Joe – Interview 29
Joe used to drink a lot at parties when he was a teenager. When he moved out of home he started to smoke cannabis regularly. For a time, Joe was going to drum & bass nights regularly where he would often use ecstasy. He has stopped using drugs and drinks alcohol less often because he has become more interested in health and fitness. He goes out to pubs and clubs far less often now.
At age fifteen Joe started going to parties with his school friends. At first he didn’t drink very much and mostly drank alcopops because he didn’t like the taste of beer. His friends started to tease him for liking girl’s drinks. He first got drunk at age sixteen when at a friends house party. He drank half a bottle of whisky and later felt so bad that put him off alcohol for a few months.
He thinks that it is common for young men to drink alcohol to feel more relaxed and confident in social situations – like talking to girls -commonly known as Dutch courage’.
When he turned eighteen he felt lot of pressure from male friends to drink beer. Somehow, it was expected that men drink pints. Joe is not a keen beer drinkerbut he followed the crowd and had several pints only to feel very sick afterwards!
At seventeen, and at a party, Joe tried his first joint. He moved out of his parents house at nineteen to share a house with friends andstarted to smoke weed regularly. He enjoyed smoking cannabis but stopped at age twenty after he began to experience episodes of paranoia. Plus he also wanted to stop smoking tobacco. He found giving up cigarettes the hardest. He gave up both substances pretty much on his own with the help of a self-help programme. In his late teens, he started going out to drum & bass nights, and started to use ecstasy. He also tried cocaine and ketamine a few times, but gave it up soon afterwards. He was concerned about the health risks associated with drugs.
Joe’s attitude to alcohol has changed. Unlike his teenage years, he orders what he wants to drink rather than have whatever everybody else is drinking. He goes to pubs and clubs less often now andusually only for a special occasion like a birthday or to a gig, instead of going out every weekend. He would probably still drink a lot when out with friends, but he drinks much less frequently than in his teenage years.
Joe lives in Scotland and thinks that the drugand alcohol health awareness campaigns therehave had an impact on young people. He is more aware of the health risks associated with them.