Question 1245

Photo by: Emily

24 Responses to “Question 1245”

  1. Eljai:

    War being fought where I live

  2. Sapphire:

    I don’t want to see either of my best friends being brought home from war in a coffin.

  3. Susan:

    my son suffer

  4. Doreen:

    Parents crying

  5. Margaret:

    any of my children die

  6. dada:

    no more war here ….no more sick people around me … .no more tears on my face …

  7. Bismah:

    those garbages who made my life miserable

  8. Cali:

    Addiction and what it does to those who suffer and their families. The only disease that ravages your mind and body and soul and tells you it’s your fault. Purely evil. I hope never to see again my son physically, mentally, emotionally, spiritually wrecked by drugs and tears rolling down his face in despair telling me how tired he is of fighting addiction. Never again.

  9. Jenina:

    to see the one I love loves someone else.

  10. Sapphire:

    I don’t want to see my best friends lose them selves in this fighting that they are doing for our country.

  11. philo:

    the death of sum1 u love

  12. reysanglenn:

    Happiness. Because every time after happiness comes, there is always a pain, sadness, and sorrow. It’s better for me to find comfort in pain than being happy for a while and then suffer in pain, sadness, and sorrow.

  13. msgemini:

    pass

  14. Shannon:

    Someone I love suffering from addiction

  15. Taurean:

    My mothers face when she cries.

  16. jasmine:

    animals being mistreated that makes me so sad and angry.
    my sister hurt or my young brother or uncle

  17. Tommy:

    Apocalypse. Nuclear war, failure of ecosystem, or whatever. I want my future family to be able to find joy in this world.

  18. Death of my child

  19. annie:

    death

  20. I concur with Dennis and Scott that adidoticn is a chronic condition. Assuming I worked at a public treatment center there are several things I would do to further the work of aligning this belief to what is actually practiced in our profession. Direct work with clients and families would include the education piece about how adidoticn is like having cancer, not like having a really bad case of the measles. Framing the issue of chronic vs. acute this way is crucial to helping all involved take the long view of success. Group work with a mixed-stage set of clients over an extended number of sessions as in Weegmann and English, skyped or cell phone based assertive continuing care, in-person quarterly RMC’s, would all be woven into my practice (assuming my agency was supportive). Much systemic work is needed to spread this vital reframing of adidoticn as a chronic condition. From an education standpoint, this concept and practice is not a hard shift to sell, but many of these shifts will cost money. When it comes down to dollars that is a different story. From all levels within the agency, to community, state and federal funding sources both education and advocacy is necessary. I am ready to sign up for the sustained push that is required for progress to be made. Taking these sytemic changes even further into the very critical need for overall change in our nation’s adidoticn treatment and aftercare structure. Toward that end I agree with McClellan and Meyers and say increases in funding support are needed to implement best practices in treating adults, adolescents, those who are dually diagnosed and incarcerated.

  21. BubblesQ:

    People that I love are in pain *

  22. I concur with Dennis and Scott that adtocdiin is a chronic condition. Assuming I worked at a public treatment center there are several things I would do to further the work of aligning this belief to what is actually practiced in our profession. Direct work with clients and families would include the education piece about how adtocdiin is like having cancer, not like having a really bad case of the measles. Framing the issue of chronic vs. acute this way is crucial to helping all involved take the long view of success. Group work with a mixed-stage set of clients over an extended number of sessions as in Weegmann and English, skyped or cell phone based assertive continuing care, in-person quarterly RMC’s, would all be woven into my practice (assuming my agency was supportive). Much systemic work is needed to spread this vital reframing of adtocdiin as a chronic condition. From an education standpoint, this concept and practice is not a hard shift to sell, but many of these shifts will cost money. When it comes down to dollars that is a different story. From all levels within the agency, to community, state and federal funding sources both education and advocacy is necessary. I am ready to sign up for the sustained push that is required for progress to be made. Taking these sytemic changes even further into the very critical need for overall change in our nation’s adtocdiin treatment and aftercare structure. Toward that end I agree with McClellan and Meyers and say increases in funding support are needed to implement best practices in treating adults, adolescents, those who are dually diagnosed and incarcerated.

  23. Whoever edits and puisblhes these articles really knows what they’re doing.

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