While many believe that underage drinking is an inevitable “rite of passage” that adolescents can easily recover from because their bodies are more resilient, exactly the opposite is true.

Every year there are parents who break the law: they host a party and serve teens alcohol. How often does this happen?
According to teens, it happens all the time."It's kind of like they open the door as soon as you get to the party," says 19-year-old Cameron, "and they have a bowl to the side where they take your keys before you even start drinking.
Why do some parents allow underage drinking? “Because they would rather it be at their house and for them to have the control," answers 19-year-old Marlena, "and for them to know where their kids are.”
"I hear that a lot," says Dr. Michael Fishman, an addiction specialist, "and the fallacy is 'to keep the kids safe'."That's the assumption, but is it true?
Is it really safer when kids drink with adult supervision? "I've been at parties where I've seen a mom say, 'hey, this kid is a little too drunk - no more for him," says 19-year-old Anthony.
The problem, kids say, is that sometimes there is no supervision. "And it was pretty much all of us downstairs partying," recalls 19-year-old Ryan. "The parents are upstairs doing - nothing. They just kind of minded their own business and let us have a party downstairs."
"Usually they are not around," agrees Flesner. "They just kind of host it and sometimes buy the alcohol -or they just allow it. And often, the kids start drinking at home - but they don't stay there.
"In fact, some people are going to leave that house intoxicated," says Dr. Fishman."It was a lot of the wealthy parents who had a big house," says 20-year-old Jessica Holt, about onepart she attended. "A lot of people could come.” "You're introducing a lifestyle to your 15, 16, 17 year old and that lifestyle is alcohol. And so by allowing them to drink in your home, you're basically giving them permission to drink in the world at large and any time they'd like," explains Stacey DeWitt, founder and CEO of Connect with Kids.
Tips for Parents Research shows that adolescents may be more vulnerable to brain damage from excessive drinking than older drinkers. Alcohol impairs brain activity in the receptors responsible for memory and learning, and young people who binge drink could be facing serious brain damage today and increased memoryloss in years to come. If one begins drinking at an early age, he/she is more likely to face alcohol addiction. Consider the following ...
Copyright 2009 CITIZENS RALLYING FOR CHANGE ON ALCOHOL. All rights reserved.