Second Entry-VENTING

I feel like times are passing me by, and I just don’t understand it.  Got a text the other day from my sister in law.  This is my wife’s sister, Tina.  When Cheryl passed away, Tina and her family were living in an extra home on our property.  I was agains this from the get go because she and her husband and five of her seven children are drug users.  They fight constantly and don’t have jobs.  After Cheryl died in March, I let them stay through the end of May, and then told them they had to make arrangements for another home, that the boys and I needed our privacy, and that I could not keep paying the extra utilities for them, as well as helping to feed them, transport them, etc.  It was just too stressful.  They refused to move, and I had to evict them.  Tina showed up in court with a forged note saying my wife left the property and the kids to her.  It was laughable, because we bought the property together after marriage, so I am the sole owner, and Cheryl would not have done that anyway.  The judge, who knows us personally ruled in my favor and told Tina she was lucky he didn’t charge her with forgery and perjury.  I haven’t spoken with her since that day in August.  The text she sent was asking for money to build a shelter because they are living in a tent.  I told her, truthfully, that I didn’t have any money to lend at this time, I am on disability pay thru January, we’re just skating by.  I did offer her free lumber that I have and am not using. 

She started a text campaign, that it is all my fault she and her family are homeless and living in a tent in the woods, I stole "their" property, etc.  Okay,  first, as I said, Cheryl and I bought this property for cash 13 years ago.  In all that time, neither Tina nor her husband have worked.  They have been welfare recipients the entire time.  I have literally given them thousands of dollars, two vehicles, and places to live down through the years.  But it’s my fault they have nothing.

I spoke with Brad today about his hanging out with the same people he gets high with, and told him in no uncertain terms that if he is getting high, he must move out.  If it is a case of he’s trying to quit and unable, he has to seek professional help immediately, but he must remain drug free and in school, or I will not let him have the truck I bought, pay his cell bills, or allow him to live here any longer.   If he fails a drug test, or refuses to take one when I tell hiim to, he also has to leave. I told him, that I haven’t seen signs of drug use in him, and was not accusing him, but the fact that he is back with the same crowd concerns me.

He got mad, said I’m trying to force him out of the house.  My response is that I love him, I want him here, and I want to be part of his life, but that he KNOWS that I will not tolerate drug use, and he was told that last time he ran out and then came back home.  He then tried to guilt me for saying I will throw him out with no place to go.  Again, the decision rests with him, and how he decides to behave.  He’s 19, not nine, and old enough that it’s time he understands that I am not required to keep going around in circles, repeating the same cycle with him.  Nor am I required to give him the truck that was bought contingent on his behavior and grades, or keep paying for a cell phone. 

For some reason, people seem to feel that they are entitled to everything.  They don’t take responsibility for their lives or actions, and when it jumps up and bites them on the posterior, it’s everyone’s fault but their own.  They assume the role of society’s victims, instead of using a little healthy introspection and dealing with their own issues. 

I don’t know what Brad’s decision is going to be, probably will be running off again in a day or two if his former pattern holds.  But he knows, or he better know before he makes a rash decision, that this door will no longer be open to him.  If he spends the rest of the winter living in the woods, I hope he has a good coat.  If you’ve read my earlier entries, I think it’s pretty plain that I live for my sons, nothing on earth means more to me.  It just comes to a point that to continuing to let him come home and have another chance is enabling him, and teaching him nothing.  I can’t be a base of operations for this kind of behavior; I refuse. 

I just don’t get it.  We raised all our kids the same, with the same rules, instilling the same value system; everything.  Tina, I am sad to say, I don’t care about.  She is not, and never has been my responsibility.  But Bradley just confuses me.  How does a person get so off track from the way they were raised?  I keep praying morning, noon, and night for him and I believe that ultimately he will be all right, but I have to do my part, and that means sticking to my guns and not letting him live here, yet behave however he pleases.

Anyway, there’s no one I can talk to about this stuff with his mother gone, so you guys get to hear me go on about it.  Thanks for listening and for being so supportive

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January 2, 2013

Hi, just saw your entry on the front page and decided to drop in. I really admire your dedication to your sons – in just the couple entries I read it sounds like you do a heck of a job. My dad raised me to EARN my own way and work for what I have – there’s a great sense of pride in that. I can’t imagine waiting for anyone to just grant me things! Entitlement is a crock. LOL

January 2, 2013

Believe me, how you raise a child has nothing to do with how they turn out! There are just twenty months between my two, Mark and Roz, and they are opposites in every way. Mark has had a lot of addiction problems, low morals and can’t look after himself well. Roz went to a good university and works for the police and has never touched drugs, and is mature and responsible. The Twelve Steps group

January 2, 2013

says that addiction is genetic and I believe that 100%. You can buy drug testing kits over the internet if you wanted Brad to prove that he wasn’t taking anything, but cannabis does stay in the system for up to a month when used heavily.

January 3, 2013

I too don’t understand how two people raised the same way could be so different. You can only do so much, Brad has to want the change as well. Good luck.

January 3, 2013

Fristly, YOU DID THE RIGHT THINGS WITH TINA AND WITH BRAD. I am a recovering addict. Have been clean since May 19, 1992. I have worked hard to remain in recovery and not return to the throws of addiction. You allowing him to stay, paying his bills, and comforting him when things are rough only allows for the addiction to continue…I know personally how easy it is to stay addicted when others loveyou more than they love themselves. It wasn’t until I had no one and nothing that I turned a new leaf after hitting a very hard bottom. Addicts will manipulate, use guilt, throw pity parties, cry, scream, or do whatever they see will get them the outcome they want. Be strong. I know it will be hard but you have us here as a sounding board. Love is not a feeling it is an action…always has been an action word and in order to love Brad you must take action. We know your sons mean the world to you and please know that you can make it through this…:-)

I agree with Saving Barbie. As long as you give in to the rants/raves/begging your son will continue to abuse drugs. He is going to have to hit ROCK BOTTOM in order to realize who truly loves him, and what he needs to do with his life. It’s going to be hardest for you, so you need to stay strong, and know that you are doing the right thing! I will continue to keep you both in prayer. Ginny

January 3, 2013

I also agree with SavingBarbie and know its true due to experience with a family member. The toughest part is sticking to your guns even when others wont understand, even when he pulls all the stops on you. Always speak calmly, say what you mean and mean what you say. Getting into screaming matches or arguing back & forth will make him think he could win if he keeps it up. Be strong when he can’t.

January 5, 2013

Brad knows you love him and want the best for him. You’ve shown that to him from day one, and he won’t forget it. I think that’s what will help him when he needs you most….hang in there my friend.