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Lele
Recently, MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) came to my school,
Miami Palmetto Senior High. They came to launch a new video, which
attempted to reach youth using popular media and a high tech show.
There were tragic personal stories in the video, of the destruction
and devastation drug use can cause. I had tears running down my
face, and I know many others around me did too. But was the video
effective in reaching out to its audience? |
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Less than a month after
the video was shown, a boy in my school was killed in a car accident,
very probably with alcohol playing a part. And on Halloween, or
Homecoming, or any of the other of the weekend nights, did the video
make any difference…to anyone? Sometimes I feel like it doesn't.
Like all the effort, all the assemblies, all the talks, will come
to nothing. That no matter how many drug facts we spread around
the school, how many speeches I make to the world, it doesn't mean
anything to my friends, my classmates. Because we're young and impetuous
and high on life, and we live in the world of "nothing could
ever happen to me."
But it's not true, because there are too many people who die or
are hurt every day for this idea to continue. As DFYIT (Drug Free
Youth In Town) president of my school, we try so hard to spread
the truth and create fun incentives for kids to stay drug-free.
But we're battling so much ignorance, so much disbelief. I joined
DFYIT to alleviate the pressure on so many kids today, to provide
an atmosphere where plenty of kids are living life to the fullest
without drugs. We teach that despite what they think, marijuana,
tobacco, and alcohol are very powerful drugs, and not something
to have fun in the parking lot during lunch or after school. Most
importantly, we want to provide them with the knowledge that they
can develop into strong, independent individuals without drugs.
We are our nation's future we have dreams and hopes. And I bet
none of them include being drug addicts, living that image of a
dark alley corner, or facing that door of an Alcoholics Anonymous
meeting.
So what must be done to make a difference? All we can do is try,
and try, and try. And then try some more… to use whatever
preventive methods we can think of to help. We want to change people,
starting with one, two, three… until more and more through
the combined efforts of everyone have heard the message. In the
end, all the speeches, assemblies, and talks do make a difference.
I have a goal and I have ways to achieve it. I also have leaders
to guide me. This is my anti-drug: to make a difference in my life
and in the lives of my classmates |