The tone of this book is one of optimism and great encouragement, which is what every weary parent in such a hard situation needs. It includes a lot of very helpful advice in the form of concrete exercises. The main ideas are--- stand by your family’s values when clearly communicating specific boundaries; not enabling destructive behaviors or communication patterns no matter how tempting; and establish a reliable “Home Team” that will be ready to support your teen’s recovery and come alongside the parents. Structure and discipline are key. He repeatedly warns against the dangers of lack of consistency between the adults in the teen’s life, as teens in this situation are especially vulnerable and prone to manipulation, and claims that a systemic allegiance to whatever system is in place is the most powerful indicator of the patient’s success. What he doesn’t address, is how to cope when the “Home Team” fails. A sad reality is that many families go through this process multiple times and failed/incomplete placements are commonplace. A parent cannot oversee and control every aspect of this situation (which is where the home team is supposed to fill in). It’s hard enough for a parent to follow through with consequences and deal with the fallout of that. It’s even harder when the other adults in the picture side with the teen in their frustration, and become an “advocate” for the teen’s immediate comfort and happiness (not progress) as soon as the going gets tough. There are too many cool guy church leaders, buddy coaches, disengaged Santa-style grandparents who want to befriend kids, but not support and follow up with parents in their hard, less glamorous work. I think there’s a tendency in all of us when someone is acting out to think the solution is only a matter of connecting the dots of how the people closest to them have failed them and caused the problem. Whether that is the case to any degree or not, people must still be accountable to their choices and their ability to think functionally. I’ve always been perplexed at the ever growing industry of life coaches and parenting coaches, but given the decline of the proverbial village, it’s beginning to make sense. The producers of this material also offer those services for families post-treatment, so it may be that dealing with the latter issues of lack of community support come into play when those services are engaged. And the price tag on that is understandably higher than that of a book.