Making Good Decisions
Sooner or later, most American children
will be offered drugs, and will have to make a conscious decision to
accept or reject them. And they will likely be faced with this decision
many times before they grow out of adolescence. How can you make sure
your child continues to make the right choice?
"Parents can help their children learn how to say no when a friend
offers drugs by role-playing with them the ways they make tough life
choices," says Ruth Wooden, president of the National Parenting
Association in New York. She says, "If your kids see how you deal with
the tough issues of daily life and how you consider options, your kids
will have first hand experience with their own tough choices." She
advises parents to ask their children questions like, "My boss wants me
to work this weekend and I really would rather not. How do I tell him no
without getting in trouble?" Or "Grandma is going to be mad at me if I
tell her I don't like the gift she gave me for Christmas. Any ideas on
how to handle this?"
"The point is the children need to learn that tough choices are part of
everyone's life and it takes practice to think through decision-making
strategies. Help your kids get practice and let them know your life is
not stress-free either," Wooden says.
Wooden points out two key times to watch when your child may be most
vulnerable to use drugs. One is when they are feeling really low, maybe
after a bad test or losing a game or when a friend moves away. The
notion that "drugs will make you feel better" can have a lot of appeal
during the down times. Children need to be alerted to the fact that the
best decision to make when they are feeling blue is no decision at all.
Important decisions require them to "be thinking clearly" and being sad
or depressed is a time when they should be prepared to "stay put" and
not make any major decision.
The other dangerous time is when your child has had a string of "good
luck" (i.e., when they are feeling "on top of the world" and everything
is going right). These times can blind them into believing that they can
do anything and it will turn out fine. Children need to involve parents
in order to make clear-headed decisions in both instances. She says,
"When they see our decision process, or better yet, when we ask them for
their opinion, they get real life practice in a safe space."
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