Help your child be independent
Dear Annie: This is for “Oklahoma Parents,” who said the “system failed” their 24-year-old son, “Jared,” who was into drugs and has been in and out of jail for domestic abuse, possession and failure to pay child support. The system didn’t fail your son – you did.
I speak from experience. At 19, with barely a high school education, I was living at home, collecting the dole and working only long enough to keep collecting it. I, too, had plenty of reasons to blame others for my situation, but eventually, my mother had enough and threw me out. That was the best thing she could have done.
Twenty-four years later, I am happily married with four wonderful children and a thriving career. This never would have happened if my mother hadn’t had the courage to do what she felt was right. She continued to provide support to me (emotionally and financially), but only as I made progress on my own. My priorities changed and my survival skills (suppressed when not in regular use) were honed when I suddenly needed to worry about what I would eat for the next week.
These parents should do the same. Yes, there is a risk, but are they planning to shelter Jared forever? What happens when they’re gone and he needs to start looking after himself when he’s 50? – Eternally Thankful to Mom in Canada
Dear Canada: We’re glad your mother had the backbone to make you stand on your own two feet – and that you were resilient enough to turn things around. We hope Jared’s parents are paying attention.
Dear Annie: My husband, “George,” and I have been caring for my mother-in-law for the past three years. Unfortunately, we can no longer continue and must put her in a nursing facility.
The problem is her doctor. He is trying to dictate which facility to put Mom in. We much prefer a different home, but the doctor does not have staff privileges there. Now he refuses to fill out any medical forms or turn over her medical records to anyone, and he is generally making our lives miserable.
We have since found another doctor for my mother-in-law who is much more cooperative and whom we like a great deal. Do we have any recourse against the original doctor? – Fed Up in New Jersey
Dear Fed Up: According to the New Jersey State Board of Medical Examiners, your doctor has 30 days to provide the records after receiving a written request from the patient, or whoever the patient has designated. Physicians may not refuse to release a copy of the medical records if they are needed for treatment by another health care provider, although you do need to pay for the costs of reproduction.