Inspire

Inspire Inspire Mentoring Program Sometime in 2013 a mentoring program will begin and we would like everyone to contribute in any way they can.

Anyone with any interesting trades, for example musical instruments, knitting, cooking, or even drawing, are welcome and when Inspire achieves a sponsor then these people will receive payment. High schoolers, grades 9-12, are encouraged to join and take on a mentee in which they will come to Inspire every Tuesday and Thursday after school to 5:00. Mentees (grades 3-8) can sign up and be partnered

with a mentor from the high school and join in any activities available. Unfortunately, before mentees can start their fun with their mentor every day they have to have their homework completed first because we believe school should be their number one priority. Transportation is simple; there are busses that take kids from school to Inspire. To join there will be forms at S.O.C.K. (the armory across the street from Safeway where Inspire will be held). Any questions or comments please call (503)-515-7030 between times 3:15 to 8:00 or text at any time.

01/13/2015

The Truth About Drug Users and Addictions!
and why it's still a problem!

"Most drug users are intelligent resourceful people with good life skills, supportive networks and loving families. These assets enable them to manage the risks associated with their drug use, avoiding the most dangerous drugs and managing their frequency and scale of use to reduce harm and maximise pleasure. Crucially they will have access to support from family and friends should they begin to develop problems, and a realistic prospect of a job, a house and a stake in society to focus and sustain their motivation to get back on track.

In contrast the most vulnerable individuals in our poorest communities lack life skills and have networks that entrench their problems rather than offering solutions. Their decision making will tend to prioritise immediate benefit rather than long-term consequences. The multiplicity of overlapping challenges they face gives them little incentive to avoid high risk behaviours.

Together these factors make it more likely that, instead of carefully calibrating their drug use to minimise risk, they will be prepared to use the most dangerous drugs in the most dangerous ways. And once addicted, motivation to recover and the likelihood of success is weakened by an absence of family support, poor prospects of employment, insecure housing and social isolation.

In short what determines whether or not drug use escalates into addiction, and the prognosis once it has, is less to do with the power of the drug and more to do with the social, personal and economic circumstances of the user.

Heads in the sand

Unfortunately the strong relationship between social distress and addiction is ignored by politicians and media commentators in favour of an assumption that addiction is a random risk driven by the power of the drug.

It does happen. But the atypical experience of the relatively small number of drug users from stable backgrounds who stumble into addiction and can legitimately attribute the chaos of their subsequent lives to this one event drowns out the experience of the overwhelming majority of addicts for whom social isolation, economic exclusion, criminality and fragile mental health preceded their drug use rather than being caused by it.

Viewing addiction through the distorting lens of the minority causes policy makers to misunderstand the flow of causality and pushes them towards interventions focused on changing individual drug-using behaviour and away from addressing the structural inequality in which the vulnerabilities to addiction can flourish.

Until we re-frame our understanding of drug addiction as more often the consequence of social evils than their root cause, then we are doomed to misdirect our energy and resources towards blaming the outcasts and the vulnerable for their plight rather than recasting our economic and social structures to give them access to the sources of resilience that protect the rest of us."

08/18/2014

did you know in just 2009 1 in every 3 children in America lived without their biological dad? did you know children who don't live with their biological dad on average are 2 to 3 times more likely to be poor, use drugs, and to experience educational, health, emotional, and behavioral problems. Did you know that you can make a difference?

statistics from fatherhood.org/media/fatherhood-statistics

02/08/2013

waiting for SOCK to be remodeled so we have a building to use but its taking 2x the time they said it would

09/08/2012
09/07/2012

We need mentors!!!!!

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Shelton, WA
98584

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