How Can I Talk to My Child About Alcohol?
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 818 legacy views
Reader rating
Not enough ratings yet
Aggregate average appears after enough eligible reader ratings.
Rate this resource
Sign in to rate this resource.
The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism gives some practical strategies for bringing up the subject of alcohol use with your child:nn# Encourage conversation. Encourage your child to talk about whatever interests him or her. Listen without interruption and give your child a chance to teach you something new. Your active listening to your child’s enthusiasms paves the way for conversations about topics that conce
you. nn# Ask open-ended questions. Encourage your teen to tell you how he or she thinks and feels about the issue you’re discussing. Avoid questions that have a simple “yes” or “no” answer. nn# Control your emotions. If you hear something you don’t like, try not to respond with anger. Instead, take a few deep breaths and acknowledge your feelings in a constructive way. nn# Make every conversation a “win-win” experience. Don’t lecture or try to “score points” on your teen by showing how he or she is wrong. If you show respect for your child’s viewpoint, he or she will be more likely to listen to and respect yours. nn# Draw the line. Set clear, realistic expectations for your child’s behavior. Establish appropriate consequences for breaking rules and consistently enforce them. nn# Offer acceptance. Make sure your teen knows that you appreciate his or her efforts as well as accomplishments. Avoid hurtful teasing or criticism. nn# Understand that your child is growing up. This doesn’t mean a hands-off attitude. But as you guide your child’s behavior, also make an effort to respect his or her growing need for independence and privacy.
Drug abuse used to be considered a moral failing, with addicts written off as willful and incorrigible. Today, teen drug abuse is more likely to be seen as a physiological disorder, a disease that can be treated and eventually conquered. Approaches to treatment for drug abuse vary, but people in treatment all learn how to change their behavior and reduce their cravings. Relapses are common, but people who stick with drug addiction treatment and can reclaim healthy, productive lives.
Drug addiction certainly can be treated. While drug abuse used to be viewed as being, at best, a weak, flawed person’s response to life’s pressures and temptations, today most professionals who work with teen drug addiction consider it a medical condition, on the same plane as diabetes or heart disease. And just as someone with diabetes or heart disease has to institute lifestyle changes and take medications, teens in treatment for drug addiction learn behavioral changes and often take medications as part of their treatment regimen. This change in attitude has helped boost hope for many teens and their families.
In fact, one of the reasons drug abuse is so prevalent is that many folks who need treatment for drug abuse don’t get it. The U.S. Department of Labor posted a report recently of one study showing that 47 percent of men and 41 percent of women in need of treatment for abuse of illicit drugs are not treated. Much of this gap between need and actual treatment comes from inadequate funding for drug abuse treatment and inadequate education about drugs and drug treatment.
There are many ways in which drug and alcohol addiction can be treated, and that treatment can lead to permanent recovery if the person fighting the addiction makes a real commitment to a treatment program and sticks with it. According to several studies, drug treatment reduces drug use by 40 to 60 percent, but, typically, only for people who stay in treatment for three months or longer. Treatment for drug and alcohol abuse is a long process that involves not only recovery from the physical effects of substance abuse but therapy that allows drug abusers to understand the psychological and social roots of their addictions and learn new ways of coping. As much as they need to stop using, they also need to recognize the emotional triggers that can cause them to start using again. That’s why it’s important to choose the treatment program that best serves the individual needs of the recovering addict.
Article author
About the Author
Further reading
Further Reading
Website
Children Occupational Therapy Brisbane We come to you!
Ready Kids OT, work with you and your child to address your concerns and achieve your childâs goals. We provide both one on one Occupational Therapy sessions and Virtual Occupational Therapy through online video resources and printable handouts to education & empower parents to better support their child.
March 25, 2021
Article
5 Types of Booklets You Need For Your Business
For any business, booklets can be used for marketing as well as training purposes. The number of pages a booklet should have depends on the amount and type of information you want to convey. Selecting the right type of booklet can be difficult for any business owner. Here are 5 popular types of booklets that your company can choose from: 1.Brochure BookletrnMost companies have a lot to benefit from a comprehensive brochure especially in terms of informing customers about thei
February 19, 2021
Article
All About Solutions Offered By Tow Truck Companies
Why subscribe for the solutions of a car breakdown service company? This can be a problem you could have found yourself asking, upon being introduced to such services. Obviously, you can have identified that vehicles break down, but maybe it's your competition that after your car or truck stops working, you can always take it to your local mechanic. You might also have already been alive to the fact that vehicles have a tendency to often breakdown in such a way that they have
February 6, 2021
Article
Why must we break the taboo around baby loss?
On the 25th of November, Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex, opened up about her experience of baby loss in an article for the New York Times. In her emotive piece, she explains her harrowing experience, she describes âsitting in a hospital bed, watching my husbandâs heartbreak as he tried to hold the shattered pieces of mine.â In this piece, Meghan bravely speaks out against the stigma of discussing baby loss, following a similar public statement by Chrissy Teigen in
December 14, 2020