Revisiting Eps 425: Setting boundaries around teen substance abuse with Brenda Zane

Episode 425


Brenda Zane is back this week!  

She was on the podcast last time (spring 2023) talking about how to be with teen substance use.  

We had SUCH an amazing response to that conversation that Brenda and I thought it would be helpful to have her back to talk about “what do you do” for specific scenarios around our teens and substances that leave us feeling in the dark. Today we discuss how to set healthy boundaries around teen substance abuse while still maintaining a connected relationship with our teens. 

Guest Description

Brenda is the founder of Hopestream Community, a collection of support and educational services for parents of adolescents and young adults struggling with substance use and mental health challenges. She is a CRAFT Parent Coach, Volunteer coach and facilitator for The Partnership To End Addiction, a Mayo Clinic Certified Health and Wellness Coach, and Board Member for Sky’s The Limit Fund.

Brenda’s mission is to provide parents with evidence-based tools that help create conditions for change in their families. Hopestream Community comprises the Hopestream podcast, private, online communities, The Stream (for moms,) and The Woods (for dads.) Parents can also find educational offerings to learn about The Invitation to Change Approach which guides them through the experience of having a child misuse substances and struggle with mental health.

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Takeaways from the show

https://www.besproutable.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/BrendaZane-e1665690310786-1.jpg
  • Creating conditions for positive change in children, and the plant analogy.
  • Why young people turn to substance use, including a desire to cope with emotional pain and shame.
  • Setting boundaries around drug use
  • The challenge of enforcing consequences
  • The importance of addition over subtraction in facilitating change
  • Have open and curious conversations with their teenagers about substance use, rather than resorting to shame or judgment
  • The importance of building a positive relationship with children, focusing on mutual respect and influence rather than control or manipulation
  • The “information sandwich” technique to discuss sensitive topics with teenagers
  • How humor and modeling positive behavior are useful tools
  • Focusing on boundaries and natural consequences, rather than reactive measures like drug testing and phone confiscation

What does joyful courage mean to you?

It takes courage to have these conversations, because honestly, it’s a lot easier sometimes to just let it go. Sometimes I just don’t want to deal with it or I don’t know how to have the conversation. So it does take courage to learn the tools, put yourself out there, take a risk on sounding weird, or whatever, in front of your kid. And when you do that, you actually bring a sense of joy. And I want to make sure to distinguish joy from happiness, because you might not be feeling happy, right? Sometimes kids have to go out of the house for treatment, or sometimes there’s difficult things that you have to do. It does provide that sense of joy that you’re doing the right thing for your child. And there’s no better feeling than that.

 

Resources

Brenda’s Website

Hopestream Community  

Brenda’s Podcast

Hopestream Community Instagram

Hopestream Community Facebook

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Transcription

SUMMARY KEYWORDS
parenting teens, substance use, risky behavior, mental health, positive relationships, natural consequences, information sandwich, boundaries, chemical dependency, addiction therapy, family dynamics, open communication, motivational hooks, self-harm threats, parental authority
SPEAKERS
Brenda Zane, Casey O'Roarty

Casey O'Roarty 00:04
Music. Hey there. Welcome back to the pod. Just a brief reminder that I am sharing past shows with you through next week. This week is one of the two interviews that I've done with Brenda Zane. I mentioned her in my intro last week. She's the host of the hope stream podcast and a parent coach for families with teens and young adults in addiction and recovery. I'm re releasing back to back shows on how to parent our kids through really risky behavior, because it is the stickiest place that parents find themselves. It's that combo of risky behavior and mental health. And just like Dr Klein's interview last week, my conversation with Brenda is real and it's raw. This Convo is specifically around substance use, the challenge of enforcing consequences, how to facilitate change, building positive relationships with our teens, the technique of the information sandwich and focusing on boundaries and natural consequences. If you have a child who is using substances, this show is for you. If you have a child who has friends that are experimenting, this is for you too. And if your teen isn't engaging in substance use, yay. Listen in, because there's sure to be lots here for you to consider as well. I'm so grateful that you're here. Enjoy. Okay, hey listeners, welcome back to the podcast. I'm so excited to let you know who my guest is today. She is a friend of the show. Brenda Zane. You will remember her from Episode 78 where she talked with us about how to be with teen substance use. We're going to continue to go there today. We had such an amazing response to that conversation that Brenda and I thought it would be helpful to have her back to talk about, what do you do specific scenarios around our teens and substances that leave us feeling in the dark. And you guys delivered the community. Delivered was some really wild, not wild, but typical scenarios that we have to navigate, and it's like what is going on. So just to remind you, Brenda is the founder of Hope stream community, which is a collection of support and educational services for parents of adolescents and young adults struggling with substance use and mental health challenges. She is a craft parent coach, volunteer coach and facilitator for the Partnership to End addiction, a Mayo Clinic, certified health and wellness coach and board member for sky's the limit fund. Brenda's mission is to provide parents with evidence based tools that help create conditions for change in their families. Comprises the hope stream, podcast, private online communities. The stream, which is for mom in the woods for dad. Parents can also find educational offerings to learn about the invitation to change approach, which is so amazing, which guides them through the experiences of having a child misuse substances and struggle with mental health. Hi, Brenda, welcome back to the show. Thank you. My first I want to say straight off, I love the sentence in your bio, which is that your mission is to provide parents with evidence based tools that help create conditions for change in their families. So many of us, parents of teens and tweens, it's like, tell me the formula, give me the wand. What is the language that's gonna keep my kid from ever touching any kind of substance, right, or misuse, or experiment, or even, you know, socially use. And I just really appreciate that we can create a condition that might decrease the likelihood of problematic use, but ultimately, as we all know, right, our kids walk out the door and they make their choices, so how we respond is what we're gonna dig into. No,

Brenda Zane 04:00
it's so true, and that's all we can do, is create those conditions. We can't make them change. And I just a funny little story about that. I bought my son a plant who I don't know what mom buys their 23 year old son a plant for his birthday. I did because I couldn't think of anything else to get him, and I had it sitting in the corner, and it was starting to just look really sad and wilty, and one of the leaves was turning brown. I'm like, Oh no. And I was kind of thinking about it, because I'm weird in, like, terms of what I do. And I thought, you know, it's not that that's a bad plant, it's that it's not in the right place, it's not in the right conditions. And so I moved this little plant over to the window, and I gave it a little bit of water with some fertilizer, and I talked to it, and I kind of rubbed it sleeves a little bit, and the next day it was a little more perky. I thought, Okay, this is exactly what we're doing. Is we are just trying to create conditions in which our. Kids are more likely to change, or to want to change, or to want to continue with the good behavior that they are doing, right? It's not that we're always correcting. So anyway, that was just a little reminder to me that when something is struggling like that, it's not necessarily that they're bad or there's anything wrong with them, right? They just might not be in the right conditions.

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