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A Drug education program with a different approach is reaching
thousands of students in Southland schools -- and creating a wave of
much-needed optimism that we can stem the tide of abuse.
by Mari Werner The drug-related death on June 5, 2002 of punk rock legend
Dee Dee Ramone in his Hollywood apartment was another sad but common statistic
from long-term substance abuse. A Heroin
user since the age of 15,
Dee Dee, who died at 49, told a reporter in 1998,
"Heroin is a cunning and insidious disease. It will trick you any way it can.,,
A study from the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration, released in March 2002, reports that Los Angeles has
the nation's highest drug-related deaths -- 1,192 of them in the year 2000
alone (the most recent annual statistics available). Heroin, Cocaine and alcohol accounted for 40%
of the deaths, mostly in individuals age 25 or above. And like Dee Dee Ramone and many others
before him, most of those who die from drugs started their abuse
and Addiction early.
Currently, every year in the United States, over 2.9 million
people start using illegal drugs, the vast majority of them children. If only
10 percent of them reach a point of needing professional help, simple math
demonstrates that there are nowhere near enough resources to do the job. And even for
those who do make it to packed rehab programs, the results
are seldom lasting, and a true cure is rare.
It is facts like these that drive Tony Bylsma, the director
of drug education and prevention for the Narconon drug rehabilitation program,
to reach out to more and more children in the greater Los Angeles area each year. Using drug education lectures that have been
refined over the past 23 years,Bylsma and other lecturers are proving that with a solid
education in drugs, kids can make sane and sensible decisions about drugs that
will keep them from abusing.
"You're the first person that actually made me think
and see the real side of drugs," said one LA high school student after a
Narconon drug education lecture. You're
not like all the other people who I've heard speak. They all say, 'Don't do drugs. Drugs are bad., But you said, 'Make your own decisions.' For the first time ever I listened.',
"I don't think that 'el [Ecstasy] is a good idea
anymore," wrote a student from Cleveland
High School. "I will always have (the lecture] in the
back of my mind."
School administrators and teachers have also noted the
difference, at times remarkable, in students after the lectures.
"The students in his [Bylsma's] classes universally
reported that they had, in fact, definitely learned things that they had not
previously known," said one Los
Angeles school principal. "He was not viewed as another adult
lecturing' and several students reported a desire to give up their drug use, or reaffirmed their commitment not to use."
Narconon lectures are used in classrooms in other U.S. cities, including New
England, where the leading drug education specialist in the
Narconon network, Bobby Wiggins, has reached hundreds of thousands of students.
Reduction of drug use of as much as 70 percent has been
reported in some schools as a result of
the Narconon drug education lectures. In
response to demand, Wiggins has trained up scores of other lecturers, like
Bylsma, and recorded his own lectures onto video. The drug education program has now reached close to a million students.
Education versus Fear
Narconon's drug education draws on a vast amount of
experience and knowledge. The Narconon
drug rehabilitation program, which uses exclusively the research and
discoveries of L. Ron Hubbard, is validated internationally by drug experts and
supported by governments in several countries its success rate: an average of
70 percent of students who complete the program never return to drugs. Started in 1966, Narconon has helped tens of
thousands of people to overcome addiction and dependency. Though the program is independent and not religious in nature, it
is avidly supported by Churches of Scientology and Scientologists world wide --
a drug-free community of millions -- for its results.
Narconon undertook broad drug education in the 1970s, after
observing that most attempts at prevention have little to do with education,
but more with fear.
"Education" also tends to convey that children and adolescents
are not yet responsible enough to make good decisions where drugs are
concerned. Thus in many cases, it
consists of grotesque pictures of burned-out, shriveled lungs, or arms torn up
by needles.
According to Bylsma, there is a huge liability in trying to
influence kids away from drugs in this manner.
"When they finally meet someone who's using a drug they
heard horror stories about, and he doesn't look anything like the pictures, it
tends to invalidate all warnings," he said.
Most past drug education approaches, he said, tried to
instill an idea or thought into the child's consciousness -with or without his
consent -- to motivate him to act in a desired way.
"It's the same principle used in advertising. There's a
trend of not even talking about the product, but just showing it in a way that
is supposed to motivate the audience to go buy it," Bylsma said. "When Brittany Spears sells Pepsi to the masses, she never once says that it
tastes better than the competition, nor that it is cheaper or better for you. She just holds the can up, dances around it
and makes sure that you see how good it looks in her hand. A can of 7-UP would look just as good, or
even motor oil."
Today, attempts to instill images against drugs into young
minds are overpowered by the massive promotion and advertising that occurs for drug products in every medium. Drugs are in the classrooms, as well as in
the medicine cabinets at home. They
pervade all forms of media -- so much so that a child can hardly watch TV or
flip through a magazine for more than a few minutes without being told how to
relieve aches, indigestion, obesity and depression with drugs.
Bylsma said that an anti-drug message that tries to use the
same tactics in the onslaught of pro-drug messages in society gets lost. Further, drug advertising attaches itself to
images of fun, or being able to perform well in life. The anti-drug messages attach to images of
fear, decay and damage.
"Which would kids rather pay attention to?" said
Bylsma, who noted that kids also get unnerved when programs use fear, as they
resent the attempt to make their decision for them. It also spurs some to rebel and go the other
direction.
Such outcomes have led to the belief by many that drug
prevention and education is ineffective in stemming the tide of drug abuse.
"Only ineffective education gets an ineffective
result," Bylsma said.
Drawing on Experience
In 1979, two of Narconon's staff in Los Angeles determined that the only viable,
long-term answer to the drug trend was education and prevention. They drew on the extensive experience of
Narconon executives and counselors, and sifted through all the worthwhile
references on drugs that they could find, including all the writings of L. Ron
Hubbard on the subject.
From there they developed a drug education program like no
other, then as well as now.
Narconon drug education takes a unique approach. It recognizes that students are already being
covertly convinced to consume drugs, through various channels in society. And
it presumes that students are capable of rational, independent decisions. Each lecture begins with a clear message to
the students that the purpose of the talk is education, and the decision making
is up to them.
After first developing the program in 1979, Narconon
executives sent a letter out to all LA area schools. They got back 200 responses, and from that
point, they began delivering 300 to 500 drug education lectures per year.
In January 1981, Narconon in Los Angeles
called and brought together the directors of other Narconon offices in the United States
for a seminar on how to deliver effective drug education to children.
Tony Bylsma was director of Narconon St. Louis at the time,
and was one of those called. He came to
LA, learned the drug education program and took it home. Using what he knew over the next few years,
he delivered drug education lectures to more than 100,000 people, the majority
of those students. After a
long hiatus, in 1999 he again determined to approach the drug problem from the
standpoint of education and this time, he would make it his mainline career.
In 2000, after training in Boston
under today's leading Narconon drug education expert, Bobby Wiggins, Bylsma
moved to Los Angeles
and established Narconon Drug Prevention and Education.
He and program director Sigal Adini now work out of a
storefront office in Glendale,
arranging and delivering lectures at Southland schools. They reach an average of 300 students, mostly
high school, each week. Bylsma spends
most of his weekdays at the schools, while Adini handles the promotion and
scheduling and also delivers some of the talks.
Bylsma sometimes calls on another veteran Narconon speaker from the
Narconon center in Newport
Beach, Gerry Marshall, to meet demand. To reach even more youth, the lectures have
been videotaped by an associated group, Friends of Narconon, and are
distributed nationwide.
Bylsma and Marshall both are capable of delivering the talks
to high schools, middle schools and grade schools, adjusting the presentation
and examples to fit the age group. In
some schools an assembly is called and they may speak to all or most of the student body at the
same time. In others they speak to one
or two classes at a time and often spend the full day at the school giving a
different talk at each class period.
Program Details
Over the years the program has been augmented and refined
based on survey results from students.
It includes a number of different lectures focusing on
different aspects of drug abuse -- effects on the body, the mind, the
individual himself and his life and future, as well as lectures on specific
drugs such as Marijuana, ecstasy and LSD.
One lecture is on drugs and alcohol in the media, and another is on
achieving goals -- which, in addition to demonstrating drugs, ills effects on
life achievement, provides the students with tools to help them set and achieve
their aims.
"An important aspect of drug education is to let students
know that there are other and better tools than drugs for handling life and
getting some respite from it," Bylsma said.
Each lecture opens with some ground rules. "I'm not
going to tell you what to do and I'm not going to try to scare you,"
Bylsma tells them. He also tells them he
won't treat them like little kids or give them cute little sayings to use, like
"Just say 'no."'
The educational part of each talk begins with the definition
of a drug: A drug is any substance you put in the body that is not a food and
that changes the way the body or the mind is working. He explains, per the researches of L. Ron
Hubbard, how all drugs are essentially poisons, whether cocaine, alcohol, ecstasy, coffee or any other drug.
The body's first response to a poison is to speed up and try
to get rid of it. Thus the first effect
of a small amount of any drug is to act as a stimulant. If more of the drug is consumed, it begins to
act as a depressant. The body begins to
be overwhelmed and slows down to try to minimize the effect of the poison. If still more of the drug is consumed the
depressant effect can lead to a coma and eventually to the third physical
response, which is death.
Building from these basics, the lectures differ, depending
on whether he is addressing their effect on the body, the mind or the
individual himself.
If he is giving talks to several different classes at the
same school, he'll try to give a different talk to each class. The students talk about it to each other, he
says, and by giving several different talks he leaves as much information with
them as possible.
Depending on which lecture he is giving he'll back it up
with stories from his own personal experience.
Having gotten off drugs through Narconon
himself, and having worked with the program for many years, he has
plenty of them.
After each lecture, students routinely have questions, and
Bylsma stays to answer them. He is frequently asked to stay and continue
talking or answering questions after a class period is over. He recalls one time after a lecture went particularly long, an impressed teacher told
him, "They chased out the last guest speaker after about 20 minutes."
His talks generate so much interest that it is not unusual
for students to give up a break to stay and hear more, or to ask questions.
"Kids are in mystery to some degree about drugs. You fill in the blanks, and they're very
interested. And if a kid understands
something, he's less likely to have to experiment with it to know what it
is," Bylsma said.
"Once again, you have 'wowed' the students with your
very powerful presentation about the dangers of drug use," wrote a school
counselor in an assessment of Bylsma’s lectures. "During each of your talks, I was
impressed with how attentive the classes were -- at times I could even hear the
proverbial pin dropping. The details you
provide, humor you interject and the personal story you share have a very
profound effect on our young people.,,
In a number of cases, the lectures have helped students
caught in the dilemma of having family members, even parents, who take
drugs. "These kids have a
particularly confusing time of it, trying to sort out right from wrong. Learning facts about drugs and drug use helps
them to understand, to sort that out," said Bylsma.
Results
After each lecture, the students are given a survey, to be
filled out anonymously, asking what they thought of the lecture, whether it
changed the way they think about drugs and how they can use what they
learned. Almost one for one they say
their thoughts about drugs changed from the lecture.
Teachers, counselors and school administrators are also
asked for their
review, and routinely give high p raise for the
lectures. “I, personally, was very moved
by the presentation. I also learned new
information along with our students," said one Los Angeles school principal. "I believe, after hearing the
presentation myself, that this program can truly save lives as well as help
people make decisions that will lead them towards productive lives.”
As Bylsma describes it, "Instead of concentrating on
'stopping' drug abuse, the Narconon drug education program puts children into
control as far as drugs are concerned. Children and teenagers are quite capable
of understanding and making their own sensible, informed decisions."
Narconon's plan is to keep going until they are reaching all
of the Southland schools and, nationally, the 2.9 million children that have
been starting on drugs each year.
"Bit by bit, we're chipping away at the drug culture.
We're aiming toward a point when the entire society can say 'know to
drugs,"' concludes Bylsma.
"It's the only way we are ever going to change the trend. It's the only way that's ever going to
happen.”
[SIDE BAR]
"You made me think, and see the real side of
drugs"
Students are asked to provide their anonymous assessment of
the Narconon drug education lectures; following are a few of the thousands of similar
responses on record.
"You're the first person that actually made me think
and see the real side of drugs. You're not like all the other people who I've
heard speak. They all say, 'Don't do
drugs. Drugs are bad.' But you said, 'Make your own
decisions.' For the first time ever I listened."
- High school student
"I can use what I have learned by never ever taking
drugs just because I want to fit in, or curiosity. This talk has taught me to be my own person,
especially when it comes to drugs."
- Seventh grader
"My (thoughts about drugs] changed in a way that I'm
not going to do drugs. I was planning to
start. I'm never going to try
drugs."
- High school student
"I will watch out for ads and open my eyes toward drug
ads. It makes me mad that people try to
advertise drugs to kids without them really noticing what's happening. Thank you for opening my eyes."
- High school student
"I ain't going no more.
I used to do marijuana, cocaine, meth and Crack. The information is going to stay with me for
the rest of my life.”
- High school student
"The students learned things I'm sure they hadn't
previously known or understood."
Teachers, counselors and school administrators throughout
the Los Angeles area have been asked for their assessment of the Narconon
drug education lectures. Following are several examples of their response.
"Often children are misinformed about the painful
effects of alcohol and drug use or abuse.
The Narconon presenter was able to clear up the myths and
misunderstandings about substance use and abuse. In addition to his charismatic teaching
approach, his willingness to share his own struggle with substance abuse
encouraged our students to actively listen and learn from his
presentation." - School Counselor
"The students in his classes universally reported that
they had, in fact, definitely learned
things that they had not previously known... He was not viewed as another adult
lecturing, and several students reported a desire to give up their drug use, or
reaffirmed their commitment not to use."
- School Principal
"Everyone appreciated the straightforward approach in
providing relevant information on what drugs do to the body. Furthermore, the Narconon speaker's honesty
and willingness to share his story with the audience proved to be extremely
effective and beneficial. The students
were attentive and learned things I'm sure they hadn't previously known or
understood..”
- School Counselor
“I, personally, was very moved by the presentation. I also learned new information along with our
students. I believe, after hearing the
presentation myself, that this program can truly save lives as well as help
people make decisions that will lead them towards productive lives.”
- School Principal
"The faculty and students really appreciate all your
efforts and feel that the assemblies were very effective. The deans also have been going to the student
parking lots before and after school. We
all notice a big difference for the better."
- Student Counselor
(SIDE BAR]
What is Narconon?
The Narconon drug rehabilitation program, which uses
exclusively the research and discoveries of L. Ron Hubbard, has helped tens of
thousands of people to overcome addiction and dependency. Though the program is independent and not
religious in nature, it is avidly supported by Churches of Scientology and
Scientologists world wide -- a 100 percent drug-free community of millions --
for its results.
Narconon -- meaning literally "no drugs" -- was
begun in 1966 by Willie Benitez, an addict and inmate in a state penitentiary
in Arizona,
who found a book by L. Ron Hubbard containing principles about life. Benitez corresponded extensively with Mr.
Hubbard, and using principles from his books and guided by letters from the
author, he overcame his addiction. Those
same elements, and later discoveries and developments of Mr.
Hubbard, constitute the program, which takes an average of
four to six months to complete. It is
done in four phases including withdrawal and detoxification, communication
skills to gain focus and self-control,
restoration of personal ethics and values, and life skills
that provide objective methods of dealing with any situation the drug-free
individual may encounter.
Narconon is validated internationally by drug experts and
supported by governments in several countries for its success rate: an average
of 70 percent of students who complete the program never return to drugs.
Narconon. The Road Out
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