Pubdate: Sun, 12 Feb 2006
Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB)
Copyright: 2006 The Edmonton Journal
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134
Author: Kerry Williamson, CanWest News Service
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

HELPING TEENS TAME ADDICTIONS IN THE WILD

GHOST WILDERNESS -- An old forestry hut, long abandoned, is perched 
at the top of Black Rock Mountain.

Unused since the 1950s, the hut has seen better days. It was 
reshingled once, a decade ago, but nobody has stayed up there for 
much longer than a few hours.

It continues to stand, though, holding up against howling winds that 
blow down the eastern slopes, carving their way past the bluffs that 
stand like sentries over the foothills.

And inside, scratched out with a knife on the old wooden walls that 
seem ready to fall with every strong gust, are hundreds, perhaps 
thousands, of names.

Each one is etched in its own unique way, dug out, written in fading 
marker, scribbled in barely legible ink.

Chris's name is there now. So is Sarah's. Right now, this hut, this 
mountain, means more to them than pretty much anything else.

For Chris and Sarah -- three weeks ago for one; three months ago for 
the other -- getting wasted on drugs was the only high they had.

They are two of eight teenagers living at the Enviros Base Camp, a 
camp deep in the Ghost Wilderness bush northwest of Cochrane that 
helps teens between 12 and 17 kick serious drug addictions. The 
program combines wilderness activities with schooling, therapy and treatment.

The unique camp, part of the Alberta Drug Strategy, is run by the 
Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission and the Enviros Wilderness 
School Association. An urban youth residential program exists at 
Crowsnest House in Edmonton.

Chris and Sarah were caught in a web of serious addictions that tore 
their lives apart and left them balancing on a precipice.

Not unlike the precipice where Chris stood on that blue sky day a few 
weeks ago.

"It's pretty crazy up there. The view was just wicked, man. You could 
see everything, everything," he says.

He'd never climbed a mountain before.

"You could see this place here, you could see the lake that we skate 
on, you could see Calgary. I'd never seen anything like that, ever.

"And there were thousands of names scratched in the hut. I carved my 
name in the hut. We had to do that."

Black Rock looms large above the camp, casting a shadow each day when 
the sun falls behind the Rockies.

It's hard to ignore. And it is easy to use it as a clear but clumsy 
metaphor for this place. A mountain that needs to be climbed, a 
challenge that needs to be overcome.

It is six hours from the bottom, to the forestry shack at the top, 
and back down to the bottom again. It is not treacherous, but it is a 
good hike all the same.

You hear a lot about Black Rock here.

"I never thought I would be in a place like this," says Chris. "I'd 
never climbed a mountain before. I'd never even started a fire before I came.

"I've learned a lot."

The first thing you notice is how young the youth are.

Shooting hoops on a makeshift, snow-covered court. Or standing around 
the sink, rinsing dishes, they look like teens you'd see waiting for 
a bus outside school.

When a reporter's tape recorder is inadvertently left alone and 
recording, the teens open up, making up raps, singing some old Tupac 
Shakur song, begging staff members for suckers they know are hidden 
in a box in the kitchen. They sound like your brother, your daughter, 
your grandchild.

They tell their stories with their heads down, barely looking you in 
the eye. Their pain is clear as they talk of drugs, of addictions 
that have put them on the streets, that have stolen their childhoods.

Sarah is your typical teenage girl. A little shy, she jokes with 
strangers who enter the camp and laughs when she turns down an offer 
of seconds at lunch.

So it's shocking when she speaks of why she is here.

"I got into trouble with meth and everything a couple of years ago," 
says Sarah, whose name, along with all of her campmates, has been 
changed. "I've done lots of these programs."

Her story is similar to that of other youths who choose to come to 
Base Camp, a three-month program offered to kids with serious drug 
addictions that has been up and running for six months.

Sarah grew up north of Edmonton, got in with the wrong crowd, and 
started doing drugs before her 15th birthday. But it was the crystal 
meth that took over her life. She struggled with school and saw her 
relationship with her family deteriorate.

She has spent the past two years trying to kick her habit. A social 
worker referred her to Base Camp, and she is just one week shy of 
leaving, her 12 weeks almost up. She hasn't done drugs in three months.

She remembers when she first got here. The youths go through the same 
ritual -- they arrive with their family, parents, uncles and aunts, 
close friends, older brothers, stopping in a nearby meadow used for 
grazing horses during the winter.

 From there, they walk together into camp, passing wooden signs 
nailed to trees representing the four stages they will go through. 
Courage, for deciding to change. Trust, for having faith in their 
abilities. Commitment, for their desire to stay. And Wisdom, for 
making the change a reality.

During their stay in camp, the teens are given wooden beads that 
represent each stage, as they move forward with their treatment. 
Sarah is close to having all four.

Now, she isn't sure she wants to leave. "When you are out here, you 
are out here. But it's a different story when you get back home. When 
you are back in the real world ... it gets a lot harder."

But three months ago, she was sure she would not stay.

"I thought it was stupid and I was going to leave the next day," she 
says, slumped on a couch inside the camp's main cabin.

"I almost left, because they do some really weird stuff here. They 
were passing this feather around and doing all this weird stuff that 
I had never seen before.

"But I am glad I stayed. It's good out here. You just stay here and 
deal with your problems and you can't just run away from them.

"I think, hopefully, this will be the last time I am in treatment."

She has cut ties to her dark past. She has become closer to her 
mother. She has a job lined up, in the mountains, once she leaves. 
And she has already said goodbye to friends she knows she can't see anymore.

"I've had to drop a lot of close people, because you know they won't 
change and you just can't be around them," she says. "You have to 
change everything.

"I had to tell some people I couldn't see them, and it felt good, 
because I never thought I could do something like that.

"This place, it gives you a chance to be a kid again, to live a normal life."

Mark Miyamoto, AADAC's director of youth services, says the camp 
utilizes experiences gained from other day programs, incorporating 
them in a residential, wilderness setting.

"It's not necessarily the outdoor skills they learn that are 
important, it's the perseverance, the self-esteem, they gain from 
learning those things," said Miyamoto. "It replicates a lot of things 
that happen in their lives."

Another kid, Matt, has a story similar to Sarah's. He, too, is here 
because of a court order.

"I am surprised that I can go a day without doing drugs. I didn't 
know that was possible," he says. "When you are growing up, doing 
drugs all day long, that's what you become used to, that's what you know.

"And then you come out here, and it all changes. In the back of your 
mind, nobody really wants to be here. But we know it is helping."

It is a transformation that is common, but one that is not expected. 
The teens choose to come here, and have already decided to kick their 
habits, but they are still a long way from being normal teenagers.

Many have been living on the streets for months, even years. Many 
have few or no ties to their immediate family, those strings cut when 
addictions took hold.

When the teens arrive, they are still the tough youngsters from the 
streets, or the ones that skip school to smoke pot or crack. But a 
few weeks in the bush often prompts a change.

"What I see, over a period of time, every time I come out here, is 
some sort of change in the kid," says Doug Darwish, executive 
director of Enviros. "When I first see them, I see them with their 
heads down. A month later, I see them carrying their body 
differently. They are sitting up, they are willing to look me in the 
eye, they are willing to engage in conversation.

"You see a whole physical change that says 'I'm proud of who I am. 
I'm comfortable with it now, I can stand tall.' "

Carolyn Godfrey has been working with youths like these for 16 years. 
She, too, watches them change. "I see their confidence increase," she 
says. "I see that ability to make a decision. I see them recognizing 
the value of themselves and their families. I see respect for 
themselves and for others.

"Some of the kids, success is coming out here and staying for one 
week. To me, when I think of success, I think of positive change. 
It's one day more without drugs. It's one more conversation with 
families that is healthy and positive.

"It's small steps. But, in their perspectives, they are huge steps."

The idea is not new. Experiential learning is perhaps the oldest form 
of education -- the old 'teach a man to fish' theory -- but it is one 
that has often battled for credibility.

Godfrey, the camp's manager of specialized resources, says the 
wilderness can be just as effective as a classroom or an urban 
treatment program. A difficult cross-country ski trip can often teach 
these youths more about themselves than a talk with a counsellor.

"It is a really quick tool to help people learn about the strengths 
they have. The cause and effect is very quick and immediate," says 
Godfrey. "If it is raining, and if you don't put on a coat, you get 
wet. It's raining and you do put on a coat, you stay dry. It's that 
kind of immediacy.

"And it's about transferring those skills that they learn in the 
outdoors, that they can persevere through a tough day of skiing or a 
difficult hike.

"Things like, 'When it was really tough and you guys dug in and you 
got there, when things are tough at home or at school, how do you use 
those same skills to get you through that experience?'

"The technical experiences speak for themselves. What our team does 
here is transfer that to real life."

The first kids came through here close to six months ago.

The camp, a scattering of cabins and outhouses amongst stands of 
birch and spruce and nestled beside a small lake, has been here for 
close to two decades, beginning life as a work camp for juvenile offenders.

Its latest incarnation came last August, when AADAC teamed up with 
the Enviros company, which runs the camp and other programs like it 
across the province, to make it a home for youths with serious 
addiction problems.

It is funded through a $4.2-million injection of provincial cash, 
funding for 24 youth detox and residential treatment beds in Alberta. 
Calgary got 12 of the beds, eight of which were allocated for the 
camp program. Edmonton got the other 12 for programs in an urban 
setting at Crowsnest House.

Dave Rodney, chairman of the alcohol and drug abuse commission and 
MLA for Calgary-Lougheed, says that money should continue in 
perpetuity, meaning the camp is here to stay for now.

The kids come here voluntarily, referred to Base Camp through the 
commission's various treatment programs. They do not have to stay, 
either. This place is no prison.

"Years ago, we found that when a 17-year-old young man was having 
problems with drugs, we could find a spot for that young man in the 
adult detox and residential program," says Rodney, who visited the 
camp last month and was almost reduced to tears talking to the kids.

"But we started to see more young men, and younger and younger males, 
and we also started to see more females, and younger and younger 
females. We decided that we needed a facility specifically for youth.

"For kids that exhibit higher tendencies towards risk, who ... are 
much more suited to get away from that urban environment, let's get 
them out of town and make sure they are ready to come back when they 
come back."

For three months, the kids live in the bush, apart from the odd home 
visit toward the end of their stay.

Twenty-six kids have been through the program. Those that graduate 
are moved back into more traditional programs once their 12 weeks are 
up, or left to go back home, hopefully to stay clean. But the camp is 
no magic wand -- it is up to the kids themselves to change.

Some of the first group are, no doubt, still mired in addiction. But 
others are likely now cut off from the lifestyle that brought them 
here in the first place.

They attend daily classes, being taught Alberta Education curriculum, 
just as they would at school. They are offered numerous types of 
therapy and treatment sessions, from decision-making to risk-taking 
to relapse prevention to information on drugs and alcohol.

Most days, they gather at a ceremonial fire pit near the lake, 
sitting on wooden benches and talking together of their experiences, 
sharing their stories. It's here they often write in their journals, too.

There is a ropes course farther up the hill, designed to help 
confidence, to bring the group together.

And they are offered a full-time wilderness experience, one most have 
never had. They skate on the frozen lake, hike the trails that pock 
the Ghost Wilderness area, rock climb nearby bluffs, cross-country 
ski and canoe in the summer.

They are responsible for keeping their bunkhouses -- one for girls, 
one for boys -- warm, by chopping wood and keeping their fires going at night.

"It's about them," says Darwish. "I mean, we facilitate it. But it's 
them finding their strength along the way, realizing they have value."

Joost de Bruijn's classroom is modestly decorated, a small room near 
the back of one of the cabins nestled in the bush.

But every day, he teaches these kids the same as he would teach them 
in Calgary, or in Edmonton. The youths are expected to continue their 
schooling while they are here.

Trouble is, many of them haven't been in school for months, even years.

"Some students come here on an academic track already, they may even 
come with correspondence materials," says de Bruijn. "But generally, 
they will come from an outreach school, or not from any kind of school.

"Some of the kids that come here, they won't have been at school for 
two years, so they are way behind. But the academic side, with many 
of them, is secondary or tertiary to the other issues in their lives. 
The social issues, the addiction issues."

When he's not teaching, he's a friend to the kids. On this afternoon, 
he joins them at the basketball hoop hanging loosely over an icy concrete pad.

"The kids here are great, they all have so much to offer," says de 
Bruijn. "They all have gifts, and they all have the ability to change."

Camp counsellors live with the kids, working four days on, four days 
off. They supervise the activities, make sure the work is done. But, 
most important, they are there to talk to, and to listen.

They admit the youth who come to Base Camp are already survivors, of 
the streets, of their own addictions. But living here, in the bush, 
requires a different kind of survival.

"Some of these kids have never left the city, never left their own 
environment," says Darwish. "So it's one thing to say, 'I'm going out 
there,' but it's another to actually move in and live here.

"The survival skills these kids have, actually become an impediment to growth."

Rodney knows a little about survival. The rookie MLA is perhaps 
better known for climbing Mount Everest twice, the only Canadian to do so.

"It's one thing to survive. It's another to thrive," he says. "I have 
heard stories of people who have embarked upon hobbies, whether it 
was whitewater rafting, climbing, camping, or even something like 
birdwatching, whose hobbies actually saved their lives in terms of 
changing that addiction to a much more healthy pastime.

"You can achieve certain benefits in the outdoors that are just 
unattainable in an urban environment."

Mike has been on the streets for most of his teenage years. He's a 
tough-looking, street-hardened kid, wearing the bling -- a thick 
silver chain, a flashy watch -- bought with money from dealing drugs.

He has been in and out of court. He misses his girlfriend, also 
fighting a serious addiction, and wants to be transferred out of Base 
Camp, to another residential program that will allow them to see each other.

He is here because of a court order forcing him to enter some sort of 
treatment program. He chose Base Camp because he enjoys the outdoors, 
and has a love of rock climbing.

While he wants out, he knows the program has helped him.

"You learn life skills, survival and that kind of stuff," he says, 
his head shadowed by the brim of a cap. "You are surviving away from 
the streets. When I grew up, I was always off and on the streets for 
like, three years, selling drugs and what not.

"And now I'm not, and it's all about trying to keep away from that stuff."

Mike has tried other programs before.

But like many kids with addictions, day programs weren't the answer.

He has sat through day after day of therapy and treatment sessions, 
only to go home and smoke up two or three hours later.

"Here, it's not so much that they are teaching, it's that we are 
learning it on our own through different experiences. Different 
things happen every day out here, and you have to find ways to cope 
with it," says Mike.

And by being here, he has discovered a different kind of high.

"You learn how you can get highs off other things than drugs. When 
you are way up high, rock climbing and stuff, it's a different experience.

"You realize you don't have to smoke something just to feel 
something. You can climb real high up and just look down.

"I used to be afraid of heights. Then I started climbing and I would 
get real high up somewhere and look down and just go 'Wow!'

"You just get that adrenaline pumping. It's better than drugs, man."

Chris spent Christmas Day in house arrest. He, too, has spent the 
past few years on the streets. He, too, has been through program 
after program, each one failing to curb his drug addiction. He's lost 
touch with his immediate family, but is hopeful Base Camp can help.

"I signed up because of the need to turn my life around," he says. 
"I'm just always in and out of jail, living on the streets. This 
isn't what I want, not at all.

"The hardest part for me is being here. I miss my independence, I 
miss drugs. But you learn a lot out here.

"I'm just surprised that there are two ways to live life. I come from 
a lot different than this."

Chris thinks he will last the three months. A city kid, he's already 
done things he'd never thought possible, like climbing Black Rock, or 
going cross-country skiing, or even finishing a simple hike.

He likes to look up at the mountain he climbed two weeks ago. From 
the meadow near the camp, you can see the forestry hut, the one which 
now has Chris's name scratched into it.

He laughs when he thinks of what his friends would think about his 
conquering a mountain. He doubts they would understand.

But he knows what that day meant for him. Stepping out of his comfort 
zone, hiking a trail he'd never seen before, immersing himself in a 
place that must have seemed like another planet to a kid from the 
city, a kid from the streets.

He also knows camp won't save him. "This is just a stepping stone for 
me. This ain't where it ends for me. There's no way that three months 
is enough.

"You can't just say 'I'm done with drugs.' It just doesn't work like that.

"It's going to be a life-long struggle."
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman