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Responding to Poor Judgment Dear Margo: This past year has been amazing for me. I successfully passed my first semester in college with a 4.0 while juggling friends and a job. I have a very goal-oriented boyfriend who is compassionate to boot! We have a lot in common and …Read more. If It's Something Dire, You Will Know About It Dear Margo: My husband is an only child in his late 30s. My father-in-law is terribly selfish. We live several states away, and because he's the only blood relative left, my spouse does his best to keep in touch with his father. It is rarely …Read more. What's Up with That? Dear Margo: I really don't know what to do about my mother. It's as though she's made a career out of not listening to what I say ... or she's dedicated herself to doing the opposite. Right after I told her I was going on a diet and staying away …Read more. Guess What: Not Everyone Is Kind Dear Margo: My husband, our children and I recently moved to a new town. Through the children, really, I've met a group of women. They apparently are longtime friends, and one of them invited me to their Wednesday mothers group for lunch. I have to …Read more.
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When Even an Intervention Is Impossible

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Dear Margo: I think my sister, "Allison," has been abusing Adderall and similar drugs for about 15 years. She's increasingly paranoid and delusional, and has difficulty keeping jobs or managing her money. For example, within 18 months, she spent over $250,000, which represented her portion of our mother's estate. She claims that our brother purposely placed "tracers" in our mother's car, which supposedly hastened her demise. (Our mother passed due to a stroke at age 89.) She believes her ex-husband and former neighbors are watching and following her.

The problem started when she was supposedly diagnosed with ADHD and was prescribed Adderall to manage the symptoms. However, I question the diagnosis, as she did not exhibit any traits associated with ADHD as a youngster or as an adult. The "symptoms" appeared at about the same time she was experiencing marital and family difficulties. I would like to arrange for a family intervention, but she has alienated her two children, her siblings and her ex-husband. We're all concerned about her welfare, but she has cut us out of her life and refuses to speak to us. What to do? — Alarmed and Stumped

Dear Al: Fifteen years is a long time to be zonked out on psychostimulants, whether she needed them or not. She has manically blown through a fortune and become estranged from everyone, and she exhibits paranoia. All this pretty much renders an intervention useless. About the only thing you can do is go to her prescribing doctor and lay out the facts. (She is getting these pills from somewhere, let us hope not the street.)

Assuming she is seeing a doctor, he could commit her for observation and/or treatment. If this is not possible, you're all unfortunately going to be unable to prevent her from self-destructing.

— Margo, sadly

How Do You Make Your Family? One Child or Two?

Dear Margo: Both my wife and I are over 50. We went to India and hired a surrogate so we could have a child, and now we have a beautiful baby girl who is 1 year old. We will be paying off the cost of the doctor and the surrogate for the next three or four years. We're struggling with the decision of whether or not to get her a sibling, which would double our debt. Also, India is not the safest place in the world. Two weeks after we came back to the U.S. with our baby, terrorists slaughtered people we met in Mumbai.

We want our baby to have a happy life and worry that she'll have no one when we pass away. On the other hand, we are worried that we won't have enough money to provide for her if we double our debt. We swing back and forth in our decision-making. We ask people and get advice ranging from she won't be lonely to she will; many only children are well-adjusted to they're not; parents who don't have a second child when they get a chance regret it later. Your ideas, please. — Confused

Dear Con: In the same way that "Sajani" is a girl's name in Hindi meaning "well loved," I wish there were a name meaning "good just as things are," so I could say, "Leave well enough alone." Here are my reasons: You are already older parents. Your family finances are strained. The actuarial tables say you will both live into your 70s, your wife perhaps longer. Your child has a very good statistical chance of being at least in her 20s before she is left alone. Only children usually have good friends, and they develop inner resources to be comfortable by themselves. I, myself, am an only child who never wished for a sib. — Margo, realistically

***

Dear Margo is written by Margo Howard, Ann Landers' daughter. All letters must be sent via e-mail to dearmargo@creators.com. Due to a high volume of e-mail, not all letters will be answered.

COPYRIGHT 2010 MARGO HOWARD

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM


Comments

7 Comments | Post Comment
Excellent advice to the older parents. Your job is to surround yourself with good friends with children her age so she has a chance to make friends and see how friends interact. Then, help her by seeing how you can be a place where neighborhood kids and school mates can come.
Comment: #1
Posted by: BB
Sat Jan 9, 2010 9:08 AM
I think LW1's sister sounds as if she may have schizophrenia. The delusions and paranoia, as well as the wasting of her money, could fall within symptoms of it, which I know by experience with a family member who is schizophrenic. Margo is correct, however, that nothing can be done unless the family can prove she is a danger to herself or to others.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Bonnie
Sat Jan 9, 2010 5:02 PM
For #1, I would like to add that I was on Aderall as a teen for ADD (which I do have). The chemicals in the pills did not go well with the chemicals in my brain, and I suddenly became violent, depressed, and suicidal. Those are some of the scariest two years of my life. My doctor refused to take me off medication, so I just stopped taking them and stopped paying him. I was no longer depressed, suicidal, and my temper became more manageable. I found out a few years later the drug had caused four deaths in Canada and was being discontinued in certain places. So it may just be the drugs, if she was never like that before. I hope it's not too late to help her.

For #2, May I suggest adoption? I was adopted, and I love my parents twice as much as any normal daughter would! I think it's ridiculous these two at FIFTY decided to have a baby. I can't imagine struggling through college and checking to see if my parents are taking their meds and behaving at the manor. If people over 50 want to have kids, PLEASE adopt a child! So many children in America are without parents, and it's sad that people would rather get a surrogate in another country to have their baby than consider a child from their own country. I agree with Margot, there's no point in getting another child. But if you MUST, consider adoption!!
Comment: #3
Posted by: Brooke
Tue Jan 12, 2010 8:24 PM
Re: Bonnie

I agree. The first thing I thought was schizophrenia also.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Nonni
Sun Jan 17, 2010 11:43 AM
My son is an only child. He always had friends and never seemed to miss having a sibling. I asked him not too long ago if he regretted it and he said no, only that he didn't understand the sibling relationship but otherwise he liked everything being all about him and not having to share things "just because."

I have a sister whom I never wanted. It's better now that we are in our 40's but it took years to get close at all and even now we're not "all that close." The one thing my son doesn't get is that my sister and I can have a huge argument, and then turn around and do something extraordinarily nice for one another. Like when we had a huge fight and didn't speak for over 3 months and she found out I needed groceries and she went out and bought over $200.00 in food and brought it to me. Stuff like that.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Nonni
Sun Jan 17, 2010 11:50 AM
I hope the older couple have good people lined up to take over if something were to happen. Every parent should have that but it would give them peace of mind if they decide to have another child or not. They might even try fostering with an eye toward adoption. You can tell the foster system you'll only accept babies of certain age without certain birth conditions. It means the pool of children is limited but you might get that great sibling out of it anyway.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Mich
Tue Jan 19, 2010 11:11 AM
Although I don't think an intervention is ever "impossible"...if you wait 15 years it certainly doesn't help. This faily should be ashamed of themselves...ALL OF THEM (EX-HUSBAND INCLUDED). This should have been dealt with strongly about 14 years ago. To wait 15 years, then to think the solution is to write an advise columnist...freakin unconscionable!!!
Comment: #7
Posted by: RyanOnCue
Thu Jan 21, 2010 10:20 AM
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