Saturday, April 13, 2013

Livengrin's Home in Bensalem
"I Don't Want to be an Enabler!"

Free Seminar helps families learn to help an addicted loved one, not enable them.

Small group

"I wish I knew how to help." When a family member has an addiction, you hear that a lot. So many loved ones set boundaries but struggle to follow through. There are alternatives to break the cycle.

Please join us this Saturday, April 13th, for our free "Education for Families: Changing Enabling Behavior" seminar. 

This informal session will offer information and reassurance on how to address addictive behavior with family members and loved ones. Families, educators and healthcare professionals can all benefit.

Bring your questions and household issues to be addressed by experienced family counselors. 

View and print the event fact sheet.

The event takes place from 2 to 3:30 in Shanahan Hall on Livengrin's main Bensalem campus. Seating is limited! To register for the event, contact Dana Cohen at dcohen@livengrin.org or by calling 215-638-5200, ext 162.

We look forward to seeing you there!  

To learn more about this and other upcoming Livengrin events, please visit our calendar page.






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During its 46 years of service, more than 120,000 people have come to Livengrin to learn how to be healthy, sober and a part of their families, work and communities again.  You can play a role in a person's success story - make a contribution, volunteer, and tell someone about the help and hope to be found at Livengrin.  There's information, guidance and much more to learn 
throughout our website

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Celebrate National Prevention Week

Celebrate National Prevention Week

Celebrities and Civil Rights Leaders Ask Obama to Change Drug Laws

More than 100 entertainers, civil rights leaders and other notable citizens have signed a letter to President Obama, asking him to change the nation’s drug laws. The group is urging him to replace jail sentences with intervention and rehabilitation for non-violent drug offenders, the Associated Press reports.
They asked the president to form a panel to deal with clemency requests, and to support a measure to let judges waive mandatory minimum sentences.
“The greatest victims of the prison industrial complex are our nation’s children,” the letter states. “Hundreds of thousands of children have lost a parent to long prison sentences for non-violent drug offenses, leaving these children to fend for themselves. Many of these children end up in the criminal justice system, which comes as no surprise as studies have shown the link between incarceration and broken families, juvenile delinquency, violence and poverty.”
Celebrities who signed the letter include Scarlett Johansson, Kim Kardashian, Will Smith, Jennifer Hudson, Nicki Minaj and Susan Sarandon. The letter was also signed by civil rights leaders and advocates such as Harry Belafonte, Julian Bond, Dr. Benjamin Chavis and Rev. Jesse Jackson. Hip-hop magnate Russell Simmons helped assemble the group, the AP notes. Some religious leaders, politicians, music industry executives, academics, business leaders and athletes also added their names.