Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop supporting him. Change your locks. Don’t give him the opportunity to steal from you.
Sometimes cutting the cord and letting them truly fail will make a difference. And if not, you’ve
Protected your family.
This is what my husband did. But clearly he needs therapy - should I be waiting for him to get help or should I be finding a therapist for him and bringing him back home..
As a mom who had to put my child out (different reasons) here’s my thoughts. If you’ve done everything you can do it’s time to stop. And if your child is a danger to others living in your house, it’s time. I would consider stealing a danger if you can’t prevent it by locking things up. Only you can answer whether you’re there.
In the meantime now is the time to cut off all supports. No money. No car. Only food and shelter. Phone maybe - mine was a danger to himself so that was the last thing I took and not until it didn’t matter. But if he’s using it to gamble, then it shouldn’t be on your dime.
If you remove him, I’d be very clear as to what it will take for him to return. And never waiver. It will be the hardest thing you ever do.
Anonymous wrote:Yes my husband has locked him out of everything. But my husband asked him to leave home and says we shouldn't enable him as he is an adult now. I am not sure how to navigate this.
Anonymous wrote:I do not know what you have already tried. My advice is to make moving back home and having you pay for things like groceries phone etc conditional on his seeking treatment. (And of course give him zero money directly.) If you have never done a psychological work up, try for a psychologist to get a diagnosis to see if there are underlying conditions. If he does have something like ADHD or depression, get him a psychiatrist appointment to go on meds. Look also at things like intensive out patient mental health programs and GA. He might even need inpatient/rehab. If he does not agree to and then actually follow through on sorting out his mental health issues that likely are helping fuel his gambling addiction, than you likely cannot have him in the home since he will steal again. Also, do let him know that you will be there to support him getting on the right path again but that you can only do this is he is transparent and proves he is doing all the mental heath work you are requiring.
Anonymous wrote:Yes my husband has locked him out of everything. But my husband asked him to leave home and says we shouldn't enable him as he is an adult now. I am not sure how to navigate this.
Anonymous wrote:Hate to say this but protect yourself financially - make sure he doesn’t have access to your CC, bank accounts, or any other source of funds. Pull him out of college. He has a bigger issue to address.