Hartford Courant

Stepparent should send stepchild to rehab

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy — Helpful Hinter Copyright 2021 by Amy Dickinson Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: My husband’s daughter is addicted to drugs — namely, fentanyl.

When she randomly contacts us, he allows her to play this game where it’s everyone’s fault but her own.

She recently committed a serious crime and instead of putting the responsibi­lity onto her, he allowed her to drag him into the rabbit hole of believing it was someone else’s fault.

It doesn’t seem healthy to me. She should be held responsibl­e for her own actions.

It may not be our place to confront her, but I also don’t think he should feed her ideas that she is not responsibl­e for what she did. What do you think?

— Upset Stepparent

Dear Upset: I agree with you. But you are not this daughter’s parent.

Your position as a stepparent is both an asset and an impediment.

On the one hand, you are in an ideal position to identify the enabling structure of your husband’s relationsh­ip with her.

On the other, you lack empathy for this particular parent. Your frustratio­n seems to have gotten in the way of your compassion.

Both of you should urge your daughter toward rehab and recovery. That’s it. Everything else is just noise: her noise (excuses, blaming, self-hatred), his noise (buying her flimsy cover-ups) — and yours, too.

Change might happen when both you and your husband simply stay quiet.

You should be supportive and compassion­ate toward him, while guarding your own life, home and bank account.

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra­tion runs a very useful “help line,” connecting family members to local groups for help. Check samhsa.gov for more.

Dear Amy: Due to an undiagnose­d learning disability, I graduated from college with a couple of C’s and one D on my undergradu­ate transcript.

Fast-forward a few years and I realized that I wanted to become a science teacher.

I approached College A to begin a teacher licensing program and was accepted with the caveat that I meet with the department head.

The meeting was one of the most degrading experience­s I’ve ever had. He was aggressive, rude and condescend­ing to me. He told me: “You will never be a good science teacher with a grade like this.”

He made it clear that he would not work with me. I later approached College B and was accepted on a probationa­ry basis.

One year later, not only did I graduate the teacher licensing program with flying colors, but I returned to that school for my master’s degree and graduated with a 3.9 GPA.

I have worked as a highly qualified teacher for almost a decade now.

As a teacher, I cannot imagine putting my students through the type of degrading experience like the one I had with the department head at College A.

I looked it up and he is still working at the college.

I feel strongly that this man should know how his words and actions could affect an aspiring student.

Should I write to him (or the college) and let them know of this experience?

— Wondering Teacher

Dear Teacher: You deserve a lot of credit for achieving your goals. Your students are lucky to have you as their teacher.

I think you should go ahead and write a letter to this professor. Frame your experience as a “lesson.” Give him credit for inspiring you to prove him wrong, and for providing you with a great example regarding the kind of teacher you have been determined to be.

Keep it respectful­ly worded.

I suspect that after you write this letter, you may decide not to send it. Writing it will make you feel better. You will see that you’ve already conquered this long-ago demeaning encounter — and you will feel less of a need to prove it.

Dear Amy: Regarding “Old Messy House Dweller,” the website for the National Associatio­n of Senior and Specialty Move Managers lists profession­als who assist people with downsizing, selling, moving, etc., in terms of culling and disposing of possession­s.

A search by an individual’s ZIP code will provide local consultant­s.

Dear Helpful: Yes! Here’s the website: nasmm.org.

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