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Parents with troubled son worry about disclosure

By Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

Dear Amy: We had a very difficult summer. We had to send our 14-year-old son out of state to a wilderness program because of his substance abuse, defiance and high-risk behavior. We were totally caught off guard by the substance abuse issue. We are first-generation immigrants and were not exposed to drugs growing up in our birth country.

Our child spent 11 weeks at the program, during which we learned more about his behavior (drugs as well as alcohol, stealing to support his habit and so on). It was shocking and unbelievable.

He worked hard to overcome this behavior and picked up a good set of coping skills. He has since transitioned to a small residential therapeutic treatment center where he will get continued help, while completing his schoolwork.

When his friends (the ones we want to keep him away from), as well as other well-meaning friends, ask about him, what do I say?

Right now I simply state that he is at a private school. Some accept the answer, and others continue to probe.

I say that the details are not important and walk away. We as a family have gone through too much pain. All this probing only makes it worse.

 

I want our child to choose when (and if) he wants to share his story with others.

What is your advice?

-- Pained Parents

Dear Pained: This is your family's business, and it should be up to you to choose what you want to disclose (and to whom). One way to handle this is to be deliberately vague, but also polite (making a statement and then walking away is impolite and may raise more questions).

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