Erowid is gathering stories about how families who value cannabis and psychedelics have handled things in the midst of the Drug War. The emphasis in our approach is on "family" rather than just "kids and drugs" or what may be wrong with school-based programs. This focus is also on personal accounts rather than empirical research. These are stories we are less likely to read among existing resources, since this is a taboo subject, and families' experiences are shared person-to-person and are not often documented.
"It's like questions about sex [father]"
Recently divorced, this father of a 17-year-old and a 14-year-old describes how he's handled the topic of drugs with his children.
"I feel a lot of responsibility [sister]"
A college student whose little brother recently started doing drugs, and who struggles with how best to talk with him about it.
"No idea what had just happened [son]"
Usually very open about his use of psychedelics, when asked about his experience doing LSD with his mother, Michael took pause.
"So I gave him MDMA and 2C-B [brother]"
a 24-year-old peer counselor and health educator. At the time of his interview, he and his wife were the guardians for his 16-year-old brother.
"Can you tell me a little bit about attitudes about psychoactives around your house when you [or your children] were growing up?"
"Can you describe a little bit more the setting [of a particular experience]?"
"How old were you [when this experience happened]?"
"Knowing what you know now, and just thinking back on the experience, would you have done anything differently?"
"What were some of the things that informed your approach? Was it seeing things around you that didn't work? Things that did work? Were there things that you read, or people that you met that had had experiences that you thought were relevant?"
"What about siblings, how have their experiences differed from your own?"
"What kind of follow-up, or "integration" happened after the experience?"
"Were there other people in your community doing this in a similar fashion? Did you see yourself as having peers, in the context of a community?"