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Date: | Tue, 18 Aug 1998 14:50:24 -0400 |
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Dear Sherry,
Thank you for articulating my own dis-ease. As I observe my own daughter with her 12 year old's enormously zealous anti-smoking stance, I wait with bated breath as she enters junior high this year and is presented with all the new challenges of peers and social pressures to conform. I do know that whatever choice she eventually makes with respect to smoking, it will not be because a picture book pointed out that smoking was bad for her. The limits of education in health promotion I fear!
Grace Ross
>
>Hi Tricia,
>
>Your message has been on my mind for a few days, I am not sure how to get
>at the issues it raises for me, but I will give it a try.
>
>I am not sure if you are going about this the right way, especially in
>light of the recent study on why young women are smoking. Is a book on
>smoking and its affects going to address the issues of the need of young
>women to be attractive to the opposite sex? Or are books that have strong
>women heroes that have success with their lives going to have more of an
>overall impact on the choices that are made?
>
>Just a thought,
>
>S
>Sherrie Tingley
>[log in to unmask]
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