Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SIL tried to get nephew into a treatment program for weed after they found him smoking it for the 4th time. She couldn't find one that would accept him in their state. He was 17 at that point and he didn't qualify based on intake questions(?!) is what she told me. Three different centers classified him as a casual user who didn't need treatment.
He's 20 now and still smokes based off of what I see on his IG. I won't let my kids be in the car with him nor is he allowed in any of their cars. He did give it up for an entire summer while doing an internship that drug tested periodically. He says once he's a real adult (aka graduates from college) he'll stop until he finds a job and then only smoke on the weekends.
I think they do give it up as they grow up, but extremely frustrating when they are doing it every day while in HS.
I think weed treatment is a bit of an over reach usually. I would pursue mental health, therapy and anxiety or depression before putting a kid in rehab with a bunch of serious drug users.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Montgomery County age cutoff is 18. HS counselor highly suggested that we get him in when he was one month shy of his 18th birthday.
That’s not Montgomery county, that’s when they are legal adults and you can’t legally compel them to do anything
Anonymous wrote:You can’t really control it. You can talk to them, have a good relationship, express worries, give them evidence but at the end of the day, despite what many parents believe, you can’t control an older teen. I also have seen over and over parents who freak out about weed, drug test and all that but then their kid turns to drinking, and a lot. A lot of bad things happen when teens are drinking, that is when the unprotected sex, assaults, accidents, and rape happen. Not so much on weed.
Anonymous wrote:SIL tried to get nephew into a treatment program for weed after they found him smoking it for the 4th time. She couldn't find one that would accept him in their state. He was 17 at that point and he didn't qualify based on intake questions(?!) is what she told me. Three different centers classified him as a casual user who didn't need treatment.
He's 20 now and still smokes based off of what I see on his IG. I won't let my kids be in the car with him nor is he allowed in any of their cars. He did give it up for an entire summer while doing an internship that drug tested periodically. He says once he's a real adult (aka graduates from college) he'll stop until he finds a job and then only smoke on the weekends.
Anonymous wrote:The Vape pens are so tiny, so quick, and the cartridges so concentrated and odorless that many families have only the changes in behavior as a warning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SIL tried to get nephew into a treatment program for weed after they found him smoking it for the 4th time. She couldn't find one that would accept him in their state. He was 17 at that point and he didn't qualify based on intake questions(?!) is what she told me. Three different centers classified him as a casual user who didn't need treatment.
He's 20 now and still smokes based off of what I see on his IG. I won't let my kids be in the car with him nor is he allowed in any of their cars. He did give it up for an entire summer while doing an internship that drug tested periodically. He says once he's a real adult (aka graduates from college) he'll stop until he finds a job and then only smoke on the weekends.
I think they do give it up as they grow up, but extremely frustrating when they are doing it every day while in HS.
Anonymous wrote:I know because no one touches my dugout.
Anonymous wrote:Montgomery County age cutoff is 18. HS counselor highly suggested that we get him in when he was one month shy of his 18th birthday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SIL tried to get nephew into a treatment program for weed after they found him smoking it for the 4th time. She couldn't find one that would accept him in their state. He was 17 at that point and he didn't qualify based on intake questions(?!) is what she told me. Three different centers classified him as a casual user who didn't need treatment.
He's 20 now and still smokes based off of what I see on his IG. I won't let my kids be in the car with him nor is he allowed in any of their cars. He did give it up for an entire summer while doing an internship that drug tested periodically. He says once he's a real adult (aka graduates from college) he'll stop until he finds a job and then only smoke on the weekends.
I think they do give it up as they grow up, but extremely frustrating when they are doing it every day while in HS.
Anonymous wrote:SIL tried to get nephew into a treatment program for weed after they found him smoking it for the 4th time. She couldn't find one that would accept him in their state. He was 17 at that point and he didn't qualify based on intake questions(?!) is what she told me. Three different centers classified him as a casual user who didn't need treatment.
He's 20 now and still smokes based off of what I see on his IG. I won't let my kids be in the car with him nor is he allowed in any of their cars. He did give it up for an entire summer while doing an internship that drug tested periodically. He says once he's a real adult (aka graduates from college) he'll stop until he finds a job and then only smoke on the weekends.