Anonymous wrote:Do you have any friends of the family in longterm recovery?
If so I'd see if teen wants to go with family friend to some
local AA meetings.
For teen girl I'd recommend womens AA meetings only.
There are also local outpatient recovery programs.
Teen works or goes to school during the day. In the
evening teen has 4-5 hours of meetings in the evenings.
I think the local outpatient recovery programs are pretty
effective as they are generally longer than inpatient and run for 6-8 weeks.
Anonymous wrote:I went to inpatient rehab for an ED 3 times between 2000-2008. The first few times, I had zero interest in getting help. Like with most people struggling with an addiction, I was a very good manipulator. I knew exactly what to say and do to make everyone think I was getting better. But really, I was learning new tricks and new ways to keep up with my ED without anyone knowing. The last time I wanted to get help and it worked. That seemed to line up with most people there. Rehab only sticks if you want it to AND if you make the changes outside of rehab. This may mean cutting off friends, quitting an activity , etc.
I don't think inpatient rehab is bad, it can definitely be effective. But if the person isn't open to it, it's a gigantic waste of money
Anonymous wrote:There are great programs that exist to deal with this, but you need an expert to help you navigate that world. You should call Patty or Jacy at Life Compass Partners and work with them. They are amazing. If you afford to take serious action, you can really help your kid in the short term. Problems like these can last years and tear your family apart.
Anonymous wrote:I'd ask a lot of questions about whether the teen will be exposed to even more harmful activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In patient rehabs and therapeutic boarding schools are most usually a bad choice parents with money make out of desperation. I am not saying it might not work in a few cases, but I don't know of any. The least best outcomes I have seen come out of kids taken away in the middle of the night and put in wilderness camps. Usually on the advice of a consultant.
Dealing with a teen with problems large enough to consider these options is very hard work. It seems so much easier to outsource it to these places. But I firmly believe that having the family committed to having their child overcome the issues in a firm and kind, non-tough love way at home produces far better outcomes.
If you are lucky enough to have a trusted family member the child likes be in a position to take on your teen, that could work as well.
I tend to agree with this and we are in thick of it right now with way too much weed. But I admit I’ve been tempted to outsource for awhile to at least get a break
Same with us. What are you doing? My son is 17 it’s gotten ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In patient rehabs and therapeutic boarding schools are most usually a bad choice parents with money make out of desperation. I am not saying it might not work in a few cases, but I don't know of any. The least best outcomes I have seen come out of kids taken away in the middle of the night and put in wilderness camps. Usually on the advice of a consultant.
Dealing with a teen with problems large enough to consider these options is very hard work. It seems so much easier to outsource it to these places. But I firmly believe that having the family committed to having their child overcome the issues in a firm and kind, non-tough love way at home produces far better outcomes.
If you are lucky enough to have a trusted family member the child likes be in a position to take on your teen, that could work as well.
Honestly, as someone who works with at risk kids, addiction and risky behavior is a nature/nurture issue where nurture is the most formative influence on what is happening with the child. Families and parents are almost always the biggest component (90%) of the problem for children with addiction and/or high-risk behaviors. Nature (i.e., heredity) is a small component but it is far out-weighed by nurture.
Keeping a child in a system that is broken will only work if the entire system works to fix the system's problem/s. That means Mom, Dad, Sister/s, Brother/s, and kid all work together on the issues. Most parents and families are not either willing or able to do the heavy lifting required. Unfortunately this also means that when the child returns to the original environment failure is almost all but assured because the root causes haven't been fixed and the system that reinforces the problem is still in place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In patient rehabs and therapeutic boarding schools are most usually a bad choice parents with money make out of desperation. I am not saying it might not work in a few cases, but I don't know of any. The least best outcomes I have seen come out of kids taken away in the middle of the night and put in wilderness camps. Usually on the advice of a consultant.
Dealing with a teen with problems large enough to consider these options is very hard work. It seems so much easier to outsource it to these places. But I firmly believe that having the family committed to having their child overcome the issues in a firm and kind, non-tough love way at home produces far better outcomes.
If you are lucky enough to have a trusted family member the child likes be in a position to take on your teen, that could work as well.
Honestly, as someone who works with at risk kids, addiction and risky behavior is a nature/nurture issue where nurture is the most formative influence on what is happening with the child. Families and parents are almost always the biggest component (90%) of the problem for children with addiction and/or high-risk behaviors. Nature (i.e., heredity) is a small component but it is far out-weighed by nurture.
Oh boy. I have a kid who struggles with substance use. We were abs continue to be very loving abs supportive parents. We were involved, authoritative not authoritarian, we are great listeners our kids are close to us. We got therapy when needed, we screened for learning differences, we treated ADhD, we engaged coaches, teachers and others to help our kid who had always struggled. There’s a lot of addiction in my family. I was very aware and constantly got expert advice, read a ton etc. he still went down this path. It’s heartbreaking.
Keeping a child in a system that is broken will only work if the entire system works to fix the system's problem/s. That means Mom, Dad, Sister/s, Brother/s, and kid all work together on the issues. Most parents and families are not either willing or able to do the heavy lifting required. Unfortunately this also means that when the child returns to the original environment failure is almost all but assured because the root causes haven't been fixed and the system that reinforces the problem is still in place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In patient rehabs and therapeutic boarding schools are most usually a bad choice parents with money make out of desperation. I am not saying it might not work in a few cases, but I don't know of any. The least best outcomes I have seen come out of kids taken away in the middle of the night and put in wilderness camps. Usually on the advice of a consultant.
Dealing with a teen with problems large enough to consider these options is very hard work. It seems so much easier to outsource it to these places. But I firmly believe that having the family committed to having their child overcome the issues in a firm and kind, non-tough love way at home produces far better outcomes.
If you are lucky enough to have a trusted family member the child likes be in a position to take on your teen, that could work as well.
I tend to agree with this and we are in thick of it right now with way too much weed. But I admit I’ve been tempted to outsource for awhile to at least get a break