Kayleigh – Interview 12
Kayleigh, a university graduate, described herself as a ‘late starter’ when it comes to drinking alcohol. She says that she didn’t have a clue about how much to drink when she was a teenager and would get too drunk. She thinks that health professionals should make women more aware of risks to the baby that drinking alcohol has during pregnancy.
Kayleigh, a university graduate, describes herself as a late starter’ when it came to drinking alcohol. By the age of fourteen or fifteen Kayleigh and her friends realised that they were the odd ones out’ and began to drink alcohol like other young people they knew. She remembers her first alcoholic drink was cheap cider and didn’t really enjoy it so she stopped until she was seventeen and then started trying more expensive drinks.
Although underage she had no difficulty in getting hold of vodka. She says that she didn’t have a clue about drinking so she would drink double or triple vodka and would be completely flat out’. There was one situation in which she was completely drunk and got a taxi back home but realised she didn’t have enough money. The taxi driver, however, made sure she got home safe. Looking back, she thinks that is a classic example of putting herself at risk when drunk and considers herself lucky’.
Kayleigh remembers that teenagers would often come into school on Monday and boast about their drunken adventures over the weekend. But she thinks it’s not just teenagers that boast about it. For instance, Facebook is often used by those in their twenties or thirties to put their drunk’ pictures. She thinks it’s a problem in British culture that people think they can’t have a good time without alcohol.
After she met her now husband she stopped drinking alcohol. She described herself as a shy teenager and found that alcohol made it easier to meet boys. She describes her mother as a casual drinker and her husband drinks very little now, and her father finds it difficult to understand that they don’t drink.
When she was pregnant with her second child she did a project on alcohol and pregnancy at the YWCA [now Platform 51] and was shocked to find out about the effects of alcohol on the unborn child. She thinks that health professionals, midwives in particular should make women more aware of it.
Kayleigh says that she has never tried any drugs and never been offered them either. She thinks that two main factors protected her from drugs; love and concern for her grandmother, and the fact that none of her friends were interested in experimenting with drugs.