While the book is honest and very insightful to say the least, I have always had issues with parenting techniques that spoil a child for 18 yrs and then kick them out in the world to fend for themselves. So, this book was a torture for me. I skipped a whole lot of emotions of the mom and the family. I wanted to know about Jake. How he was handling his family's rejection of him when he was at the lowest. If Addiction is a disease, will you kick a seriously sick person out of your home and make them fend for themselves, especially when that person is your child, hasn't fully grown up or developed crucial life skills and leave them battle with their sickness, finances, housing, schooling, getting a job all at the same time when you are also piling them with guilt, shame, loss, and your judgement? Even a normal healthy adult will have issues dealing with all of that.
This book reaffirmed for me that adults are messed up, that the grown up world isn't sane but has insanely high expectations of their kids to lead a perfect life. We are the cause our children suffer.
Jake is such a strong spirited kid. I wish him the best sincerely. And I really feel sorry for us clueless parents and the children we appear to protect, or control or worry about because we don't know any better. I truly wish that instead of stigmatizing addiction, and judging addicts we should look into ourselves as a society and ponder upon how we are actively contributing to these disassociated young adults who turn to drugs to find a solution from the dreary life they see us adults living. They don't want to live the same meaningless, stressful lives, and check mark each box for milestones set by this society. Get a degree. Get a job. Get married. Buy a house. Have kids. Make sure your kids live the exact same way as you did. All checked? Good. Now you are a respectable, reliable person because you followed directions. Now, you belong. Welcome to HERD mentality.