  Three bad government decisions and strategies heighten the drug epidemic right now:  Continue reading Is Harm Reduction Policy to Blame for Current Drug Epidemic?