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Parenting in Recovery: Challenges and Opportunities

Webinar

Parenting in Recovery: Challenges and Opportunities

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Many people in recovery are parents. In fact, 70% of women entering treatment have children (Werner, Young, Dennis, & Amatetti, 2007). Many identify caring for their children and strengthening their relationships with them as primary recovery goals. Parenting can be rewarding, extremely stressful, and—for parents with trauma histories—potentially triggering. Parenting-related issues that arise for families in recovery may include coping with stress, including family separation and reconnection; household and financial challenges; isolation; difficulty balancing recovery-related activities with spending time with children; discipline issues; rebuilding trust; and overcoming stigma (Arria, Moe, & Winters, n.d.). In one study related to parenting and mental illness, mothers and other stakeholders identified numerous systemic barriers to developing and supporting mothering roles (Barrow, Alexander, McKinney, Lawinski, & Pratt, 2014). 

As investments and initiatives to address people’s needs for recovery supports to advance their health, housing, and employment goals have expanded, much remains to be done to address people’s needs for recovery supports to assist them in moving towards their parenting goals.  The purpose of the Parenting in Recovery: Challenges and Opportunities webinar is to provide insight into the experience of parenting in recovery, to offer examples of recovery-oriented approaches to supporting people their roles as parents, and to suggest strategies for increasing parenting supports for people in recovery. 

Learning Objectives

Webinar participants will be able to

  • identify challenges specific to parenting while in recovery,
  • name three ways to support people as parents in recovery, and
  • identify one next step on how to increase or improve supports for parents in recovery (either individually or as an agency).

Moderator: Cheryl Gagne, Center for Social Innovation

Presenters:

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Comments (4)

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Recovery from what?  The parents that I work with are targeted parents.  That is they married and had children with a narcissistic/borderline spouse.  The disturbed parent has traumatized the fit parent to such a degree that they suffer from complex PTSD.  The NPD/BPD parent presents their (ex) spouse as emotionally unstable and most family court judges place the children with the abusive parent, further harming both the healthy parent and the children. 

Targeted parents are subjected to even more abuse once they have separated or divorced the narcissistic/borderline parent.  The fit parent and children can ONLY recover if there is protective separation from the abuser, otherwise therapy actually makes it worse. 

It's estimated that there are 22 million families in this crisis and it is growing.  I am trying to find a way to merge ACE, trauma informed and narcissistic family abuse in order to support the healthy parent and save the children from certain mental and physical negative health outcomes.

Any thoughts?

thank you,

Kay A. Johnson

Executive Director

The National Alliance For Targeted Parents.

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