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Welcome to a compassionate blog dedicated to offering hope and support for families navigating the challenging journey of addiction, codependency, and recovery. Explore heartfelt stories and honest advice, crafted to guide families toward healing and renewal.
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Dear Liz:
WHEN YOUR KIDS ASK FOR HELP
Dear Liz: My addicted daughter is getting evicted from her apartment. She has no money and asked me to help pay her electricity bill and her rent. If I don’t, she might be out on the street. What should I do? Thanks, Ronda
Dear Ronda,
I wouldn’t give her cash.

Dear Liz:
Yes, is my short answer.
But honestly, it depends on what—if anything—you plan to do with the information if he tests dirty? If you’re not prepared to establish and enforce consequences, then you’re wasting your time and money, and chipping at your relationship with your son.

Book Review: Attached
Attached. The New Science of Adult Attachment and How It Can Help You Find—and Keep—Love is an excellent book that decodes our relationships styles, whether secure, anxious or avoidant. Our attachment style is influenced by a variety of factors—not only our childhood, as previously believed—including our life experiences. And good news, they can change over time.

Dear Liz:
Dear Regina,
From some of your comments I’d put my money on you knowing about boundaries. Dear Miz Liz is happy to give you permission to implement those boundaries while still loving your friend. Which, of course, is where it gets complicated and why you’re writing me.

Dear Liz:
My 23-year-old son was in town and we discussed dinner at my house to celebrate his birthday with him and his fiancé. So I planned a meal, shopped for groceries and baked a cake. At 5:00 p.m. Sunday, he said they’re tired and decided to just grab a pizza. I was disappointed and hurt and stuck with a cake. . .

Dear Liz:
Dear Sheila,
Your question is really about boundaries, and I respect you for asking it. I imagine you’ve had some experience with this and appreciate where it’s coming from.
If you’ve been reading this column, you know I’m normally a tough love kind of girl. In this case, though, I’d focus on the word “love.”

Dear Liz:
Dear Claudia,
My simple answer is that the line gets crossed when we lose ourselves to meet someone else’s needs when it’s not ours to do. (I assure you that you’re not alone, Claudia, many parents have a hard time separating the two.)

Making Discoveries
Hi Kris, can you please share with readers how you survived the holidays when you first chose sobriety?

Dear Liz:
Dear Rebecca,
You’re fortunate to have such supportive friends, and congratulations on the newborn!
This is a question about boundaries. Having boundaries helps us maintain healthy, balanced relationships and love people well without losing ourselves in the process.

Dear Miz Liz:
Dear Kathleen,
Mom needs help.
I’d honestly question the validity of this situation if I didn’t believe you can’t make this up (or wouldn’t). It’s tragic on so many levels and it epitomizes my greatest passion in life: keeping kids on track.