Pubdate: Thu, 30 Mar 2000
Source: Ann Arbor News (MI)
Copyright: The Ann Arbor News 2000
Contact:  P. O. Box 1147, Ann Arbor, MI 48106
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Author: Susan L. Oppat, News Staff Reporter

ANNUAL HASH BASH DRAWS DIFFERING POINTS OF VIEW

Some Looking Forward To Saturday's Event, Others Aren't

Shannon Fiala and David Wilson both attend the University of Michigan. Both
were sitting in the sun on the Diag Wednesday afternoon.

But when it comes to marijuana use and this Saturday's 29th annual Hash
Bash, they seem to come from different planets.

Wilson, a 21-year-old sophomore from Toronto, is looking forward to the Hash
Bash. He missed it last year when it took place during Passover. "I've heard
all walks of life come, people you wouldn't normally see on campus."

Wilson won't smoke at the Hash Bash. "I'm not interested in getting busted,"
he said. But the art and creative-writing student uses marijuana every week
or two, believing it broadens his creativity.

Wilson estimates that 95 percent of the people he knows in Ann Arbor use
marijuana - and that half of those abuse the drug, using it until "they lose
their ambition, and motivation."

Wilson believes he has a handle on his drug use.

"If I love basketball, I won't play basketball seven days a week and exclude
my friends. Same thing with marijuana. I enjoy it. But I know when to use
the drug and when not to. I've had bad times on marijuana - paranoia,
headaches. Sometimes, you've got work to do, and you can't do it (on
marijuana)."

Fiala, a first-year Women in Science and Engineering (WISE) student from
Kalamazoo, has used marijuana, about six times in high school, "to see what
it's like."

She didn't like it - it made her slow on the soccer field, among other
things. She decided before she arrived in Ann Arbor not to use it any more,
and doesn't think she knows anyone here who does.

Fiala has heard about the Hash Bash, that "people come to the Diag from all
over Michigan and buy a lot of marijuana and get really high." But she won't
be there - she'll be volunteering for Hands on the Planet, a day of service
projects to clean up the environment.

"I think in high school, it's more something cool to do. Now I just think
it's kind of stupid. It's just a phase, and I grew out of it," Fiala said.

She said she has a high school friend who uses marijuana heavily. After
eight years playing soccer, Fiala's friend had to leave the sport - she
couldn't keep up. She's not attending college but working in what Fiala
considers a dead-end job.

That's the problem with marijuana, according to Kathleen Bishop, a Drug-Free
Schools coordinator for Ann Arbor Schools.

"Any drug you use to cope with any situation, even if it's to socialize, is
a problem, because you're not learning skills to deal with life, to deal
with feelings, like boredom," Bishop said.

"Kids ... don't understand that it's addictive. They think it's a natural
high, no big deal. But when we see addicted kids, marijuana is always a
component. They start with alcohol, but they are always using marijuana in
addition to whatever drugs they are using."

In the peer support groups Bishop runs in Ann Arbor middle schools, she
takes her victories in small doses.

Like one middle-school girl, described by Bishop as a street-wise kid who
"smoked dope." Bishop said there were drugs in the girl's home and a
divorce, which the girl was having a hard time coming to terms with.

"Kids have to be able to talk about how they feel and be allowed to grieve
the loss, and this wasn't happening."

One day the girls told Bishop she had quit smoking marijuana.

"She said, 'You're right. It's a problem for me.' That's the biggest issue.
A lot of kids say 'drug use is a problem, but not a problem for me.'

"You just have to keep driving it home that this is not healthy coping,
you're not dealing with what you need to deal with," Bishop said. "The point
is to get kids to a place where they can look at their lives, because one of
the effects of marijuana is to be numb."

What happened to the girl? Bishop isn't sure. Has she stayed off drugs?
Probably not. So why use her as an example of success?

"We slowed it down. She left knowing that marijuana is addictive, that she
has addictive tendencies. That was a victory. I ruined her drug use. This
kid stopped, for a while."

The biggest factor in prevention, Bishop said, is having a responsible adult
teaching children values.

"We teach them that, if they are in trouble, there are people they can go
to, grown-ups who will care about them. If nothing else, we've taught them
that they can go to the school counseling office and say 'Hey, I'm in
trouble."
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