Pubdate: Tue, 23 Mar 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Beth Rippen PEER PRESSURE AND SMOKERS I agree that 25 percent of the money from the tobacco settlements should go to education on the physical effects of smoking in an effort to prevent people, especially teens and children, from picking up the habit in the first place (Letters, March 18). As someone who started smoking four years ago, at age 15, I think that the education minors now receive about the dangers of smoking, and the dangers of drugs in general, is lacking -- particularly as it relates to peer pressure. How else to explain why I and my friends, all aged 16 to 23, smoke or are currently trying to quit? I went to a new high school my senior year. As an outsider I was able to watch the interactions my peers had with each other from an altogether different standpoint. I realized that high school is filled with peer pressure. Along with society's normal pressure to conform, these kids have to balance fashion trends with school dress codes; the need for friends with the demands of homework; and the desire to date with the fear of pregnancy and STDs. These kids are under stress. A few of them gravitate toward smoking as a way to handle that stress. I did. The myth that ``everybody's doing it'' is false. A few do it. They tell others that because they want more of their peers to do it. It's not out of an intention to harm another, but out of a desire to be perceived as normal. The smoker, the pothead, the crackhead and the drunk don't want to be perceived as the deviant element in high school. So by telling his or her friends that ``everybody's doing it,'' he or she is just hoping that by saying it enough times to enough people, it will eventually be true. Because then they won't be the freak anymore. Beth Rippen Santa Clara - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck