An Alarming Number of Teens Say They Turn To AI For Company, Study Finds

A new survey paints a bleak picture of the new generation.



Nobody hates talking frankly to children more than their parents β and nobody but their parents have more incentive to tell a convenient lie. You may deny it, but letβs be real: one of the βsecretsβ of effective parenting is the Platonic lie, the noble sacrifice of honesty for harmony. Maybe you donβt really know the right answers, maybe youβd prefer not to say, maybe itβs already 9 p.m. on a weeknight, the kitchen is still messy, and your four-year-old wants an existential treatise before bed. So you take the easy way out and make something up. These are hollow victories, won with cheap shortcuts, that ring only in the near term.
All the above applies whenΒ talking to children about cannabis. In an age when tens of millions of American adults have access to recreational marijuana β and may even keep it in their home, a home they share with children βΒ andΒ when there isΒ growing acceptanceΒ (andΒ factual data supporting it) for providing medical cannabis to children suffering from specific ailments treated with cannabis, it behooves everyone to be honest, immediately.
If you are over 30, you should also be honest withΒ yourself, being the victim of years of anti-cannabis propaganda told to you by parents, teachers, and other authority figures you let you down. This simple maxim β tell the truth β is Elizabeth DβAmicoβs strategy for talking to children about cannabis. But weβd add one more bullet point, one for which DβAmico provides an object lesson: Find out what the truth about cannabis is for yourself before you do.
DβAmico is a clinical psychologist and a researcher at the RAND Corporation. She is also the lead author of βPlanting the Seeds of Marijuana Use,βΒ a recent study that examined the effect of medical marijuana advertising on impressionable youth. She and other researchers and found that constant bombardment with billboards and print ads gives kids the idea that cannabis is mostly safe and good.
And this is mostly true! CannabisΒ doesΒ appear to be a safer choice than alcohol or tobacco, according toΒ a 2015 studyΒ published in Science Reports that included research from decades of related studies.
βIf you say something is bad, thatβs not giving them the full facts,βΒ DβAmico told Westword. DβAmico is also the mother of two teens and lives in the Los Angeles area, which is both heavily populated and saturated with cannabis advertisements.
At all times, DβAmico told the newspaper, the mission of a parent around marijuana is to encourage teens to βmake a healthy choice by really talking to them about all sides so they can ask questions β and when they do, be honest about it. Because if you just tell somebody, βDonβt do it,β we know that doesnβt work.β
DβAmico demonstrates a pervasive problem that encounters both adults and teens alike when discussing cannabis use: Itβs not as simple as being able to tell your children that adults can responsibly use cannabis, but children never can.
For example, DβAmico told Westword: βYes, there are medical benefits, but theyβre benefits for adults. No medical benefits have been shown for adolescents.β
This is a surprising and troubling claim for a researcher to make, unchallenged,Β and it is one contradicted by some scholarly evidence,Β as well as heaps of anecdotes.
Cannabis-derived medicines are helping many kids with seizures and with autism, just as they are helping adults β because thatβs the thing. Adults and kids are both humans, with human brains and bodies. To posit that a child of 17 lacks an endocannabinoid system that then mysteriously appears when they become of voting age isnβt grounded in fact. It also contradicts what pharmaceutical companies know β but it may be what you, the parent, βknowβ based on your own indoctrination and conditioning.
The point is this: You may not know the answer to what your teen asks about marijuana. Be honest and admit your ignorance when it arises β and then correct it. This will require some rigorous self-examination, but it will be worth it. If you repeat an old lie, the kids always seem to find out eventually.
TELL US, have you talked with your children about cannabis?
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