Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the midst of the same thing. Kid who suffers from depression, anxiety and ADHD. I don't know how often he's using. We've done everything - psych treatment for his mental illness, medication for ADHD, etc. We have gotten to the point where we realize that this is not something we can control. We could take everything away from him. At best that would do nothing and, at worst, he'd kill himself.
We've also come to realize that with his mental health issues, it probably brings him peace and relief. Again, I'm not happy about it, but I can't deny what it does for him and that nothing else has controlled his anxiety.
So we set ground rules. It cannot be brought into our house. He cannot use our money for it. He bears the consequences if he gets caught. And, we sold his car and do not allow him to drive ever.
I agree with both of these things.
You get through it the best you can. Keep him in therapy and try to keep him busy, and off of hard drugs. The truth is there are many contributing, successful members of society who smoke weed. I am not one of them, but it's not my life. It's his.
A ton of support from me. Teens are so, so tough to parent.
I’m OP do you have consequences if you find stuff? If you think he’s using on school nights etc?
If I find stuff, I throw it away. It is not allowed in my house. I don't have consequences for anything else except that so long as he's using, he can't drive.
Ok so you let him go out with friends etc and you know he’s using you’re just trying to protect home use is that right? No judgement I understand just asking
Anonymous wrote:I sympathize. Substitute video games for pot and I have the same story. It's been fairly well-established (and my experience with DS bears out) that consequences do not work for self-soothing actions in ADHD children. Nothing you can take away would matter. You must substitute. My son was happy to begin a treatment program for young adults, it's intensive small group therapy, every day. He is working hard to deal with it. No easy path.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the midst of the same thing. Kid who suffers from depression, anxiety and ADHD. I don't know how often he's using. We've done everything - psych treatment for his mental illness, medication for ADHD, etc. We have gotten to the point where we realize that this is not something we can control. We could take everything away from him. At best that would do nothing and, at worst, he'd kill himself.
We've also come to realize that with his mental health issues, it probably brings him peace and relief. Again, I'm not happy about it, but I can't deny what it does for him and that nothing else has controlled his anxiety.
So we set ground rules. It cannot be brought into our house. He cannot use our money for it. He bears the consequences if he gets caught. And, we sold his car and do not allow him to drive ever.
I agree with both of these things.
You get through it the best you can. Keep him in therapy and try to keep him busy, and off of hard drugs. The truth is there are many contributing, successful members of society who smoke weed. I am not one of them, but it's not my life. It's his.
A ton of support from me. Teens are so, so tough to parent.
I’m OP do you have consequences if you find stuff? If you think he’s using on school nights etc?
If I find stuff, I throw it away. It is not allowed in my house. I don't have consequences for anything else except that so long as he's using, he can't drive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the midst of the same thing. Kid who suffers from depression, anxiety and ADHD. I don't know how often he's using. We've done everything - psych treatment for his mental illness, medication for ADHD, etc. We have gotten to the point where we realize that this is not something we can control. We could take everything away from him. At best that would do nothing and, at worst, he'd kill himself.
We've also come to realize that with his mental health issues, it probably brings him peace and relief. Again, I'm not happy about it, but I can't deny what it does for him and that nothing else has controlled his anxiety.
So we set ground rules. It cannot be brought into our house. He cannot use our money for it. He bears the consequences if he gets caught. And, we sold his car and do not allow him to drive ever.
I agree with both of these things.
You get through it the best you can. Keep him in therapy and try to keep him busy, and off of hard drugs. The truth is there are many contributing, successful members of society who smoke weed. I am not one of them, but it's not my life. It's his.
A ton of support from me. Teens are so, so tough to parent.
I’m OP do you have consequences if you find stuff? If you think he’s using on school nights etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the midst of the same thing. Kid who suffers from depression, anxiety and ADHD. I don't know how often he's using. We've done everything - psych treatment for his mental illness, medication for ADHD, etc. We have gotten to the point where we realize that this is not something we can control. We could take everything away from him. At best that would do nothing and, at worst, he'd kill himself.
We've also come to realize that with his mental health issues, it probably brings him peace and relief. Again, I'm not happy about it, but I can't deny what it does for him and that nothing else has controlled his anxiety.
So we set ground rules. It cannot be brought into our house. He cannot use our money for it. He bears the consequences if he gets caught. And, we sold his car and do not allow him to drive ever.
I agree with both of these things.
You get through it the best you can. Keep him in therapy and try to keep him busy, and off of hard drugs. The truth is there are many contributing, successful members of society who smoke weed. I am not one of them, but it's not my life. It's his.
A ton of support from me. Teens are so, so tough to parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the midst of the same thing. Kid who suffers from depression, anxiety and ADHD. I don't know how often he's using. We've done everything - psych treatment for his mental illness, medication for ADHD, etc. We have gotten to the point where we realize that this is not something we can control. We could take everything away from him. At best that would do nothing and, at worst, he'd kill himself.
We've also come to realize that with his mental health issues, it probably brings him peace and relief. Again, I'm not happy about it, but I can't deny what it does for him and that nothing else has controlled his anxiety.
So we set ground rules. It cannot be brought into our house. He cannot use our money for it. He bears the consequences if he gets caught. And, we sold his car and do not allow him to drive ever.
Horrible parenting. “We could take everything away from him.” No, you MUST take everything away from him. At some point, the weed will do nothing for him and he will look for something harder. He is a child that is thinking like a child. You need to be the adult. You are holding a child’s hand as he smokes weed and this is so sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the midst of the same thing. Kid who suffers from depression, anxiety and ADHD. I don't know how often he's using. We've done everything - psych treatment for his mental illness, medication for ADHD, etc. We have gotten to the point where we realize that this is not something we can control. We could take everything away from him. At best that would do nothing and, at worst, he'd kill himself.
We've also come to realize that with his mental health issues, it probably brings him peace and relief. Again, I'm not happy about it, but I can't deny what it does for him and that nothing else has controlled his anxiety.
So we set ground rules. It cannot be brought into our house. He cannot use our money for it. He bears the consequences if he gets caught. And, we sold his car and do not allow him to drive ever.
Horrible parenting. “We could take everything away from him.” No, you MUST take everything away from him. At some point, the weed will do nothing for him and he will look for something harder. He is a child that is thinking like a child. You need to be the adult. You are holding a child’s hand as he smokes weed and this is so sad.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in the midst of the same thing. Kid who suffers from depression, anxiety and ADHD. I don't know how often he's using. We've done everything - psych treatment for his mental illness, medication for ADHD, etc. We have gotten to the point where we realize that this is not something we can control. We could take everything away from him. At best that would do nothing and, at worst, he'd kill himself.
We've also come to realize that with his mental health issues, it probably brings him peace and relief. Again, I'm not happy about it, but I can't deny what it does for him and that nothing else has controlled his anxiety.
So we set ground rules. It cannot be brought into our house. He cannot use our money for it. He bears the consequences if he gets caught. And, we sold his car and do not allow him to drive ever.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in the midst of the same thing. Kid who suffers from depression, anxiety and ADHD. I don't know how often he's using. We've done everything - psych treatment for his mental illness, medication for ADHD, etc. We have gotten to the point where we realize that this is not something we can control. We could take everything away from him. At best that would do nothing and, at worst, he'd kill himself.
We've also come to realize that with his mental health issues, it probably brings him peace and relief. Again, I'm not happy about it, but I can't deny what it does for him and that nothing else has controlled his anxiety.
So we set ground rules. It cannot be brought into our house. He cannot use our money for it. He bears the consequences if he gets caught. And, we sold his car and do not allow him to drive ever.