How
Can You Prevent Your Kids From Becoming Alcoholics or Drug Addicts?
By
Dr.Fourkan Ali
When addiction runs in the family, parents can set good
examples – but their influence only goes so far.
Over the course of my
years as a substance abuse therapist, I've heard one question time and again:
"How do I prevent my children from becoming alcoholics and drug
addicts?" The question comes from active alcoholics and addicts who don't want their kids to suffer like they
do, as well as from people who have witnessed addiction destroy their families
and murder their loved ones' spirits.
The simple answer is:
If addiction runs in your family, don't drink alcohol or abuse drugs. But the
full answer is more complex. Here's what you can – and can't – do to reduce
your children's risk for addiction:
1. Forget parenting
techniques.
Understand that there
is no right or wrong parenting technique that will keep your child from the
grasps of addiction or alcoholism. The only way you can promote a sober
lifestyle for your child is by role modeling a sober
lifestyle.
2. Ask for help.
If you personally
suffer from addiction, alcoholism or both, ask for help – it's the most powerful example you can set for your
child. Though your own sobriety does not promise abstinence for your children,
it does relay the message that asking for help is courageous and brave, and
that living a sober lifestyle is an admirable aspiration.
3. Know the limits
of parenting.
Some of my clients come
from seemingly perfect families that appear to belong on the set of "Leave
it to Beaver." They went to church on Sundays, kept a curse jar on the
kitchen counter and didn't have a bar in their homes other than a coffee bar.
Still, at 20 years old, they need treatment for heroin addiction.
I've also heard horror
stories from close, well-adjusted friends who grew up in volatile households,
left home at age 16 and barely made it out of their 20s alive. Yet somehow,
they have never developed an addiction to chemical substances. This dichotomy
is tricky because it's closely related to the chaotic argument of nature versus
nurture.
If you refrain from
having alcohol or drugs in your home, your child can still develop an addictive
relationship with these substances if he or she has the disease of addiction.
In that case, he or she will manage to one day encounter a substance that masks
deep pain and makes feelings of isolation seem obsolete.
You see, the reality is
that alcoholism and addiction are diseases intertwined into
our DNA. While they are often propelled
by an exposure to an alcoholic environment; sometimes, they seem to originate
from thin air. Recognize that no matter how good or bad of a parent you feel
that you are, your child's addiction is not your fault.
4. Take control.
My intention for
acknowledging this topic is not to make you feel helpless, but rather to make
you feel empowered – empowered to ask for help if you suffer from addiction or
alcoholism and empowered to live a life of self-care and self-esteem. You can
then pass those traits on to your children.
5. Fall in love with
yourself.
When no one is
watching, how do you treat yourself? What does your internal dialogue look
like? Is it positive self-talk or harsh words of
disbelief? I am a strong advocate of the
old adage: You can't love others unless you love yourself. To set an example of
someone who doesn't need drugs or alcohol to feel good about themselves, fall
in love with your positive and negative attributes, and let your children watch
this long-term love affair. That way, they can fall in love with themselves,
too.
Source:website
0 comments:
Post a Comment