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News of Hope email. |
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N
E W S OF H O P E Volume 5.2
An
email newsletter from Susie Vanderlip
and the LEGACY OF HOPE staff |
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WELCOME
!
Photos
from 2002 travels! |
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Another
school year is closing in on the
finish line! What an emotional
year for us all. Out of the ashes
of September 11th has come a very
real and renewed sense of community
and patriotism. Teen
life, however, has continued
much the same with all the challenges
natural to adolescence. So,
LEGACY OF HOPE® has been
on the road traversing America,
including longgggggg airport
security checks and dozens of
pat downs later! |
| OUR
YEAR IN RETROSPECT
We
expanded our base of information
with more surveys of middle
school and high school teens,
particularly in rural America.
Many communities added evening
programs for parents and city
leaders to our visits. The results
were rewarding as adults became
more aware of teen realities
and motivated to make change.
And we enjoyed continued camaraderie
at many statewide conferences
for FCCLA teens and advisors
and for school counselors, exchanging
ideas and mutual support with
one and all.
HIGHLIGHTS
Presentations
have expanded in the recovery
world. We built new and valued
relationships as LEGACY OF HOPE
was shared at two significant
recovery conferences: Women’s
Healing Conference sponsored
by The Betty Ford Center, Hazelden
and The Caron Foundation; and
the New England Association
of Addiction Recovery.
We are also celebrating the
first full year for the weekly
newspaper column
It's Not Easy Being a Teen in
the Wellington Daily News, Wellington,
Kansas. You'll have a chance
to read excerpts below.
THANKS!
We
THANK everyone of the schools,
associations and foundations
we worked with this school year
for their continued recognition
of the impact and catalytic
power of dance and drama in
prevention, intervention, and
inspiration of HOPE! |
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| Contents
of 'News of Hope' Version
5.2 |
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In
this issue, look for statistics,
observations, and our usual dose
of personal reflection and encouragement
for teens and adults nationwide.
(Scroll
thru newsletter to view all contents
or jump to location) |
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| 4. |
Life
too STRESSFUL? Mellow with
- De-Stress
for Success |
| 5. |
Intriguing
Current Prevention Articles
From
Premiere Prevention Resource
JOIN TOGETHER (JTO) |
| 6. |
Legacy's
“REAL
WORLD ROLE MODELS
Adults
worthy of notice and praise
for their dedicated work
on behalf
of youth including some
of America's best youth
speakers and
my valued colleagues!
|
| 7. |
Contact
Legacy Of Hope |
Upcoming
FREE public performance
of LEGACY OF HOPE
Thursday, May 30th at 7:00pm
For parents and teens -
the one-woman show your
teen will
talk to you about for a
long, long time!
Acacia Elementary School
Fullerton, California
Call for details |
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| TELL
YOUR FRIENDS TO SUBSCRIBE |
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| 1. |
COLLABORATIONS
BETWEEN SCHOOLS AND COMMUNITIES
“Revelations
from Rural America”
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| Rural
schools chose to impact parents
and their communities by sponsoring
LEGACY OF HOPE evening presentations.
The results were powerful:
A rural community in southern
Nebraska brought me in to the
high school and community, six
guns a blazin’, to clean
up the town! My job was to “lay
down the law” on alcohol
and drug abuse with a clear
message about the traumatizing
impact of alcoholism and drug
abuse on users, their families
and their friends.
After the school assemblies,
students were surveyed for interest
in support on a variety of concerns.
The responses were tallied and
shared with a crowd of approximately
150 parents that evening after
they, too, viewed LEGACY OF
HOPE.
By the end of the evening,
three teens and two adults had
sobbed in my arms, unloading
tears of pain and grief hidden
away for years as they attempted
to tolerate the intolerable
in their lives. Ten teens spoke
to me about their suicidal thoughts,
their faces shining with hope
and relief to have their pain
heard and not ignored.
My stomach soured at the tales
of teens who had had to plead
and literally beg social services
and/or police to take them away
from drunken, doped, sexually
and physically abusive parents.
A number of teens shared with
me abhorrent tales of being
accused of lying about beatings
and multiple molestations in
their homes. I have run into
such stories throughout small
town America. Locals said they
thought authorities were in
denial of the severity of alcohol,
drug and abuse problems and
small town loyalties were to
blame.
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19%
(59 students) to cope with
depression |
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19%
to cope with friends’
depression. |
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7%
(23) for suicidal concerns |
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8%
(28) for rage/violent feelings |
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12%
(37) for concern over friends’
depression |
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13%
(41) for concern over friends’
rage/violence |
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18%
(57 students) for alcohol
use |
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11%
(34 students) for marijuana
use |
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32%
(100) for concern over friends’
alcohol or drug use |
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26%
(82 students) felt they
would benefit from Peer
Helpers on campus |
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10%
(33 students) gave their
name to participate |
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| The
community audience responded to
the survey results with concern,
enough to warrant community and
school response. As a result,
the high school counselor will
contact the National Peer Helpers
Association and expressed hope
for school and community financial
support to implement and sustain
peer helping on campus.
Unfortunately,
the school’s budget has
declined year after year, as
budgets have in many rural schools.
The counselor reflected how
the high school had held successful
groups on campus in the past.
The counseling department had
even trained teachers to run
the groups; and the district
had funded substitute teachers
in classrooms to free teachers
up to run them. Two years ago,
however, the groups were eliminated
due to school budget cuts and
higher priority allocations
to sports programs.
An additional
problem common to rural America
surfaced: gossip. As a result,
secrecy was common in the community.
Some teens shared on surveys
that they would like to have
given their names to be in groups
but feared gossip and backlash
so refrained from doing so.
Studies
of alcoholics in recovery have
suggested that a large percentage
of alcoholics who began drinking
alcohol as teens did so as an
attempt to self-medicate depression.
If middle schools and high schools
across the country devote resources
to teen depression, suicidal
thoughts, rage and violence,
the results may well be a reduction
in alcohol and other drug abuse,
suicide and violence; improved
academics; and the more successful
futures for our children.
INFORMATIONAL
MATERIALS: For
informational materials and
demo video geared for
adult venues, professional meetings,
conferences, associations and
workshops, call 800-707-1977
or email: Susie@legacyofhope.com
To
"Contents
of News of Hope" |
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| 2. |
ON
SALE!! FOR
GRADUATIONS AND AWARDS!
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TEEN
POWER TOO –
Uplifting book for teens
Half
Price SALE!
$5.00
plus S&H ($2.50 each)
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Buy
in volume now to acknowledge
student leaders and graduates!
LEGACY
OF HOPE -
Full one-hour video
25%
Discount!
was $40.00 NOW $30.00
plus S&H ($2.50 each) |
Great
remembrance for teens, a favorite
FCCLA advisor,
peer helping advisor, counselor
and friends you care about.
Pick
up a copy for your classroom,
your kids, and anyone you have
wanted to get the message.
View it together and the conversations
will unfold between you and
someone you love.
To
"Contents of News of Hope" |
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| 3. |
Excerpts
from Susie’s Weekly
Newspaper Column |
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It's
Not Easy Being a Teen |
To
read additional columns, see http://www.legacyofhope.com/wellington
news.htm We
ask your assistance in syndicating
the column. Please help by letting
the Editor of
your local paper know about It's
Not Easy Being a Teen. We'd be
happy to have them
run the column for awhile to see
how the community responds. THANKS! |
TEEN
MENTAL HEALTH PROBLEMS ON THE
RISE Column
from March 19, 2002 |
Eileen
M. O’Connor in the Monitor
on Psychology, September, 2001
states,
“More undergraduate and
graduate students are reporting
depression, substance abuse,
eating disorders, learning disabilities,
and most commonly, problems
adapting to college life.”
Over the last ten years, a progressive
decline in mental health resources
has occurred across all aspects
of the American landscape. Managed
care decimated health insurance
reimbursements for therapy;
school districts cut funding
for school counseling. As a
result, our youth have been
left to their own devices to
cope with emotional distress.
By the time they reach college,
they are more likely to seek
psychological services, according
to O’Connor, perhaps “because
there is less stigma”
in college to speak up about
emotional concerns and/or because
colleges are seeing the natural
extension from high school of
increased mental health problems
in our youth.
it takes a society to raise
healthy kids!……Colleges
are creating stress management
fests where college youth learn
to cope with feelings through
a wide variety of nontraditional
techniques including massage,
acupuncture, biofeedback, meditation,
Tai Chi movement, nutrition,
support groups and more.
I have presented stress management
De-Stress
for SuccessÒ
workshops to high school teens
for seven years; and they love
it!
Teens
and young adults have the need
to see themselves free of the
expectations and demands of
family, peers and their own
internal critical voices.
To
"Contents of News of Hope"
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WORDS
HAVE POWER WITH TEENS -
FROM AWESOME TO ANNOYING!
Column
from January 29, 2002 |
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| The
specific words we use to communicate
with one another can make the
difference between strengthening
our families and ripping them
apart. The words of a parent impact
the self-esteem of a child for
a lifetime. The words adults use
with teenagers are well known
to trigger very dramatic results!
Starting
in the pre-teen years, we make
the transition from accepting
our parents every word as well
as those of teachers and society,
and start to think for ourselves,
defining our own personal and
collective perspective on life.
A popular word with teens from
coast to coast, north and south
is "annoying".
In my generation, adults may
have said teens were annoying,
but in reverse, our parents
were known to "bug"
us. Today's teens love to share
how "annoying" the
habits, behaviors and demands
of parents, siblings, teachers
and even friends can be!
Webster defines "annoying"
to mean: troublesome; pestering;
a nuisance; vexatious: harassing,
instituted without sufficient
grounds, serving only to cause
annoyance. The word makes a
lot of sense for today's teens
and their reduced level of respect
for parents.
The
teens summed it up with an honest
and direct statement: "Annoying
is when we don't have our own
way".
To
"Contents of News of Hope" |
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TEENS
HUNGER FOR A LOVING GOD
IN THEIR LIVES
Column
April 28, 2002 |
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| This
past Sunday was confirmation day
for a dozen teens at a church
I attend. The pastor made some
pointed remarks during the service
about teens and parents today.
He said that he had asked the
dozen teens during their confirmation
studies how many of them had talked
with their parents on such topics
as faith, God and the role of
religion in their lives. Only
2 out of 12 teens had had a conversation
on spiritual subjects with Mom
or Dad, despite their parents’
obvious desire for their children
to have religion in their lives.
The pastor
also polled the teens on how
many of them had ever sat around
the dinner table and discussed
with their parents character,
ethics, right and wrong? A mere
1 out of 12 had had such family
conversations. The pastor spoke
further of a study in which
90% of the teens at high school
graduation had never discussed
the subject of right and wrong
with their parents. They really
did not know what constituted
right from wrong. They did believe,
however, that it was right not
to get caught doing something
wrong.
The point of the discussion
was to motivate the congregation
to question why parents, grandparents,
aunts, uncles, and other adults
in a community do not make the
necessary effort to properly
educate our young in values,
character, and spiritual matters
any more. The pastor asked the
congregation to comment from
the pews. Naturally, I put in
my two cents!
I was able to share that teens
are actually hungry for meaning
in life including a concept
of a God that is real, a God
that responds to their everyday
overwhelm and insecurities,
a God that is able to help them
make sense of the enormous barrage
of messages and influences today
that promote buying, using,
indulging, extreme-living, and
self-serving in every area of
their lives.
I shared that I mention God,
non-denominationally, in every
school assembly I do. I make
an honest admission to them
that I am only able to share
with them some of my most personal
triumphs and tragedies because
I have found a benevolent, caring,
miracle-working power greater
than myself in this world, and
I choose to call that God. I
remind them that we are emotional,
mental, physical and spiritual
creatures. To be healthy in
this world, we must be aware
of these in our lives and work
to make progress on all four
aspects of ourselves on a regular
basis.
I told the congregation I have
never been censured, even by
a public school, for mentioning
God. In fact, it has been sadly
amusing how many times a student
(and/or a teacher) at a high
school will subtly amble forward
after a program to quickly whisper
in passing, “Thanks you
for mentioning God!” You
see, in my ten years of taking
hope and spiritual encouragement
to our teens, they have responded
with applause and even standing
ovations (particularly in the
South) after I have made these
statements. Teens ARE hungry
for God in their lives.
In my thousands of conversations
with troubled teens, it is clear
that many teens have lost faith,
some teens in EVERYTHING except,
perhaps, alcohol, drugs, the
party scene, and an option to
commit suicide. Even the highest
achievers have no real faith
in a power other than their
own determination, extreme focus
on achieving, and the belief
that they are somehow supposed
to control success in their
lives. Excessive stress levels
and suicidal thoughts are the
manifestation of an achiever’s
spiritual bankruptcy.
Every one of the teens I have
talked to also hungers to believe
there is a God that really can
help them out of despair. They
want relief from their fear
of not being loved by broken
parents, fear of being unlovable
and losers, fear of the future,
fear of making wrong decisions,
fear of being alone. But they
do not know how to connect with
that God. They feel somehow
He forgot them, gave up on them,
decided they weren’t worthy
of Him a long time ago when
their parents divorced or hit
them or berated them or neglected
them or worse.
I have spent many hours talking,
emailing, and sharing stories
with teens about the small and
large miracles that God has
worked in my life. They listen
eagerly, urgently, needing hope
and lessons in how to find a
relationship with this loving
force from inside their wacky
world.
Today’s
teens can actually relate very
quickly to the concept of God
in their lives. They need a
relationship with a loving,
reliable power in this world
that won’t let them down
as they feel work-absorbed,
divorced, abusive, unavailable,
overly-demanding parents may
have. But that power, God, must
be real. And God becomes real
to them only when at least one
adult in their lives models
that God. We as adults become
God with skin for teens when
we listen with our hearts as
well as our heads to a teen’s
concerns. We model God when
we choose compassion, patience,
courtesy and kindness instead
of criticism and control.
To
"Contents of News of Hope"
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| Quote:
“The
chances that your children will
delay sex, pregnancy,
and parenthood are significantly
increased if their futures appear
bright .”
National
Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy
(NCPTP)
http://www.teenpregnancy.org
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| 5. |
Recent
Headlines from “JOIN
TOGETHER ONLINE” |
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| Current
Prevention news from Reputable
Sources
The following are SAMPLE TOPICS
and ARTICLE SUMMARIES.
Web Addresses are given for
Full Articles on JTO Web Site |
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| T
O P S T O R I E S |
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New
Yorkers at Risk for Addiction,
Other Problems
http://www.jointogether.org/y/0,2521,549550,00.html?U=19628
With
post-traumatic stress disorder
and depression known
risk factors for addiction,
NIDA helped fund a study
to see
how New Yorkers are coping
after September 11.
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Schools
Need Students to Advocate
for Tougher Alcohol Policies
http://www.jointogether.org/y/0,2521,550022,00.html?U=19628
Motivating
non-drinkers on college
campuses to speak out
against the harm caused
by binge drinking could
be an
important step towards cutting
the rate of alcohol-related
problems.
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| 6.
LEGACY’S “REAL
WORLD ROLE MODELS” |
| Here
are some of the AWESOME
PEOPLE we've worked with
this year, men and women
devoted to the education
and well-being of America’s
kids. In this newsletter,
we recognize |
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AMERICA'S TOP REHAB
AND RECOVERY FACILITIES |
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Hazelden
Foundation:
Susie
with Patricia Broat,
Public Education Manager
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Caron
Foundation
and
Betty
Ford Center:
Susie
(center) with Deborah Keltz
of the Caron Foundation
(left);
Nancy Waite-O'Brien, PhD.
Director of Psychological
Services
and Professional Development
at the Betty Ford Center |
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PEOPLE OF GREAT CHARACTER
AND CONTRIBUTION! |
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Tisha
BennettExecutive Director
TeenESTEEM
Wellington,
Kansas Tisha devotes herself
to reducing teen pregnancy
and providing services to
pregnant girls. She is always
on the lookout for a life-saving
project for kids!
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Rita
Grant (with Susie at recent
CCPOA conference) Crime
Prevention Officer
San
Bernardino County Sheriff's
Department Rita retires
this year after a career
making a difference in thousands
of lives. Her spirit and
dedication to the well-being
of her community are ever
present!Our best wishes
go with her! |
| To
"Contents of News of
Hope" |
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| 7.
Contact Legacy of Hope |
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Please
visit our web site at
www.legacyofhope.com to
view a more complete list of great
web sites worth visiting and other
resources. Email comments or questions
to Susie@legacyofhope.com
or call
800-707-1977. |
A
LEGACY PRODUCTION
Susie Vanderlip, CSP * Ken Vanderlip,
PhD *
Carmella Lampe |
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About
SUSIE VANDERLIP, CSP
Certified
Speaking Professional, Dancer,
Actress, Author,
Prevention Specialist and Recovery
Coach
Contributing Author to: |
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LEAD
NOW or Step Aside |
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