Q: How do I strike a balance when talking to my 15-year-old daughter about her casual/social alcohol and marijuana use between keeping the lines of communication open while letting her know that I don’t condone it? What’s most important to me is that she talks to me about this stuff. I don’t want that to stop.
We’ve talked about safety, both from sexual assault, physical injury and adulterated marijuana. I want her to know that she can call me any time she feels unsafe and she will absolutely not be in trouble if she’s been drinking or using marijuana. But at the same time, I’d rather her not do either and I want to let her know that.
My fear is that if I come on too strong, she’ll stop talking to me and she’ll continue to drink/smoke. How do I let her know that I’d really rather she not do it at all, without leading her to stop confiding in me?
A: Thank you for being courageous enough to write this letter. The reason we see so many books, posts and questions about younger children is because, while the issues can be difficult and confusing, the stakes are often so much lower when parenting younger children.
When it comes to the teen years, facing drug and alcohol use is one of the many topics that can keep us sleepless and, suffice it to say, many of us didn’t grow up with the ability to speak frankly about these topics. Secrecy and a lack of communication around substance use was (and is) the way that most families handled it, and the fact that you have spoken to her about safety and your unwavering and unconditional love speaks volumes about your relationship.
And, still. The data is clear around how alcohol and marijuana use can change the adolescent brain, so you are right to be concerned. My favorite book on this subject is “The Addiction Inoculation” by Jessica Lahey. It is full of the latest data surrounding substance use and the adolescent brain. I spoke to Lahey directly about your letter, and here are the key takeaways for you (and every parent who is coping with this right now).
- Pick up “The Addiction Inoculation” and read it or listen to it. You are not going to take it all in or use it all, but there will be parts that will speak directly to your situation. That is what you want to use to spark conversations.
- Lahey suggests speaking frankly about the gray line between substance use and addiction. You should also discuss your daughter’s friends rather than using “you,” as a little bit of distance, Lahey says. This will lessen your daughter’s need to be defensive about her own use. Arm her with a little bit of data around when the use slips into “problematic.” Changes in sleep, grades, eating, school sport/groups, grades and friendships can all signal that the casual use is […]
View this full article on The Washington Post
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