Interview on KSDK St. Louis

Interview on KSDK St. Louis
Finding Your Ideal Parenting Seminars

Boy's Use of Gardasil Is Approved

Saturday, December 26, 2009





The vaccine Gardasil won regulators' approval for use in males, setting the stage for a debate over whether boys should routinely receive an inoculation used to prevent cervical cancer in women. The Food and Drug Administration found Gardasil, which has been approved for use in females since 2006, to be safe and effective in protecting males from genital warts. (The Wall Street Journal, 10/17/2009)

For more information on sexual health for teens please go to Teen Pregnancy & Prevention Partnership of Missouri  http://www.teenpregnancy-stl.org/

Reality Check!

Monday, December 21, 2009


Reality Check!




It is Christmas time and everyone is struggling financially. Do the kids and your expectations match up? Are you struggling to make ends meet, but then indulging financially during the holiday season? It is time to have a reality check with yourself and your children. A reality check can be accomplished through a very simple act of holding a family meeting. Before your meeting, it is always important to gage your child’s understanding and development to be able to get your point across effectively. Here are some tips for your reality check meeting with your children and to make certain you match their developmental stages and ages.


If your child is in…


Grade School-Keeping the conversation short and sweet, as their attention span will not hold with a lengthy conversation. Focus your attention on the “list” that they are making and explain that even though they are making a list they might not get everything on the list. Teaching the kids to prioritize, listing their top three wants is a great life lesson. Also, engaging in a type of philanthropic cause to begin teaching empathy will begin to turn these little guys into empathetic adults.


Teens/Tweens-Focus the attention of the meeting on complete honesty with the family’s financial situation. Allowing the teen to be able to “step into their parents shoes” by taking a look at a realistic budget. Have a brainstorming meeting on how to be frugal with money and presents. Teens and Tweens need to begin learning how to budget and make choices with money, it will not be long when they may be out on their own at college attempting money management, practicing along the way will make their lives a lot easier later in life. In addition, engaging in a type of philanthropic cause to follow through with empathetic appreciation.


College/Adult Children-Again, focusing the attention of the meeting on complete honesty with the family’s financial situation. Make suggestions of new holiday traditions that they can help create such as: exchanging white elephant gifts, playing rob your neighbor, buying only for small children, having a cookie exchange, and volunteering as a family together. Lastly, engaging in a type of philanthropic cause to promote the true meaning of Christmas, it is better to give than receive; at this point in their lives they will understand this concept.


Providing a reality check for you and your family will be the best gift of all to give them this holiday season. Being open, honest, and engaging with your children will provide a sense of unity, stability, and grace!


Happy Holidays!

Bullying and the "Wolfpack"

Friday, December 4, 2009

Just Kids Being Kids? Links Between Bullying and Suicide We can't say, empirically, that bullying causes suicide.



I often have several stories of suicide running through my head. I read about suicide and suicide prevention daily and write about it at least once a week, so it's ever-present. I don't often get dragged down by these stories; I keep them in my head to stay focused and remind myself why I do the work of suicide prevention. But, lately, I have been replaying in my head the stories of young adolescents who have died by suicide, trying to understand what might have been done differently to prevent their deaths.


One story is that of Carl Joseph Walker-Hoover, whose mother was recently featured on the Oprah Winfrey Show. Carl was 11 years old when he ended his life in Springfield, Massachusetts, after he was bullied daily in school with anti-gay comments. Carl did not identify as gay, so being gay in and of itself was not what put him at risk for suicide. But, even though he did not identify as gay, he came to share the shame and isolation gay youth report. Others have said that they have tried to imagine the depths of hopelessness about his situation that Carl had felt that would have driven him to this decision.


We can't say, empirically, that bullying causes suicide. That fact is what has made me hesitant to write about bullying and suicide prevention. But, Carl's story is one that compels me to do something, to say something.


Another is the story of Ryan Patrick Halligan, who was bullied in person by schoolmates for years and online by the same youth for months before he ended his life at 13 years old.


Ryan's father John writes about bullying: "We had the conventional adult belief that this was just kids being kids, a part of growing up ... that encountering mean kids in middle school was just inevitable."


Mr. Halligan writes so eloquently about the cause of his son's death that I've chosen to include a piece of what he writes on his website here: "I want to be very clear. I don't blame Ryan's suicide on one single person or one single event. In the end, Ryan was suffering from depression. This is a form of mental illness that is brought on by biological and/or environmental factors. In Ryan's case, I feel it was the ‘pile on effect' of the environmental issues mentioned above that stemmed from his middle school life."


Just the same, Mr. Halligan writes, "we have no doubt that bullying and cyber bullying were significant environmental factors that triggered Ryan's depression."


How can these stories serve as a springboard for us, to move us forward as we try to tease out the environmental and psychological factors that influence some people to think about suicide?

taken from Psychology Today-May 11, 2009, Depression


Enroll your teen/tween boy in our "Wolfpack" and all boys group, one of the topics that will be covered will be "Bullying":

January 18th 2010- “Survival Of The Fittest”



Pack Leader-Rich Rodgers, Mechanic


•Practicing effective strategies for dealing with bullying situations