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From
walking
on eggshells... to strength
and confidence
When
I first came to TOUGHLOVE nine months
ago I was so desperate and so
low I didn't even know if I could go on,
or if I had enough
fight left in me to follow through with
the programme. So I took it
one day at a time as I have been doing
since losing my husband two
years previously.
My
daughter was smoking pot, stealing money
and things from me to hock
and verbally abusive towards me, it was a
daily occurrence
and I was constantly walking on eggshells
frightened of saying or
doing something that would set her off.
The only
time she showed me any affection was when
she wanted either money or
to be driven somewhere; I felt used and
abused
and I didn't know where to begin to make
things right.
"I
began by not allowing pot to be
smoked in my home, so out
to
the
back shed they went summer or
winter, mossies or cold”
TOUGHLOVE
taught me new skills on how to deal with
her, how to set boundaries
and stick to them. I began by not allowing
pot
to be smoked in my home, so out to the
back shed they went summer or
winter, mossies or cold, if that's what
they wanted
to do then so be it. The next thing was
the abusive behaviour, which
was hard, but I did it by refusing to
listen. When
she started I either drove off and went to
the beach or hung up; even
when I was driving her somewhere if she
started I just
switched off and concentrated on driving,
she soon got the message
and stopped as soon as she knew I'd
stopped listening
and it was no use and she soon learnt that
I would not argue with her
or listen to her abuse.
It
was about that time that she informed me
that I'd turned into a "real
bitch" since going to TOUGHLOVE,
so I knew then it was working
even though some days I found it hard. She
told me one day that she
didn't want to grow up and as she was 20
yrs old I thought if I don't
act on this she is going to be with me
forever along with her
boyfriend and my house is not big enough
for
all of us -
since
moving in with me I have had huge
electricity and phone bills not to
mention the stuff of mine that was taken
to the hock shop so they'd have money for
pot! So I thought it was
about time they found a place of their own
and took on
some responsibility and learnt to stand on
their own two feet.
Today
my daughter and her boyfriend live in
their own place, the abuse is
down to almost non-existent, and apart
from a few
hiccups from time to time things are a lot
quieter. I also use TOUGHLOVE
in other areas of my life as it has helped
me to become
a stronger and more confident person. The
next thing I am going to
work on with my daughter is to go to
mother - daughter counseling, because even
though things are a lot better between us
I
feel we need to still work on our
relationship
together
to get it back to where it should be.
I
love my daughter dearly and was using the
death of her father, the
teachers at school not understanding, to
even having a tough
time with her exams to excuse her for all
the horrible things she did
and said to me over the years, but now
through TOUGHLOVE
I have learnt that there is no excuse for
it.
My
daughter
said to me only the other day "now that we
don't live
with you any more you don't have to go to
TOUGHLOVE".
Not
so I told her,
as
I still need the support for things that
crop up between us now and
again and it is my
turn
to give something back to help
other parents who are in my situation.
Jeannette
M
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Back
From the Gutter
By S. M. S.
Raising children can be the most
rewarding job you’ll ever have to do, but
it can also be hell on earth. ‘Children
are perfect little angels and a constant
joy to their parents’. But like all things
make believe the story must come to an
end. Television is a classic example of
how children are portrayed to be something
they’re not. Take for example a recent hit
show called Seventh Heaven. Yes their kids
were naughty but their responses were
unrealistic. Not at all like that of
children in the real world. In the real
world there is a fine line between love
and war. That’s why we have TOUGHLOVE.
TOUGHLOVE is an
internationally recognized program whose
unique approach to child rearing has been
an inspiration and literal lifesaver to
countless parents over many years. Its
success in turning problem children into
cooperative adolescents is nothing short
of astounding. Here is one of the many
success stories to come out of the
phenomenon known as TOUGHLOVE.
To all the parents out there who feel
powerless, and who have lost all hope and
control over the destiny of their
children, don’t despair. There is hope.
There is light at the end of the tunnel.
Tamsin and her husband Keith loved their
daughter Michelle. She was a good student
and a loving daughter. Then came
adolescence and university, mix that with
borderline personality disorder, whip in
some drugs and you have classic recipe for
a time bomb of self-destruction.
Michelle left home to enter university
and study welfare, specializing in the
area of youth. She met a boy and moved in
with him. They resided in a seedy inner
city motel. It was when Michelle began her
practical placement at a youth drop in
centre, when things started to go horribly
wrong. Emotionally Michelle was not strong
enough to cope with the problems of these
troubled adolescents: and although her
intentions were good, her adopted strategy
to help these kids failed dismally. She
became caught up in a world wrought with
drugs. Michelle’s life spiralled out of
control. Things went from bad to worse
when her boyfriend left her. Michelle had
failed her work placement, she’d lost her
boyfriend, and her self worth was at an
all time low.
Michelle’s problems soon became apparent
to her parents. Boyfriends came and went.
Then came an unwanted pregnancy which was
aborted. School was put on the backburner.
Drugs such as speed, Valium and ecstasy
became a regular thing in Michelle’s life
as did self-mutilation, a side effect of
borderline personality disorder. Tamsin
and Keith tried the usual avenues, such as
family services and psychiatrists but
nothing seemed to work. Michelle just
continued her drug abuse and dead end
relationships. She started to estrange
herself from Keith and Tamsin and acquired
a job as a stripper.
Tamsin and Keith were fighting a lot
because Keith just wanted to give up on
her but Tamsin could not desert her
daughter. Then one day while they were
visiting Keith’s sister, she told them
about the TOUGHLOVE Programme.
They had nothing to lose and attended an
orientation session. Almost immediately
they felt at home. The TOUGHLOVE
co-ordinator was very friendly and
understanding to Keith and Tamsin’s
problems. What most impressed them is that
they weren’t judged. Although they weren’t
convinced this program would help them
with Michelle, everybody else at the
meeting seemed to have experienced similar
problems. They thought "why not give is a
try".
For the first time they felt a sense of
control with their situation. TOUGHLOVE
also challenged Tamsin and Keith to
look at their parenting strategies. Slowly
they began to apply what they had learnt.
Tamsin was also forced to look at her own
emotions.
Their first bottom line was that they
would not tolerate Michelle disrespecting
their boundaries.
Michelle didn’t like this TOUGHLOVE
program.
In her eyes it was anti- children but she
soon realized that was not so when Tamsin
and Keith took in a TOUGHLOVE teenager
for a while. For the first time ever
Michelle distanced herself from her
parents, although that didn’t stop her
climbing a ladder to get into her parents
home to take food and cleaning products.
Tamsin and Keith soon put a stop to that
by locking away the ladders and making
sure the windows and doors were secured.
Keith and Tamsin went away to Victoria
for a few weeks and coming back was like
meeting a new daughter. Michelle had
become nicer. Mother and daughter started
communicating and even went out together
on outings. Finally the turn around came
when Michelle broke down crying in front
of her parents telling them that she was
sorry for all the things she’d done and
for the pain she’d caused. She vowed never
to take drugs again, her life is back on
track and the family unit of Tamsin, Keith
and Michelle is stronger than ever before.
The only thing different is that Michelle
is self-reliant and makes her own path in
life.
When asked if she would recommend the
course to others Tamsin said she’d
recommend it to everyone and her lesson
was that you can always learn and grow
through others. TOUGHLOVE is
a great promoter for that. When push comes
to shove as a parent all you want in life
is to be happy and for your children to be
well-adjusted and happy.
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"Never give up,
Never Never give up"
TOUGHLOVE Parent
My daughter was just 12 years old when
she first tried drugs. The next five years
were a nightmare. As she is an ADHD child
with considerable learning difficulties
most of her erratic behaviour was wrongly
attributed to this disorder.
She was asked to leave school after the
first term of Year 12 for truancy and
unacceptable behaviour. She briefly
obtained a part time job which didn’t last
as she slipped further into drug use.
Just prior to Christmas that year was our
lowest point. She had started using heroin
and was addicted to speed and marijuana.
There was little attempt made to hide her
drug use. Drugs and drug paraphernalia
were left openly around the house. At this
stage, she was beginning to stay away from
home for brief periods of time and had
stolen money from family members’ Efpos
cards. She was also getting into more and
more trouble with the police and had faced
court for possession of drugs and stealing
from cars.
Our initial reaction was to seek help
from any source we could. We contacted
every organisation we could think of to
get help. We were continually told that we
did not have "a bad enough problem" and
that there was no rehabilitation programme
available to her. We were told to try TOUGHLOVE.
I have been going to TOUGHLOVE
meetings for just over 12 months now.
My initial stand was not to tolerate drugs
in the house. Privileges were removed
until the house became drug free. These
privileges included telephone, bedroom
door, money etc. She also had a curfew or
she would be locked out of the house. She
is due to get her bedroom door back next
month as it will be six months from the
last time I found drugs in her room. My
daughter was on probation for 12 months
and attended court order drug counselling
which she considered a joke and a waste of
time.
The heroin stopped immediately. She
admits she didn’t like heroin. It took
about four months to stop using speed and
another six months to stop using
marijuana. She still smokes cigarettes but
has now stopped substituting alcohol for
drugs.
At the present time she is working
part-time and is trying to decide whether
to obtain full time employment or resume
her education at either a flexi-school or
Tafe. She is learning to drive and is
ready to try for her licence.
For my part TOUGHLOVE has
taught me to stop blaming. I am focusing
on how I respond to my daughter and
learning to detach. I no longer rescue her
when she has a problem and I no longer
think of her as a victim.
As my daughter tells me, it is she who
made the decision to stop using drugs and
me who made the decision not to tolerate
drugs in our home. She is responsible for
her own behaviour and I am responsible for
my own behaviour.
My motto and advice to other parents is:
Never give up, Never Never give up.
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"SAM"
By M. J.
The Corinda Group was very privileged
recently to have, as guest speaker, the ‘TOUGHLOVE’
kid of one of our members. This young
person has finally given up using drugs
after a six year involvement beginning in
primary school.
Sam (name changed to protect
confidentiality) generously offered to
answer any question we might have and in
the course of discussion managed to scare
the daylights out of this parent.
We were told just how easy it is to obtain
drugs of almost every description and how
the drug user is completely seduced by the
drugs, into ignoring the impact they are
having on themselves and those around
them.
Sam acknowledged that effective learning
cannot take place while kids are using
drugs although, amazingly, this kid
managed to hang on in school until Year
11.
The turn around for Sam seemed to arise
from a combination of factors. It was
mentioned that Mum’s ‘arse hole tactics’
(i.e. Bottom Lines), including removal of
the bedroom door, when drugs were found
repeatedly in the bedroom, and being
locked of the house for the night when
curfew was violated, did have considerable
impact.
Sam, we were assured, was the one who
chose to give drugs a whirl and Sam was
the one who chose to give them away,
albeit after life had been made more
difficult by the court, the family, and a
valued friend.
Sam is now working at remaining drug
free, working at a part time job, working
at repairing family relationships and
being very real about what has passed and
what needs to happen to create a positive
future.
The Group was really heartened to speak
to a young person who has emerged from the
teenage nightmare years with confidence,
vitality, and dare I say, a little wisdom
under the belt. I think it gave us all a
bit more hope that our own kids will get
there in the end.
Thank you ‘Sam’!!!
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A
Success Story
By J. M.
This is a success story with a
rollercoaster history, as are many of our
parents’ stories. After reading the next
paragraph, some of you may doubt that
joining TOUGHLOVE helped at all,
but if you bear with me you may begin to
understand why I believe it did.
When I first came to TOUGHLOVE my
son was 11, and was having serious
problems with his behaviour at home and at
school. Numerous attempts at counselling
of one sort and another had had little
effect (sound familiar?). Two years down
the track he is also into drugs and
alcohol, on probation and doing community
service. How can this be a success?
First and most important to me, is that
through TOUGHLOVE I have gained
the skills and strength to cope with his
unacceptable behaviour. I firmly believe
without the program’s structure and
support of other TOUGHLOVE
parents, I would be a total wreck by now.
My son’s behaviour would have continued to
deteriorate in any case, but by changing my
behaviour I have stayed strong enough to
reach the point where I do believe we are
turning the corner.
Secondly, with the encouragement of our
Rep, Robyn, I reached a point where I took
a stand about physical violence in our
home, and ultimately charge my son with
assault. While far from being an ideal
solution (I would have preferred
intervention from Family Services without
the need to take it into the courtroom),
at least once he was placed on probation I
began to receive assistance from the
Department. It has been a long road
though. Ten months later I’m finally
starting to get some practical help from
them in terms of support for the whole
family . . .
The third success which has resulted from
my son’s many court appearances is that
for the first time we were also able to
have a support person in the courtroom
during the hearing. Normally the
children’s court is closed to people other
than parents or guardians of the child. On
top of the frightening atmosphere of the
courtroom to a first time offender and his
parents, it is also totally disempowering
to the parent who is not only copping
blame from society in general, but
sometimes even from the magistrate and
prosecutor. To have another TOUGHLOVE
parent
there for support is a wonderful feeling,
and we will be following this up in other
courtrooms as the need arises.
I said that we were turning the corner,
and only time will prove me right or
wrong. Whatever the outcome for my son, I
feel as if I have regained some of my own
life and home, and hopefully that change
will ultimately reflect back on to my son.
It can be a hard road, but at least with TOUGHLOVE
you’re not travelling alone.
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Parents
Are People Too
By J. B.
I used to think, before I had children,
when I saw other people’s children playing
up that parents were to blame. But, not
any more.
I have been blessed with three beautiful
children, the eldest of which has been a
handful. I have always known - off by
heart - the phone numbers of the schools
my child has attended, and I am currently
on first name terms with her guidence
officer as well as several of her
teachers. We have been to counselling. We
have been to doctors, thinking that
perhaps there was a medical reason for her
horrible behaviour. We’ve talked to the
police. I’ve looked to faith and prayed
for help. We have tried everything we
could think of to make things right. We’ve
had small amounts of success in the sort
term, but nothing has been consistently
successful.
Everyone has been helpful and very kind
especially the teachers and administration
staff at her school, who have bent over
backwards and tried every conceivable
thing to try to get her to settle down and
start working towards fulfilling her
potential, which the teachers all agree is
considerable.
My husband and I are nice people - good
people - that love each other and our
children. We’ve been married for ages and
have a stable relationship that has been
sorely tested during the last couple of
years. Mainly because I wasn’t willing to
let our child stand up and be accountable
for her own behaviour. I felt guilty.
"Perhaps if I’d done something
differently." "If I’d been a better parent
she would be different now."
I kept trying all sorts of ways to make
things better. I tried groundings,
withholding pocket money, being extremely
stern, being really soft. I was endlessly
forgiving. I listened to her pleas for
more freedom to make her own decisions and
thought, "yes, that sounds reasonable". I
forgot she didn’t have the skills to deal
with such freedom. I forgot that she was
still just a child. I didn’t want to lose
my daughter’s love. I didn’t want her to
be angry with me, but no matter what I did
to try and help her, no matter how much I
loved her or how often I forgave her, she
was still angry, still difficult. I
watched as my normally easy going and
fun-loving husband became quieter and more
serious with the onset of each new drama,
and I wondered how much more we could
endure. I felt alienated from my family,
friends, and neighbours.
And then I found TOUGHLOVE. I
found other parents like myself, from all
walks of life, struggling to come to terms
with adolescent behaviour which seems to
be appearing in children at a much younger
age these days. Through TOUGHLOVE,
I have found acceptance and support, and
new ways of dealing with problems that
work, not overnight, not without hard work
and commitment, and not without pain, but
slowly, gradually chipping away at
problems that have seemed insurmountable,
and always with the wonderful support
network willing to help with advice,
nurturing and hope – which was all but
lost.
I have been a member of TOUGHLOVE
for just a few months, but already I am
feeling stronger within myself. There was
nothing out there for me before. I felt
that children had all the support in the
world, but parents were left out in the
cold. When we did seek help we were made
to feel that we were, indeed, to blame,
which only made us feel more inadequate
and insecure, and even more guilty that we
were unable to deal effectively with our
unruly children. I still have a long way
to go before I will feel truly confident
in my own abilities as a parent. I still
have heaps to learn. It’s a matter of two
steps forward, one step back, but now I
have support when I need it most. I have a
little more structure in my life. A weekly
meeting to attend where I know I’ll be
accepted for who I am; where "blame is a
dirty word, where there are kindred
spirits who know how I feel, who can
identify with what I’ve been going
through, who can offer alternatives that
have worked for them".
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Denial
By R. R.
John walked into the bar and ordered a
beer. It is the same club he has always
been to, except today he was going to
experience something very different. After
he ordered his usual, he picked up his
change and out the corner of his eye, he
saw his initials on the $5 note. His
memory returned to 2 years ago:
He was sitting in the same bar with his
mates discussing how many times a $5 note
could pass through your hands and what a
story it could tell if it could talk. So
just for fun they all decided to initial a
note and agreed to let each other know if
they came in contact with it again.
After his social drink with mates, he
went home to his family to prepare for his
normal weekend of being a parent. He sat
down in his normal chair, asked Dorothy
his wife for his tea and Joshua his second
son for a beer out of the fridge. Joshua
was 14 then and was at the age where
staying home with your parents was a drag
and uncool and he could have better fun
with his mates.
He asked his Dad for some money so he
could go to the mall, so as usual Dad
never questioned him and just reached in
to his pocket and gave him $20. Amongst
the change he noticed the same $5 he had
initialled a couple of hours previous. As
John handed the money to Joshua he said
jokingly, "In a few years that $5 would
probably have an interesting story to
tell." Joshua just looked at his Dad in
his "what are you on about look" and
replied, "Yea, sure Dad".
At that time his wife came in with his
tea, saw what happened, and again as it
has happened may times before another
argument started. Just as before, Dorothy
was concerned about the friends Joshua was
keeping, the late nights, the not coming
home at all, the times he came home drunk,
the verbal and physical abuse, the failing
grades, the change in the attitude etc.
John’s argument was; "You’re being over
protective; it’s what the kids do today;
he’s only having fun; he’s allowed to make
mistakes; he’s not stupid; he’s got sense
to know when to stop; when are you going
to allow him to experience life and grow
up."
Later that night the parents received a
phone call from the police. Joshua had
been busted in a dope raid and was in
jail. Dorothy insisted that John leave
Joshua in jail overnight, but according to
John that was being an uncaring parent.
Joshua was probably in the wrong place at
the wrong time. So away went John, paid
the bail and brought his son home. You can
probably guess how the conversation went.
Over the next few months things got
worse. Joshua came home when he wanted to,
sometimes not at all, sometimes drunk,
sometimes stoned, and all the time John
turned a blind eye to what was going on.
"Not my problem", was his usual comment.
Dorothy on the other hand joined a TOUGHLOVE
support
group and came home with all these new and
revised ways of creating harmony and
coo-operation within the family. John just
said she was wasting her time, there was
nothing wrong with Joshua, she was
creating all the problems, and not
allowing Joshua to do his own thing. No
way was he going to support her in these
changes, besides why should she be telling
other people about problems that don’t
exist.
The arguments continued and Joshua soon
found out that by manipulating his parents
against each other was a sure way of
getting what he wanted from his Dad.
One night Dorothy came home from TOUGHLOVE
and
told John that from now on, he was the
person in charge of discipline for Joshua.
He just laughed and made the comment that
Mum couldn’t even make decisions now
without help.
Everything went well for a while - no
great dramas until John started to receive
phone calls at work from the school,
police and neighbours. He then started to
realise that things weren’t as he thought
they were. John was taking time off work
to rescue Joshua and help him sort out his
problems. He took stress leave because he
couldn’t cope with the added pressure and
his performance at work was getting
sloppy. But still he allowed his son to do
what ever he wanted.
One morning John was called into the
office. His boss gave him the ultimatum.
"Sort your son’s problems out or you could
be looking for another job." "He doesn’t
have any problems, he’s just a teenager
being a teenager. You just worry about you
own problems and mind your own business,"
was the answer John gave his boss.
So many times when hear and experience
denial from people all around us; judges
when they hand out the sentences; teachers
when they don’t inform us of our
children’s misconduct; shop owners when
they don’t carry through with shoplifting
or stealing charges; influential people in
the community who say there isn’t a
problem with our youth; neighbours who
don’t support you; relatives who just
don’t believe it’s all that bad – "It must
be the way you are bringing up your kids.
I don’t have any problems with mine; and
us as parents, because we love them and we
believe it is our job as a parent to help
them in every way.
Whatever the blame we choose to use, we
cannot help any of our children if we
don’t allow them to experience the lessons
in life, and the consequences of their
actions, both good and bad.
As for John, he did loose his job, his
marriage was not the same, Joshua
overdosed, and his life was starting to
fall apart. It was only then did John
realise that he realy did have a kid with
problems.
As a reminder, above John’s TV is a
picture frame with the $5 dollar note in
one corner and this message
Denial Erases the Nurturing
needed In the Accomplishment of true Love.
I shared this story with TOUGHLOVE
groups some time ago, and after the
meeting a parent came up to me and asked
if this is a true story and how the family
was now? I told them that the family is
working it out. The wife turned to her
husband and said "See I told you that TOUGHLOVE
works".
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Families
in our Culture
By D. K.
There are two families, Mr. & Mrs.
Couldn’t Careless and Mr. & Mrs.
Decent. Both families have two teenagers
and a younger pre-school child.
Mr. & Mrs. Couldn’t Careless and
their children knew all about happiness.
Mum & Dad were out almost every night
at the pub, mixing with friends, no early
morning getting out of bed to go to work.
Master Couldn’t Careless was very happy
too, each morning spilling the milk, sugar
and cereal all over the place. It was fun
making your own breakfast every morning.
He was happy alright, not like Master
Decent. Mr. & Mrs. Decent would bath
Master Decent, strap him into the
highchair and had the enjoyment of making
a mess taken away by his mother.
The teenagers of Mr. & Mrs. Couldn’t
Careless were happy also. No restrictions
on who they were friendly with, where they
were at night, no curfew to be home by.
Yes they were very happy.
Meanwhile Mr. & Mrs. Decent are not
happy at all. Almost everyday there are
fights with the teenagers over curfew,
time spent on the phone, boyfriends
wanting to stay the night, not helping Mum
in the house. Mrs. Decent was at the point
of leaving. The teenagers of Mr. &
Mrs. Decent were also thinking of leaving.
"How could this be happening" says Mr.
Decent. "I know Mr. & Mrs. Couldn’t
Careless aren’t experiencing any of the
grief or heartache of seeing their family
falling apart".
Both little children ended up in
hospital. Mr. & Mrs. Couldn’t Careless
were not allowed to visit, unless they
were sober, because they abused the staff.
Master Couldn’t Careless was now going to
foster care, after his parents were
investigated for neglect.
Mr. & Mrs. Decent however, visited
every day, brought presents and played
with their child etc. Master Decent was
happy, but alas Master Couldn’t Careless
was not. No parents around and being told
he is being separated from his sister and
brother, and going to a new home was very
traumatic for Master Couldn’t Careless.
A few days later when Mrs. Couldn’t
Careless went to the kitchen, she started
to cry. There was no mess to clean up from
her son, her teenage children were living
with drug addict friends and her husband
was having an affair. Her family was
falling apart.
Mr. & Mrs. Decent were chosen as
foster parents for Master Couldn’t
Careless and things began to change. Both
little ones played well together and
Master Couldn’t Careless enjoyed breakfast
and enjoyed helping his foster Mum get the
milk out of the fridge, put the jam on the
table for toast.
A teenager of Mr. & Mrs. Decent saw
an ambulance at school and went to have a
look. There was teenager Couldn’t Careless
collapsed on the ground. He had overdosed.
He survived but blamed his parents for not
caring enough to stop him taking drugs. He
knew all about grief and sadness, more so
when no one visited him in hospital.
The other teenager of Mr. & Mrs.
Decent, who was a trainee nurse,
recognises him from school, befriends him
and eventually he is taken into Mr. &
Mrs. Decent’s home. It was strange at
first having a home cooked meal, clean
clothes and a clean house to live in. His
mates fell away because this was not a
cool style of living.
Teenage Miss Couldn’t Careless saw her
brother becoming happier each day and
visited more often. Eventually, she too
moved in and later each married the other
teenager, had children and brought them up
the Mr. & Mrs. Decent way.
Mr. & Mrs. Decent and their extended
family couldn’t be happier, thanks to
their values of honesty, respect and
cooperation. They had happiness all along,
but had to experience pain, heartache and
sadness to find it.
Mr. & Mrs. Couldn’t Careless never
were really happy but always thought they
were.
Life is what you make of it. You can
enjoy it if you are honest with yourself
first and last. Mr. & Mrs. Decent
found happiness because of their love for
their children, and having courage and
patience to help teenagers Couldn’t
Careless, where most people would have not
given them the time of day.
Most of all the Mr. & Mrs. Decent
family knew about the responsibility of
raising a family to be decent people, and
thereby, repeated the cycle.
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I
Forced Myself To Go
TOUGHLOVE is not a quick fix, but
rather a long term process towards
achieving positive changes. Changes, which
for some, may take only a couple of weeks,
but for others, years of hard work. Our
problems have not evolved overnight.
For myself, a Stand I kept for almost two
years was "I would not tolerate my son
begging off me". In the four and a half
years I have been a TOUGHLOVE
parent, I have not missed a single weekly
TOUGHLOVE
meeting, apart from holidays, illness and
when supporting other areas of the
program.
There were times, especially when after
our younger son Jacob lost his life at the
age of 17, I felt that I had no strength
left to attend the meetings, but somehow I
forced myself to go. Why? Because, I knew
that these were the times I needed support
from the group the most.
Each week I would take a Bottom Line for
myself to enable me to focus on my long
term goal. There were many times when I
felt utter despair for this TOUGHLOVE
Kid of mine. He appeared so helpless and
self-destructive. Not only did he struggle
with similar issues that other TOUGHLOVE
kids are up against, but he had the burden
of losing his younger brother and blaming
of himself for the accident.
One of the most heart wrenching moments
of my life was to say "no" to him, as he
stood at my front door with an empty baby
formula tin in his hand, and saying that
he could not feed his one year old son, as
he had no money. I knew that if I gave in
to his demands, I would, indirectly, be
buying his drugs for him.
It was the constant attendance of TOUGHLOVE
weekly
meetings, always knowing that there were
other parents at the end of the phone line
and the support, which gave me the courage
to keep working towards my goal.
I am happy to say that all my hard work
has paid off, not only for my own sake,
but for my son’s. It has been nearly six
months now since he last asked for money.
Although he and his partner are still
struggling with financial difficulties, I
can see they are not only gaining
financial independence, but are beginning
to establish long term goals for
themselves, which they were not able to do
up until now.
It is a joy to have Ian visit and not
have the pressure of having to say no to
his demands, and for him to achieve the
independence where he does not have to
beg.
For those parents who for now cannot see
the benefits of remaining in the group,
stay with the program for a while longer.
Begin to ask for the Active, Selective and
Confrontive support the group has to
offer.
"It takes a strong person to ask for
help. Being able to request assistance is
not a sign of weakness, but a sign of
strength and maturity. People need each
other. We are not in this world alone and
we don’t have to act as if we are". (P130
TOUGHLOVE Solutions)
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Parents
Using the Law
A TOUGHLOVE
Parent
I would like to share with you the very
positive changes that have occurred in my
family life since I joined my TOUGHLOVE
Group.
As a last resort and with no more
information than a brochure stating that
this was a self-help programme for parents
troubled by teenager behaviour, I went to
my first meeting. I was exhausted,
disillusioned and dubious after years
seeking realistic solutions which would
bring about change in my monster.
For two years, since the age of 13, and
the change to high school, my teenager had
been unmanageable. Truancy, lying, abusive
language, physical attacks, and taking my
almost new car for a joy ride were the
norm. "Pot", seemed to be growing
everywhere I looked in the garden and
bedroom.
Bongs were being made from every
conceivable plastic bottle, and my
hosepipe was fast disappearing. I was
suffering serious depression, and found no
help within the community services, except
blame. This was not helping me or my child
through these enormous and seemingly
unsolvable problems.
Within the last three months - with
support I received from my TOUGHLOVE
friends, and guidance from the TOUGHLOVE
philosophy
- I can now see a future for my son and a
relaxed and happy atmosphere in the home
which I hope and pray will continue to
improve.
These changes were brought about by some
very tough measures. As so many of my
son’s problems seemed to revolve around
drug taking, I felt the best thing was to
approach the Juvenile Aid Bureau.
Actually, it was much against the advice
of the young female officer that I
insisted that they come around and remove
the "pot" plants. As he already had two
cautions, he was charged and had to go
before the magistrate. This gave me the
opportunity to write a letter explaining
why I had taken this action, and what I
wanted done about it.
The Magistrate agreed and my son was
given four months probation with the
suggestion that he receives drug
counselling.
Two TOUGHLOVE parents were with
me at the court, and I must acknowledge my
gratitude, as I would not have had any
idea what to do without their advice and
experience.
I believe this is where our strength
lies; that it is in the support we are
able to give each other on a daily basis,
and also in times of real crises. I was
also very tough with myself. Having been a
heavy smoker for well over 30 years I
decided that it was time to give it up, as
many of the fights my son and I had were
over cigarettes. It was worth it just to
see the disbelief on my son’s face for the
first few days, until he finally realised
that I was serious.
I believe he now has a great deal of
respect for me, for the actions I took to
change the negative patterns of behaviour
that was so disruptive to our lives.
I feel that I still have much to learn
about parenting, but now it is something I
look forward to rather than seeing each
day as something to be dreaded.
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Couple
creates resource for parents of troubled
children
By DOROTHY
CASCERCERI
Bucks
County
Courier Times
Phyllis and David
York's own tough times with their three
daughters gave them the idea for
ToughLove.
"At home, we had
a couple of raging lunatics," says
Phyllis. "Well, teenagers."
Adds David,
laughing: "We had three rotten kids."
It all began when
one of their daughters, who was 18 at
the time, was sent to prison for holding
a cocaine dealer at gunpoint.
When she was
released, she did the same thing again,
and the Yorks became desperate for a
solution, they say.
A family friend
stepped in, suggested they cut off all
contact with their daughter and then
forced their daughter to earn back her
right to contact her parents.
And it seemed to
work.
So the Yorks, who
live in Doylestown and both have a
background in counseling, invited other
parents to get together and discuss
their troublesome children.
Those informal
meetings turned into ToughLove
International, a nonprofit organization
that includes 200 support groups in
North America and all over the world, in
places such as Australia, South Africa,
New Zealand and Singapore.
Allowing
outsiders to intervene with family
problems has been highly successful in
changing the children's view of the
situation.
Says Phyllis: "I
always say it's like knowing what the
kid next door needs. Sure, they lash
out, but they don't hit or anything.
They don't act the way they act toward
their parents."
By removing a
layer of emotion from the situation, the
mediator is able to connect with the
child in a way the parents can't.
"We would have
rescued her weeks before, days before,"
Phyllis admits. "It was so hurtful. We
wanted to bail her out. You see the
little kid, not just the grown-up."
That position
parents take is almost inevitable
because they care about the child so
much, according to the Yorks.
But at the same
time, it also causes more damage - and
most parents don't even realize it.
When Dee Dee
Tibolla's son was 16, she says she never
believed a word he said.
He was stealing
from her, getting arrested and doing
drugs.
She tried
everything from sending him to
counseling to asking her local church
for help.
And then she
heard about ToughLove.
Members of her
support group intervened, accepting
Tibolla's son's phone calls when he was
in jail, as well as visiting him.
And until he
agreed to enter drug and alcohol rehab,
his parents were kept at arm's length -
a tactic that made him want to see and
talk to them even more.
The group members
who were helping Tibolla's son provided
him with a number of challenges, such as
meeting them somewhere at a particular
time or shaving his facial hair.
The more
challenges he completed, the closer he
came to getting back in touch with his
parents.
"He wanted to get
back to us," she says, "so he had to
prove to them how wrong we were about
him."
In the meantime,
Tibolla was doing the same for children
of other members in the group.
"It's community
support," says Tibolla who lives in
Lower Makefield and in the past has
worked with ToughLove groups in
Sellersville and Doylestown. "People get
stronger and better able to handle their
own problems by helping others. I was
getting stronger, getting tougher
myself."
Without
ToughLove, Tibolla says, she may not
even be talking to her son now.
"I think
ToughLove provided me the opportunity to
continue to have a relationship with him
because it was rapidly coming to an
end," she says. "I learned things I
thought I was doing to be helpful were
actually continuing the situation - and
that's pretty devastating.
"I had to change
the way I was doing things with him that
weren't working - yelling at him and
trying to talk to him. I wasn't getting
through to him."
Today, Tibolla's
son, who couldn't be reached for this
article, has his own teenage daughter to
contend with.
"He knows where
we were then," she says.
He has been sober
since he entered rehab 16 years ago, his
mother says.
"He has been as
stubborn in his sobriety as he was in
his youth," she says.
An active member
of ToughLove named John, who chose not
to give his last name, joined the
organization five years ago when his
son, who was 16 years old at the time,
got involved with drugs.
Being part of the
group, John realized his methods of
controlling his son were not working.
"I had to change
myself before I changed him," he says.
"I had to change the way I was doing
things with him that weren't working -
yelling at him and trying to talk to
him. I wasn't getting through to him."
But eventually he
did, and his son graduated from high
school, found a job and even moved into
his own apartment.
Now, John is
directing his efforts toward other
parents with the same problem.
"Like they helped
me, I help them when I come to meetings
and give them suggestions on what they
need to do," he says. "I'm a parent who
knows what they went through, and I try
to help them."
Over the last 25
years, the Yorks say ToughLove has grown
into more than they ever imagined.
But recently,
they've seen a decline in participation.
In fact, the only
local group still in operation is based
in the Northeast section of
Philadelphia.
David says
changes in the fabric of society are to
blame.
"People no longer
put the time in to help other people,"
he says. "They come in for themselves
looking for a quick fix."
But helping
others is the cornerstone of ToughLove.
"(ToughLove)
really means firm caring," says Phyllis.
"You're seeking
help, helping and building your
community."
Dorothy
Cascerceri can be reached at
215-345-3186 or dcascerceri@phillyBurbs.com
September 3,
2004 4:45 AM
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