Weed hits home: In a new Yahoo News/Marist Poll, parents and children are surprisingly open about pot use

When Michelle, a 40-year-old
lawyer from Connecticut, visited her son at college in Colorado, it did
not occur to her at first that she would be venturing from a state where
recreational marijuana was still against the law to one that had
recently voted to legalize it.
But when she did realize it, she decided it would be fun to get high legally — with her son.
Michelle and Schuyler, a 19-year-old organismal
biology and ecology major, are pioneers in the brave new world of pot
use. (To preserve their privacy, both requested that Yahoo News not use
their last name.)
Over the last four and a half years, eight states and
Washington, D.C., have legalized pot for recreational use; medical
marijuana is legal in 28 states plus D.C. Strictly speaking, selling or
possessing marijuana is still a federal crime, although rarely enforced
except against large-scale growers or dealers; the new administration
may be rethinking that policy. (Across our northern border, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau just introduced legislation that would make Canada the second nation in the world to completely legalize marijuana as a consumer product.) Before long, the U.S. marijuana industry will be creating more jobs than manufacturing — and joints may be as commonplace as pints.
How is this tectonic shift in society affecting our most important relationships? To find out, Yahoo partnered with the Marist Poll to produce an exclusive, in-depth look at weed and the American family, based on a survey of 1,122 Americans 18 and older.
As the law evolves, and as social attitudes evolve
along with it, more and more Americans are overcoming old taboos and
incorporating pot into their family lives. Marijuana use has become
surprisingly open and acceptable in families where adults use marijuana —
and, in fact, the majority of Americans who say they use marijuana are
parents (54 percent).
Again and again, the research shows that adults who have at least
some experience with marijuana — whether they use it regularly or have
simply tried it once — are much less likely to be concerned about its
effects on themselves or others. This suggests that as weed becomes more
widespread in the age of legalization, more Americans and their
families will start to feel the same way.
Yet these changes are not without their challenges.
What’s clear from the Yahoo News/Marist Poll
is that pot is now a bigger part of family life than ever before. Kids
aren’t hiding it from their parents as much as they used to. Many
parents aren’t even hiding it from their kids.
Already nearly half — 47 percent — of user
parents (people who use the drug at least once or twice a year) say they
have consumed marijuana in front of their (usually adult) children,
shared it with them or done both. And more than one in four users say
they’ve consumed marijuana in front of or with their own parents.
On the other hand, there is
still a stigma attached to the practice. Seventy-nine percent of
Americans say they would have less respect for a parent who uses
marijuana in front of their child — and even among those who use the
drug occasionally, 64 percent agree.
Fitting marijuana into your family life is, in short, complicated — as Michelle and Schuyler would be the first to admit.
Initially, Michelle had a commonplace reason for flying west: to
visit her son at college. But then she realized her friend’s birthday
was coming up, and a couple of additional invitations were extended.
Someone mentioned marijuana. Ooh, Michelle thought, that could be nice. Before long, she was booking a “420-friendly” Airbnb and browsing nearby recreational marijuana shops on Yelp.
Michelle is hardly a pothead; she probably
“smokes a couple of times a year,” she says, and only with friends. But
Michelle did use more regularly as a teenager, and when Schuyler was
born, she decided she would handle the drug differently than her own
“strict Catholic Latino” parents had: She would be candid with Schuyler
about her experiences and allow him to experiment too — within certain
parameters.
“For us, pot wasn’t going to be a problem in
and of itself, but ‘Are you doing well in school? Do you have a good
attitude? Fine — you can smoke on the weekends,’” Michelle explains. “If
I had just said no, I wouldn’t have known what was going on with
Schuyler, and that’s scarier.”
As Michelle planned her Colorado trip, the prospect of getting high
with Schuyler intrigued her. “I was like, ‘Wow, this is the next phase
of our relationship,’” she says. “We can have fun together in an adult
way.”
Schuyler seemed excited too. Michelle and her
friends picked him up at school, then drove to Denver. At the local
dispensary, Michelle says she was “like a kid in a candy store. I was
buying Schuyler whatever he wanted. They had all these different things:
gummy bears, chocolates, pot you can smoke to make you happy, another
kind for joint pain. We were having the best time.”
Schuyler, however, has a different memory of that evening.
“I did
not enjoy it,” he says. “My mom and her friends bought way too much
stuff. They all just got trashed and were like, ‘We’re going to watch
“Bad Boys II”!’ And I’m like, ‘What the f*** is this? I’m going outside.’ They were way more into it than I was.”
A few months later, Schuyler finally
confronted his mom about her visit. “He was like, ‘Yeah, that totally
weirded me out,’” Michelle recalls. “I was really disappointed.”
Today, Schuyler struggles to describe how
disorienting the experience was. “I don’t know,” he mutters. “I’ve
always been mature for my age. And I couldn’t help but feel, in that
moment, like my mom wasn’t as mature as me. It was kind of like, ‘This
is not how it’s supposed to be.’”
But how is it supposed to be?
When it comes to weed, the American family is
entering uncharted territory — and Michelle and Schuyler are not alone
in their confusion over the rules they’re supposed to follow and the
roles they’re supposed to play.
New laws
and new attitudes are making life more complicated for every family
that deals with the issue. Some are happily getting high. Some are
celebrating the change. Others are dealing with anxiety, uncertainly,
even shame. How do I persuade my kids not to experiment with pot
when suddenly it’s for sale — in brownie form — at the corner
dispensary? Do I still need to hide my habit from my husband now that
it’s no longer illegal?
The first thing to know is that,
according to the poll, most Americans who’ve tried marijuana at some
point in their lives — a whopping 65 percent of them, in fact — now have
children. The same goes for occasional users, who use pot at least once
or twice a year (54 percent) and regular users, who use it at least
once or twice a month (51 percent) — which means that as America
transforms itself into a more marijuana-friendly society, families are
set to take center stage.
We’ve all heard about the “mainstreaming of
marijuana” in recent years, and it’s true that pot use has become more
acceptable overall. (According to the poll, the nation as a whole is now
divided — 49 percent in favor, 47 percent against — on the question of
legalizing marijuana for recreational use). One of the more striking
consequences of this mainstreaming is that it is altering our attitudes
about children and pot.
Overall, Americans are less worried about
children smoking marijuana than they are about children smoking
cigarettes, with 24 percent naming cigarettes as their top concern and
only 21 percent naming weed.
That’s a far cry from the days of “Reefer Madness.”
So why the change? Perhaps it’s because most adults now think marijuana
is better for you than Miller High Life or Marlboros. (Only one of
these substances, after all, is regularly described as “medicinal.”) By a
margin of more than four to one, Americans say that regular tobacco use
(76 percent) is a bigger health risk than regular marijuana use (18
percent) — and they say the same thing about alcohol (72 percent vs. 20
percent).
Compare parents who’ve tried pot with parents who haven’t, and the shift becomes even starker.
Sure, parents as a whole still cite pot as
the top concern for their children (24 percent). But only six percent of
parents who actually use marijuana share this view. In fact, both pot
users and “triers” — the 52 percent of Americans who’ve tried the drug
at least once in their lives — put it at the bottom of a list of
concerns for their children, behind cigarettes, alcohol, sex and
cheating on a test.
A Los Angeles lawyer and his daughter embody how parental priorities are evolving.
After each realized the other was also a pot smoker, they developed a
winking goodbye routine whenever the daughter went out at night.
“Don’t drink and drive,” he would say.
“I don’t drink and drive,” she would answer.
“Don’t smoke weed and drive.”
“I don’t smoke weed and drive.”
“Don’t do coke and drive.”
“I don’t do coke.”
Across the board, the Yahoo News/Marist Poll
shows that Americans who have at least tried marijuana are a lot more
likely to feel that the drug is compatible with family life than those
who’ve never touched it. Fifty-six percent of pot “triers” who are also
in a relationship say their spouse or partner would approve of their
recreational use if it were legal. Sixty percent of parents who’ve tried
pot think their kids would either approve of their mom or dad’s
recreational pot use or wouldn’t care. Among parents who use marijuana,
69 percent support prescribing legal medical marijuana to children — and
a full 75 percent consider the drug to be socially acceptable.
Among all parents — including those who don’t use or haven’t tried pot — these numbers are significantly lower.
Even mixing pot with pregnancy isn’t the
taboo it once was, at least among users. Only about one in five
Americans (21 percent) believe it’s OK for a pregnant woman to use
marijuana for easing nausea or pain. But that figure jumps to 40 percent
among regular users of weed.
“I figured out how I could curb the nausea but not feel like a stony-pony,” says Melissa Vaughn, a 37-year-old stay-at-home mom in the Boston area
who ate three to four mini pot brownies a day during her pregnancy.
“There were no side effects. It completely stopped my nausea.”’ Yet for
Melissa, the drug did have a downside. At one of her prenatal visits,
she nervously told her doctor that marijuana had stopped her
debilitating morning sickness — then watched as he entered the
information into her record. “When my son was born, they had to collect
his meconium to get it tested and make sure there was no THC in his
system — because then I was going to have to go to social services,” she
explains. “Isn’t that horrible?”
Still, despite any remaining risks, the Yahoo
News/Marist Poll finds that family members who use marijuana have
become remarkably open about it. Ninety-five percent say their spouse,
partner or significant other knows they use it; the same percentage say
their significant other knows how often they use it. Eighty-two percent
of users in a relationship have either used pot in front of their
spouse, partner or significant other, shared it with them or done both.
Sixty percent of parents who use marijuana say their children are aware
that they use it, and a majority (54 percent) of them have spoken
directly to their kids about their use. Similarly, 72 percent of adult
children who use pot say their parents know that they do.
Diagnosed with leukemia four years ago,
69-year-old Michael Good, a political science professor in Oakland,
Calif., was no stranger to weed; he’d smoked some as a “hippie” in the
1960s but not much since. Later, he’d turned a blind eye to his son’s
teenage use — but as a senior citizen he insisted that Jason accompany him on his first visit to a dispensary. “It was a fun experience for us,” Jason says. “There was something subversive about it.”
At the
very least, today’s families are discussing pot; 73 percent of parents
say they’ve had the talk with their kids. But that represents a sharp
break from earlier generations. Overall, 60 percent of Americans say
their parents did not talk to them about marijuana, and the older the
person, the less common those conversations were; 72 percent of baby
boomers never had the talk with their parents, and among members of the
Silent and Greatest generations (those over age 69), that number climbs
to 95 percent. (Perhaps the more surprising statistic is that among this
cohort, who grew up in the 1930s, when pot was a furtive indulgence of
jazz musicians and assorted bohemians, as many as 5 percent did get
a lecture about marijuana from their parents.) Likewise, 73 percent of
the over-69 group say marijuana is a health risk, compared with 59
percent of baby boomers, 52 percent of Gen Xers — and only 35 percent of
millennials.
Ultimately, the data hints that more and more American families will
soon experience what Michelle and Schuyler have already gone through.
When Schuyler was a kid, his mom was open with him about her past pot
use; when Schuyler first tried marijuana as a ninth-grader, he was open
with his mom. Michelle may have been more permissive than most mothers,
but she still set boundaries: Get good grades, wait until the weekend to
smoke, don’t smoke if you’re not feeling well (both Schuyler and
Michelle struggle with depression) — that sort of thing. And just like
most teenagers, Schuyler pushed those boundaries, overindulging at
times, getting depressed and demanding to know why, if pot was OK, he
couldn’t smoke it during the week too.
“The whole thing definitely caused friction
between me and my mom,” Schuyler says. “We had different expectations,
and they changed all the time. It felt like one day I was allowed to and
the next day I wasn’t.”
“Sometimes, Schuyler seemed to wish it was just a straight ‘no,’” Michelle admits.
The summer after senior year, Michelle
finally gave in and let Schuyler and his friends smoke in her sunroom;
at one point, she went out and showed them how to roll a proper joint.
To this day, Michelle’s disapproving mother still forwards her news
stories about how marijuana is a gateway drug (a view shared by 20
percent of Americans, including 38 percent of those 70 and older).
And yet
both Schuyler and Michelle survived — and in some ways, they seem
stronger for it. Schuyler is doing well in college; now he only smokes
occasionally, and for that he his credits his mom, at least in part.
“She didn’t create this major deal around it, so I never did drugs as a
rebellion,” he says. “When I got to college, I wasn’t like some of my
friends who drank too much and had a problem. I didn’t go crazy, like,
‘What is this marijuana?!’”
Michelle, meanwhile, says she wouldn’t do
anything differently. “I think, in the long run, I’d rather have
Schuyler trust me and share with me — even if he sometimes thinks I’m an
idiot or that I’m embarrassing or whatever,” she explains. “In the end,
I always think openness is the better way to go.”
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