Between Two Pages
Children of Substance
by
Book Details
About the Book
A collection of wounded parents, whose children have died from a drug overdose or suicide related to substance abuse, came together on the website GriefNet.org. Each one was damaged by misplaced blame and guilt because they couldn’t rescue their children. So deeply filled with sorrow they were unable to find a life after death. They have become a family-in-grief, crying together and comforting one another.
The public must be educated to the reality of the War on Drugs. There are people who still believe in the ‘junkie’ stereotype. Many presume, that, these children were weak willed and deserved what was coming to them. Some people are judgmental, uneducated, mean spirited, or have blinders on.
Drugs created a helplessness, in these children, that is hard for outsiders to understand. Kicking the drug habit is incalculably difficult! Also powerless are the secondary victims, those who are left behind to cope with the losses this dreadful disease has caused.
Each child that died left behind a parent whose life is now changed forever. They cannot erase the horror of that moment when they first heard that their child had died. The nightmares and the visions of their children dying continue to haunt them.
About the Author
Susan Hubenthal co-authored Between Two Pages: Children of Substance through a curtain of tears, yet it has been a healing and rewarding experience. Susan and the GriefNet parents have a two-fold plea: first, to find an end to the "War On Drugs," secondly, to provide an understanding of addicted children and their families. They want to share with you, the reader, their experiences, their feelings and fears to help you to understand how much these children were loved. They speak honestly about their sorrow in hopes that no other mother, father, sibling, or child has to endure this journey through grief alone. They wish to reach the hearts of those who judge their children and to gently lead them down a path of understanding, lighting the way with the reality that drug abuse and drug accidents can strike any family.