So I was having this conversation with a friend. Someone had heard that her child had been arrested. Then that person did some digging or talking to people and found out that drugs were involved. My friend was really embarrassed that someone found out. My takeaway was that she felt his addiction passed judgement on her job as a parent. And that seemed to be the answer to my question of "why are you embarrassed?".
No parent is perfect. Even the ones that seem to have it all together and have children who have it all together, are not perfect. We just don't get to see the flaws. I just find it interesting that my friend and I are in the same boat and yet we process it so different. I have never hid my child's addiction. I'll come right out and say that he is an addict. It is what it is and it explains his time incarcerated. It explains why I was raising his children. It explains some of my frustrations.
We didn't offer our children that first needle. We didn't tell them it was all right to experiment with drugs. We both come from a place of addiction. So genetically both of our children had the possibility of becoming addicts if they started. I can remember her best piece of advice to her son.....don't go to a place where you even have to answer yes or no. If you aren't at the party up on the hill, you don't have to have an excuse for not imbibing or being pressured into it. And it appeared that he got past those hard peer years of being a teenager. Mine took no advice from me and went down that road at 14.
As a parent I can tell you all the things I did right. I can tell you some of the things I did wrong. I can tell you all the things I tried over the years to "help" get my child off that road. Tough love, super connected, hard boundaries (hard for me), soft boundaries, treatment, drug court, house arrest, and nothing worked. My child is 31 years-old and it is not my job to parent him any longer. He is legally an adult. And he needs to work this out himself. And I believe that about her son also. I know she did what she could. And it is in his court now. I don't think his addiction is a judgement on her parenting. Addiction affects the whole family.
I'm not an addict, but I am very much co-dependent. I have been to al-anon, I have been to classes for family at treatment, I have been part of my child's therapy through drug court, I have been part of my husband's therapy in treatment, I have read a lot and I have no answers. What I did get out my time there is that honesty is best. If you are hiding something you are letting it control you. And whether it is our intention or not it is still enabling our addict. I don't know that addicts should feel embarrassment or shame, but we should not save them from it. And when we hide stuff we are saving them from it.
Every one works through this process in their own way and their own time. We are all in different places. So we take it one day at a time. God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can and the wisdom to know the difference.