man lookingMy question is: My 23-year-old son has a drug addiction. First it was marijuana and alcohol for many years, and now he seems to be smoking something called chop out of a bong pipe (tobacco and marijuana), but his behavior has changed he’s become more violent and very angry. He recently was arrested last week in the town of [REMOVED] where he went to school from elementary and graduated from high school where all of his friends live. He doesn’t work and is not looking for a job; all he wants to do is go from house to house sit and get high. He doesn’t want to abide by my rules so he cannot live with me, so he is a walking nomad with a backpack roaming from house to house to see what friend will take him in for as long as they will have him until he gets put out. What would be your suggestion to me as his parent to get him to see that he’s not moving forward in his life, that he’s living in the past in one small town and not reaching his full potential?

 

Greetings,

I get many emails like this one—from parents who are worried about the path on which their children are headed. It’s no secret that all parents want to see their children succeed, and that when a child fails to make a healthy and timely transition from adolescence to adulthood, it can be very difficult and upsetting to watch.

At 23, your son is an adult. Hence, your influence may be limited. However, it sounds like you’ve set healthy boundaries with your son. You’re not allowing him to live in your home, and (from what I can tell) you’re not enabling him by providing financial assistance. Furthermore, (from what I can tell) you’re not protecting him from the consequences of his bad choices. These are all good things to do (or, better put, not do).

You asked for a suggestion of something that you could do to let him see that his life isn’t headed in a good direction. He was just arrested. He’s living on friends’ couches. If these facts are not helping him to realize he’s not doing so well, then I don’t expect you’ll be able to make it any more clear.

There is a silver lining in this situation. It’s quite possible that the recent arrest will act as a wake-up call for your son. He may—as many twenty-somethings do—grow out of this phase.

On that note, encourage your son if/when he brings up a desire to change his life. If your son is willing to receive help in the form of counseling or treatment for a drug addiction, or even vocational/career assistance, those are areas where it wouldn’t be detrimental for you to aid him. Also, let him continue to know that you love him even if you don’t love the way he’s living his life. Avoid labeling him a “failure” or a “loser.”

As a parent, you are in a difficult situation, and if you’re like many parents in such a situation you’re feeling pretty powerless. It might be helpful for you, yourself, to seek counsel for your own feelings of frustration, loss or grief.

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Anthony Centore

Anthony Centore

Anthony Centore Ph.D. is Founder and CEO at Thriveworks--a counseling practice, focused on premium client care, with 80+ locations across the USA. He is Private Practice Consultant for the American Counseling Association, columnist for Counseling Today magazine, and Author of How to Thrive in Counseling Private Practice. Anthony is a multistate Licensed Professional Counselor and has been quoted in national media sources including The Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, and CBS Sunday Morning.

Check out “Leaving Depression Behind: An Interactive, Choose Your Path Book” written by AJ Centore and Taylor Bennett."