Weston Mother helps other Parents – Miami Herald

by Sue Scheff on Dec 15, 2008


Weston mother helps other parents

When Sue Scheff was at the end of her rope trying to deal with her own out-of-control teenager, she admits she never could have imagined a time when she would become a leading voice in the field of parent advocacy.Yet the Weston author is rapidly becoming a familiar face in the national spotlight speaking about just that.

”I never went into this to become a national voice or figure, but that is what I have become,” said Scheff, author of Wit’s End: Advice and Resources for Saving Your Out of Control Teen.

Scheff appeared last month on the Lifetime Network’s daily television series The Balancing Act during an episode entitled “Plain Talk and Straight Answers for Parents with Troubled Teens.”

A taping with the Oprah Winfrey show also is planned.

Wit’s End, a 168-page book released earlier this year, is a tool for parents navigating the choices and methods available to help struggling teens.

Scheff, now a full-time parent advocate, said she wrote the book not as an expert or therapist but as a parent who endured a long and painful experience trying to help her daughter, Ashlyn.

Almost a decade ago, she watched her child go from promising athlete to troubled teen, repeatedly running away, being verbally abusive and having serious problems at home and school.

With no experience or help to fall back on, she enrolled Ashlyn in a residential treatment facility that wouldn’t allow her contact with her daughter for six months.

She would later learn her daughter endured months of beatings, sexual abuse, starvation and neglect.

”It nearly destroyed her,” Scheff said. “It took us two years to deprogram her after what they had done.”

The experience led Scheff to her new purpose. She founded a group called PURE, or Parents Universal Resource Experts, which she said has served thousands as a parent advocacy group.

Through Wit’s End, she provides parents with resources to help them sort out and evaluate treatment options, including therapeutic boarding schools and treatment centers.

”You step into an arena of teen help and you are bombarded with a barrage of information,” she said. “This is one way to help sort it out.”

In her newfound role as advocate, Scheff also has appeared nationally on the ABC news magazine program 20/20, The Morning Show with Mike and Juliet and Rachael Ray, among others.

Ashlyn, now 23, has seemingly rebounded and gone on to coaching gymnastics and becoming a mother herself.

Scheff said she would like their story to provide a light for other families.

”I think any parent out there struggling with a teen right now, you don’t see the hope and you don’t think you will ever come out of it. I didn’t think I would,” she said. “`But now I look back and see all those dark times have actually helped others.”

For information, visit www.suescheff.net.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Parents’ Universal Resource Experts – Sue Scheff – Parenting Teens At Risk

by Sue Scheff on Dec 09, 2008


PARENT EMPOWERMENT

By Sue Scheff Author of Wit’s End and Founder of Parents’ Universal Resource Experts

 

Are you at your wit’s end?  Completely frustrated and stressed out over your child’s behavior?  Are you questioning where the child you raised with values went?  It is time to empower yourself with information that can help you take control again.

 

So many parents are desperate to find resolution and peace with their out of control teen.  They feel helpless, hopeless, scared, exhausted, and bewildered where this behavior came from.

 

Many teens are suffering with low self esteem, depression and other negative feelings that are making the act out in defiant ways. It is important to try to resolve these feelings before they escalate to worse behavior, including substance abuse and addiction, sexual promiscuity, eating disorders, self injury, gang involvement, etc.

 

These teens are usually very intelligent and capable of getting Honor Roll grades, however are not working up to their potential and lack the motivation to succeed and do well.  This can stem from peer pressure combined with the teen’s feelings of low self worth.  It is one of the most common trends today – highly intelligent teens making bad choices.  Are you telling yourself; “This is not my child,” yet soon realize that it is and you must take control of an obvious out of control situation.

 

As a parent that has experienced and survived a troubled teen – I am introducing “Parent Empowerment” to help you take control of your family again.  My goal is that you will learn from my mistakes and gain from my knowledge. 

 

Do you think you are alone?  I can assure you, that there are many parents that are in your same situation – and feeling the same frustrations.

 

Let’s look at things we have tried – and I am confident many of you will see the familiarity with these consequences:

 

  • Remove privileges or place restrictions on cell phones, televisions, computers, going out on weekends, friends, phone time at home, etc.  In today’s society, although these should be privileges, most are considered normal necessities of a teen’s life.  This can be related to entitlement issues. Many instances even if you have removed the privileges, the child knows he/she will eventually get them back, and find other means to communicate with their teen world.

 

  • Change schools – How many times have we believed if we change the school the problems will go away?  Maybe in some cases, however these issues will follow your child into the next school environment.  The problems may be masked in the beginning, but in most cases, the trouble will soon arise again.  Changing schools, although may temporarily resolve some problems; it is rarely the answer when teens are emotionally struggling. 

 

  • Have your child go live with a relative out of state? Wow, this is very common, but the other similarity is that in many situations it is a short term resolution before the family is calling and saying they can’t do it any longer – you need to find another alternative for the teen.  This can be traumatic and stressful for both families involved and cause friction that could result in more negative feelings.

 

  • How many families have actually moved?  Believe or not, parents have looked for job transfers or other avenues to try to remove their teen from the environment they are currently in.  So many of us believe it is the friends, which it could be, however as parents we need to also take accountability – this is not saying we are to blame, but we need to understand that our children are usually not the “angels” we believe they are.  Sure they are athletic, played varsity sports (football, track, golf, swim team, dance etc.), musically gifted, or other special talents as well as were in all advanced placement classes – but reality is, if you are reading this, this has changed.

 

  • Seeking a therapist will help.  Yes in some cases it will.  And of course, we should all try this avenue first.  Unfortunately more times than not, the teens are already a master manipulator and can breeze through these sessions convincing the therapist the parents are the problem.  I know many of you have probably already experienced this.  The other concern with therapy is that in many situations the one hour once or twice a week can barely scratch the surface of what a family with a troubled teen may require. 

 

  • Was your child arrested?  If your child has committed a crime, chances are they will be arrested.  If your child has become belligerent in the home and you fear for your safety or the safety of your family, again chances are they will be arrested.  In some cases with first time offenders the charges could be dropped.  However if this becoming a chronic problem, you seriously should consider outside help.  When a teen is arrested and placed in a juvenile detention center, even for one night, they are exposed to a different element that could either scare him/her or harden them.  Teens can learn bad habits in these centers, or potentially worse, make friends with teens that have far worse problems than yours. 

 

  • Scared Straight Programs or Boot Camps – Are they effective? Many parents will seek a local weekend Scared Straight Program or Boot Camp.  In some cases, it may have a positive effect on your teen – a wake up call so to speak; however in other cases it may worsen your problem.  Depending on your child and the problems you are dealing with or how long they have been going on, may help you to determine if these types of programs would be beneficial or detrimental to them.  Some teens will leave a Boot Camp or weekend Scared Straight program with more anger and resentment than when they entered it.  The resentment is usually directed at the person that placed them there – not at the program.  This can open doors to more destructive behavior.  Personally, I am not in favor of Boot Camps or Scared Straight Weekend programs.  A visit to a jail with a police officer, giving the teen the awareness of what could happen to them, may be a better way to help the teen to understand consequences of the current behavior.

 

 

These above efforts are avenues parents could try before considering any type of residential therapy school program.  I believe exhausting all your local resources should be the first path.  Making a decision to place a child outside of the home is a major decision and one that is not to be taken lightly.  It is important you educate yourself – empower yourself with information to help you make the best decision for your child.    

 

An educated parent is an empowered parent.  Parent Empowerment!  Take control of your family life again.  Don’t be a parent in denial – take control and become empowered!   I believe giving your child a second chance to have a successful life is our responsibility as a concerned parent. 

 

Here is a preview of my new book, Wit’s End! Advice and Resources for Saving Your Out-of-Control Teen.  Published by Health Communications, Inc (HCI).

 

Plain Talk and Straight Answers for Parents of Troubled Teens

 

Wit’s End is the shockingly gripping story of how Sue Scheff, a parent of a formerly troubled teen, turned her mistakes—and her relationship with her daughter—around. This highly practical and prescriptive book calls upon Scheff’s personal experiences with finding help for her daughter. It includes the same advice that Scheff offers parents through her internationally recognized organization Parents’ Universal Resource Experts (P.U.R.E.)—an advocacy group that draws parents together and helps them find ways to protect their children from destructive influences by educating them about the issues their family faces and creating a safe environment to revive familial bonds.

     

Using the same criteria P.U.R.E. uses to research residential treatment centers and other teen-help programs around the world; Wit’s End provides positive, prescriptive help for families who want to put their children on the road to a safe, healthy, happy, and independent adulthood.

    

Wit’s End is a much-needed guide—written by a parent who has been there—that helps parents navigate the choices and methods available to them and their child. It serves as an action plan that empowers parents—and their children—toward healing.

 

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Sue Scheff: Teens Today – Parenting Advice From Young Adults

by Sue Scheff on Dec 03, 2008


Vanessa Van Petten, author of You’re Grounded, as well as a great communicator for parents of teens today, created a website – OnTeensToday – which offers a variety of Teen and Parenting Articles, Blogs and great up to date information on today’s generation of adolescents.

Here is a brief introduction:

Welcome Brave Parents

HOORAY! Finally, parenting advice from the kid’s perspective! It’s usually impossible to get more than one-word-answers from us, but here I hope that I, along with my 8 teen writers (age 13-17) can be honest about real issues that teens and pre-teens are dealing with, so parents can actually understand us (well at least a small part of our world)…and we can finally develop better relationships.

As much as I LOVE my freedom, I know that adolescents are often two steps ahead of parental controls and because of this, watched many of my friends make really, really bad decisions. So, we have decided to break open the door to our SECRET, terribly complex world and let you in. Ok, I am exaggerating just a tad, but I do truly believe that *if we help each other stay informed, we can stay safe, supported and become happier adults.*

Visit www.onteenstoday.com and learn more!

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Sue Scheff: Teens and Shoplifting

by Sue Scheff on Nov 28, 2008


Holiday’s are officially here – malls are crowded – stores are busy with the holiday rush especially today on Black Friday.

It doesn’t matter your economic status, it seems some teens from all financial backgrounds will try their “hand” at shoplifting. Why?  Peer pressure?  Is it cool?  Part of the crowd? 

What constitutes shoplifting?  It doesn’t have to be only stealing, shoplifting can include changing price tags (which is harder to do now with the bar scans in some stores), consuming food or drink without paying for it, leaving a restaurant without paying, wearing items out of a store (again, hoping there isn’t an alarm tag on them) – this and more will land you in legal trouble if you are caught.

Teens seem to believe it could never happen to them – however more and more I am hearing from parents that have had to deal with this.

To learn more, visit www.stopyourkidsfromshoplifting.com and get some great parenting tips such as:

Why Children Steal and Your Role in Preventing Retail Theft

Very young children sometimes take things they want without understanding why it’s wrong. Elementary school-aged children know better, but may lack enough self-control to stop themselves. Most preteens and teens shoplift as a result of social and personal pressure in their lives. Here are just a few of the reasons why:

•  Feel peer pressure to shoplift
•  Low self-esteem
•  A cry for help or attention
•  The naïve assumption they won’t get caught
•  The belief that teen stealing is “not a big deal”
•  Inability to handle temptation when faced with things they want
•  The thrill involved
•  Defiance or rebelliousness
•  Not knowing how to work through feelings of anger, frustration, etc.
•  Misconception that stores can afford the losses
•  The desire to have the things that will get them “in” with a certain group of kids.
•  To support a drug habit.
•  To prove themselves to members of a gang.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Sue Scheff: Teen Entitlement Issues – Holidays are Here!

by Sue Scheff on Nov 26, 2008


Does your teen have Entitlement Issues?

 

Does your teen expect more from you than they have earned or deserve?

 

Many parents only want the best for their children (usually more than they had growing up), but has this actually backfired on families?

 

In today’s society many teens have major entitlement issues.  Many parents feel that giving their teen’s material items will somehow earn them respect.  Quite frankly, the opposite occurs in most families.  The more we give, the more our children expect and the less they respect us.  We literally lose ourselves in buying our children’s love.  At the end of the day, no one wins and life is a constant battle of anger, hopelessness, and debt.

 

While interviewing a young teen, she was recently given a new car – brand new – felt she deserved it since her parents gave her two used ones previously.  She is only 17 years old and already controlling her household and believes she was entitled to this car. She shows no appreciation or respect to her parents.  Simply, she deserved it.   Can you imagine owning 3 cars by the age of 17, yet never buying one?  This is an extreme example, but I am sure many parents can relate.

 

Entitlement issues can lead to serious problems.  Teaching your child respect and responsibility should be priority.  Although the issues may have started to escalate, as a parent, it is never too late to take control of the situation and say “no” when your teen feels they are entitled to a frivolous item or anything that is considered a privilege.

 

Life is about responsibility, as parents we need to teach our children responsibility – helping our children comes natural to us, however when it becomes excessive and the child doesn’t appreciate it, it is time to step back and evaluate your situation.

 

Learn more at www.helpyourteens.com

 

Tags: , , , , , ,