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The Rich Roll Podcast

Jessica Lahey on Preventing Substance Abuse in Kids

The Rich Roll Podcast

Rich Roll

Health & Fitness, Education, Self-improvement, Society & Culture

4.812.9K Ratings

🗓️ 5 April 2021

⏱️ 128 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

How do we equip kids with the tools they need to avoid substance abuse? How can we identify a teen who is at risk? And what can be done to prevent our young ones from developing dependency issues? Every parent is haunted by these questions, myself included. To get answers, I did what you do when you host a podcast—I turn to the experts. Meet Jessica Lahey. Returning for her second appearance on the show, Jess is a graduate of the University of Massachusetts with a J.D. concentrating on juvenile and education law from the University of North Carolina. She’s an English and writing teacher, a commentator for Vermont Public Radio, and writes about education, parenting, and child welfare for The Atlantic, The Washington Post, and The New York Times. Best known as the author of the New York Times bestselling book, The Gift of Failure—a non-negotiable must read for every parent and the focus of our first podcast (RRP #282)—Jess also co-hosts the popular #AmWriting podcast alongside fellow podcast alum KJ Dell’Antonia (RRP #396). But the primary focus of today’s discussion is her hot off the press second book, The Addiction Inoculation: Raising Healthy Kids in a Culture of Dependence. This is a conversation about how to have those difficult conversations with your kids about alcoholism and drug addiction. It’s about how to effectively guide our young ones through the perils of substance exploration, dependency, and abuse. And most of all, it’s about arming parents with invaluable, evidence-based strategies and practical tools helpful in raising, supporting, and educating resilient, addiction-resistant children. FULL BLOG & SHOW NOTES: bit.ly/richroll593 YouTube: bit.ly/jessicalahey593 As someone who has done battle with the demons of alcoholism, and as a dad of four delicately parenting two teens, this terrain isn’t just a useful lens on developmental psychology, it’s of particular personal pertinence. Whether or not you’re a parent, chances are there’s at least one young person in your life currently in jeopardy for substance dependence. It’s thus incumbent upon all of us to better understand the nature of that risk—and how to effectively guide the young ones among us towards safe harbor. May this conversation serve that purpose—because Jess understands the delicate nature of this dynamic better than anyone I know. Peace + Plants, Rich Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

During adolescence, drugs and alcohol do some things to the brain that just don't happen

0:08.8

later.

0:09.8

Like there are risks to certain drugs and alcohol to everyone, but then there are greater

0:14.8

risks for many of them because they mess with parts of the brain there in the process

0:18.8

of growing and adapting and connecting really, really quickly.

0:23.2

I think helping kids be the kind of person who doesn't have to medicate themselves to

0:30.2

feel like they're enough.

0:32.4

That's my goal with teaching, that's my goal with parenting.

0:36.0

I'm coming at this from the perspective of a parent who just wants to do whatever I

0:40.2

can that's based on actual, reliable, good evidence, especially as a parent of kids who

0:46.8

are more likely to have substance abuse during their lifetime.

0:50.8

Not as a teacher and as a person who my entire adult career has been dedicated to helping

0:57.7

kids feel seen and heard and known and helping them get to a place where they are healthy

1:03.7

and full and realized adults.

1:07.8

And all of this is part of the same picture.

1:09.9

So the fact that I've been through recovery, I think that adds something interesting

1:14.2

to the story.

1:15.2

But just having gone through recovery does not make me an expert in treatment.

1:18.9

And I'm an expert in now is prevention.

1:22.0

I love gift-of-failure.

1:23.4

I will always love gift-of-failure, but this is the book that I was meant to write.

1:26.9

This is the book that life has brought me to this place.

...

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