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"Peer Pressure"

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Fri 09/01/04 at 14:36
Regular
"cachoo"
Posts: 7,037
Have you ever felt the pressure from your friends? To do something you so badly don't want to do?
The words Peer Pressure, makes your friends sound like enemies. Especially if you have been pressured and think of all the things you have felt you have been made to do.

This was kind of inspired from SHEEPY's topic 'First time for everything', only because I thought that most of the things
I'd done in that list were influenced. By alcohol, of course. But friends push you to drink..! So you 'want' to fit in.
Have you ever felt you've been pressured into doing something? Like smoking your first cigarette or joint, stolen something, or having sex? Or anything else. Or have you ever turned down something because you're not stupid? And then have the grief of getting laughed at by them, or not fitting in.
A lot of people have real friends who wouldn't laugh at them and would accept their choice. But I didn't hang around with the right people so wouldn't know about that! ;)

So.. interesting to know. Have you ever felt pressured into doing something you don't want to? Tell us your stories! :)
Sat 10/01/04 at 13:57
Regular
Posts: 16,558
Being older doesn't mean you have to drink to show your age.
Sat 10/01/04 at 02:25
Regular
"leaf it aaaaht"
Posts: 7,914
Daedalus wrote:
> Hey Alec, fancy a game of cod sunday morning?


ALEC!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sat 10/01/04 at 02:18
Regular
"leaf it aaaaht"
Posts: 7,914
I've never been pressured into anything.

When my friends smoked i never and when i wanted to try it they never let me and told me off!

When my friends had sex...well..in my group there was 2 people who had had sex, and when i did have sex it was it someone i trusted and *loved* and i was 16 and i was one of the first to have sex.

When it comes to drugs...i when i was younger i didnt hang out with people who did drugs but now a few of my mates do from time to time but ive never been with them when they do it and i'd never do it and i know they'd never pressurise me.

When it comes to drinking..never felt pressured into something i didnt want to do, i always wanted to do it! However, tonight i went to the pub after work at 10 and everyone was drunk, i had a coke and everyone was telling me to drink and i'm glad to say i stood my ground but then again we ain't all 13 no more!

and finally when it comes to joints. Me and my friend shared one *once* given to me by my bf. Him and his mates all used to sit and smoke and i was the only one who never, though i did smoke my fags, they used to pass the joint to me as it went round and i just used to pass it on and they'd laugh (but not in a nasty way) because they all knew i was a good girl!
When i broke up with my boyfriend and wanted to try it again he told me off and said that i wasnt allowed to get into it.


Overall i think i've been lucky with the whole peer pressure thing..(ooh except my first kiss i was pressured into, i was just eager to kiss *someone* but thats not going to scar me for life or nothing.) but on the whole i think its more the fact that i want to try things and its my friends who tell me not to despite them doing it themselves because when i was 13 everyone wanted to protect me (even now my friends feel the need to protect me or something)

Anyways..thats enough i've bored you all!
Sat 10/01/04 at 02:17
Regular
"Spurs 1 - 0 Man Utd"
Posts: 5,235
Icky, FOG now.
Sat 10/01/04 at 02:12
Posts: 15,443
Hey Alec, fancy a game of cod sunday morning?
Sat 10/01/04 at 02:11
Posts: 15,443
You're in trouble now, lass.
Sat 10/01/04 at 02:10
Regular
"Spurs 1 - 0 Man Utd"
Posts: 5,235
Hypocrite, posting the whole thing again.
Sat 10/01/04 at 02:09
Regular
"leaf it aaaaht"
Posts: 7,914
Light wrote:
> I've always been told that friendship is a good thing, a gift to be
> valued. Your friends should be the family that you can actually
> choose. A true friend will always be there to support you, and a
> group of friends are bound together by ties as strong as blood.
> History is littered with great and famous friendships that have
> enriched the world through their strength; Churchill and Roosevelt
> were good friends. Had they not been, who knows if the US would have
> entered WWII or if they would have continued their isolationist
> policies? Coleridge and Wordsworth were good friends. Without the
> influence of one on the other then generations of people might never
> have known that a man has wondered lonely as a cloud. The Ancient
> Mariner might never have troubled us (which if I'm honest is not
> necessarily a bad thing...).
>
> Yet I've also heard it said that your friends drag you down. That
> friendship can be a prison and the expectations of your friends are
> your jailors. Should you ever wish to soar off and explore what you
> believe to be your full potential your friends will curse your name
> for abandoning them. The full capacity of friendship becomes the
> capacity to hate that person. History is again most instructive on
> this aspect; Julius Caesar was supposedly betrayed by his friend
> Brutus because of his desire to be King of Rome. In rather more
> recent and mundane times Tony Blair risks being knocked off the
> political moral high ground by his continued support and repeated
> rehabilitation of Peter Mandelson, a man who is gaffe-prone and
> unpopular. This is to say nothing of the 'Old Boys Network', the main
> public achievements of which have been to shield certain persons from
> too much scrutiny only to throw them to the wolves if they become a
> liability (no doubt Lord Archer and Jonathon Aitkin could explain
> just how dreadful a thing this is!)
>
> Which of these two statements is true? Is there a grain of truth in
> both? Or are neither of them particularly relevant, mere
> idealisations of man's need for companionship? As I have nothing
> better to do today I'm going to make a (probably vain) effort to
> decipher this particular mystery.
>
> Before making a start, I'll make a confession of intent. One of my
> very best friends betrayed me in about as comprehensive a manner as
> it is possible to do last weekend. He did something that he knew
> would cause me immense emotional pain and he did so wilfully and
> deliberately in the full knowledge of what the result would be, and
> he did so because he wanted to know what it felt like to do so. His
> behaviour is utterly contemptible by any reasonable standards and I
> think it's reasonable to say that he is not my favourite person in
> the world right now. So if by the end of this I have concluded that
> one's friends are vile and selfish scum who no more deserve
> compassion than a fat man deserves a girlfriend...well, at least you
> know of my bias before we get started!
>
> The main example that I intend to use is the friendship between 2
> powerful men; George W. Bush (I said powerful, I didn't say anything
> about being especially bright...) and Kenneth Lay. The former needs
> no introduction (except possibly to remind his raddled brain of who
> he is). The latter is the former chairman of Enron, the energy
> company that has recently been revealed to have done for financial
> honesty what Enoch Powell did for race relations. Some may question
> the validity of the friendship between these two; after all, in the
> murky world of politics friendship comes second to ambition. Yet I
> believe that there is a strong element of mutual admiration between
> these two that could be described as friendship, and so it is with
> these two that I will proceed.
>
> Firstly, if we rewind a few years to when dear old Dubya was running
> for the governorship of The Lone Star State. Lay (or Kenny Boy as
> Dubya refers to him) ensured that a lot of money went into Dubya's
> campaign fund. There is nothing unusual about this in politics of
> course, but once Bush was elected he returned the favour with bells
> on. Enron was given pretty much free reign to do what it waned in
> Texas. In politics, favours are usually given out begrudgingly and
> are only awarded in the first place because a company has contributed
> to a campaign fund. Even then, a politician is careful with what he
> promises because chances are the company or individual will have
> donated to the opposition as well (as indeed Enron did, though the
> political party accounts show that the Republicans were the more
> favoured to the tune of almost $1 million).
>
> The favour that George Bush bestowed was that he trusted Enron to
> keep their own house in order. When one bears in mind that most
> politicians are almost porn star-like in their willingness to jump
> into bed with big business, Dubya's decision to leave Enron to their
> own devices whilst he got on with the important business of ensuring
> Texas had the one of the highest execution rates in the world is
> surprising to say the least. The personal friendship between Lay and
> Bush seems to provide many of the answers as to why this decision was
> made.
>
> In a strange sort of way, this shows how friendship between two
> people can make them greater than the sum of their parts. Without the
> staunch and unwavering support of the powerful businessman Lay, the
> political career of Bush (a reformed alcoholic who was even then
> regarded as something of a simpleton) might have been stillborn.
> Without the support of Bush, Lay's company might have had to subject
> itself to greater regulation and control by state and federal
> government. The one could not have been achieved without the other.
> The friendship and trust between the two further showed itself by the
> amount of time the two men spent in each other's company.
>
> Yet things are not quite the same now. The rosy future that the
> friendship between these men offered seems to have disintegrated for
> at least one of them. Dubya's trust in Enron to be their own
> policeman has proved misplaced to say the least. The favour shown to
> Enron was abused to a frightening degree. As a result of Dubya
> showing trust and friendship in Lay, a mighty company has been
> bankrupted by it's own dishonesty. Thousands of people have lost vast
> amounts of money via their pensions or sharesave scheme. The abuse of
> friendship has also damaged Bush himself; accusations of cosying up
> to big business at the expense of the rights of the average man are
> flying thick and fast at his government, perhaps justifiably so. Yet
> for all I am a critic of Bush, I don't believe he is an evil man. I
> don't accept that he extended such trust to Lay knowing full well
> that Enron would make a mockery of it. I am of the impression that he
> is genuinely shocked at the extent of Enron's questionable activities
> and is upset that his friend has betrayed his trust in such a manner
> and it would seem over such a period of time.
>
> If the relationship between Dubya and Lay was one of convenience then
> we could be assured that Mr. Lay would be the second Enron executive
> to commit suicide under the kind of circumstances that keep
> conspiracy theorists in business. Yet Bush seems to be honouring his
> friendship with the man who has made his government look like fools,
> and corrupt fools at that. He was given an easy ride at the inquiry
> into the collapse of Enron. There is no question that he will suffer
> any form of censure in terms of criminal or civil actions. Every
> possible scrap of information that shows Lay as an innocent is being
> hurled at the media (today the papers make a big deal about the
> evidence given by Sherren Watkins who was one of the whistleblower on
> Enron's financial crisis; she is vociferous in her belief that
> Kenneth Lay was kept in the dark and was not to blame). Though it is
> perhaps in Dubya's best interests to abandon Mr. Lay, he is not doing
> so.
>
> Will the two men still be friends in the future? Probably. I have no
> doubt that things will be worked out between my friend and I as we
> have been through a lot together and are simply too fond of each
> other to allow one incident to make us enemies, and I would expect
> things to be no different between Lay and Bush. I think what I am
> saying in all of this is that we should certainly love and cherish
> our friends, and should always do whatever is within our power to
> help them. But don't trust them, at least not completely. When
> someone is faced with a choice of advancement of oneself at the
> expense of a friend then it would appear we will do so 9 times out of
> 10.


nice way to top up your word count!
Fri 09/01/04 at 21:10
Regular
"SOUP!"
Posts: 13,017
Peer pressure is ficticious, like gnomes and parliament.
Fri 09/01/04 at 21:01
Regular
Posts: 20,776
Peer Pressure? Nope.

Didn't you know the whole world dances to my tune .... ?

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