Jen – Interview 32
Jen used to drink as a teenager but has always been cautious about drugs. She grew up in a small village where there was a drug problem. A few of Jen’s friends would take pills at raves. After seeing videos at school about the effects of pills, she has always been terrified of them. Jen drank a lot at University but doesn’t drink so much now that she has a full-time job.
Jen says that she was a late starter when it came to alcohol, and that she grew up in a family where alcohol wasn’t freely available. It was not until she was sixteen or seventeen and started going to house parties that she started to share a bottle of vodka with friends. She would feel uncomfortable drinking and being drunk. This created problems with her parents. She had been quite well behaved when she was younger, so they were probably quite disappointed when she started to go out drinking. She says that it was just a difficult teenage phase, and that parents and children have to go through some readjusting. At the time she felt quite conflicted because she wanted to go out and drink and have fun with her friends. She says that it wasn’t so much the drinking but that she just wanted to go out and do what her friends were doing at the weekend.
A few of her friends were taking pills at raves. After seeing videos at school about the effects of pills, she has always been terrified of them.
She has always been cautious about drugs. She grew up in a small village where there was a drug problem. An ex-boyfriend was quite into speed. She and her school friends were just into alcohol. She tried smoking weed as a teenager but was afraid to continue.
Things changed when she went to university, where alot of the social activities revolved around drinking:in halls, at a pub, or parties at weekends. Jen’s drinking definitely increased, going out with friends to drink about three times a week. However, she does emphasise that she and her friends were usually quite sensible and avoided putting themselves at risk. She met her husband during her first year at university. She thinksthat she was ‘far too sensible’.
Now Jenis happy with just a glass of red wine and a cigarette. Jen pointed out that people change their drinking habitsthrough different stages in life such as when you get a job, start earning money, and get married. She says that the time for experimenting was when she was a teenager and she would rather put her job first now.