Per Reporter: Lisa and Jackson has been living with Bonnie and Donald (maternal grandparents) since Jackson’s birth. Lisa has been using drugs on and off; it is unknown of what type of drugs Lisa use, but the drugs are being used with a needle. The drugs are not manufactured/sold. Lisa is not allowed to use drugs in Bonnie & Donald’s home. Lisa do not take Jackson away from Bonnie and Donald’s home; she’s aware that it’s not safe for Jackson to be around the drug use. Lisa has stolen things from Bonnie and Donald’s home, but has forgotten her behaviors. Lisa has threatened to take Jackson away from Bonnie and Donald, which has prevented Bonnie from reporting the allegations previously. Within the past 6-8 months things has gotten worse with
I believe everyone on this email thread was aware of my meeting today with Joe Baldwin, Guardian, of Kathy Rennich to discuss her recent return from inpatient rehabilitation at a local nursing facility and her expressed desire to move to the Hensgen Home. Basically, in February 2017, Kathy fell resulting in a fractured tail bone. She received inpatient rehabilitation at Care Springs for fourteen days and has returned home with PT services. Since her return home, Kathy has refused to participate in ADL’s (which isn’t a change in pattern as she refused prior to the nf stay) and is demanding that she have the opportunity to live at the Hensgen Home. Kathy’s reasoning behind wanting to move the Hengsen Home isn’t exactly clear to the team.
On 06/21/2017 I, Deputy Daniel Pruitt was dispatched to the Creek County Sheriff 's Office for a burglary complaint. I spoke to Roberta Houston who made the following statement. Roberta said that her adopted grandson Remington Barton had been at her home without permission. Roberta said she was in the process of filing a protective order against Remington.
Watts appears to be ID and/or MI but denied every using the local Mental Health facility. However, her son uses the Mental Health facility because of his alcohol and anger issues. Apparently, on 8/4/15 Mr. Franklin became outraged because he thought Ms. Watts was going to throw out his beer. He grabbed a beer and threw it at Ms. Watts hitting her in the torso area. This frightened Ms. Watts and she called Mr. Franklin 's Mental Health Caseworker.
When you get older, life may get tough. For Diane and her family, they take it one step at a time. Diane Allen is seventy six years old and has a hard time transporting around her daughter’s house. She suffers from dementia and has poor mobility. Dementia is a brain disease that causes long term memory loss.
Santana used the drugs in the home. The drugs are not being sold in the home. The drugs are not being manufactured in the home. It is unknown if the children have access to the drugs. Santana and her boyfriend (unknown) got into a Santana called the police.
Every person has their own definition of home. In the story “The Round Walls of Home,” Dianne Ackerman is saying her home is the earth. She uses the word “round” because the earth does not have walls like normal homes, but the walls are the outside of the earth, making it round in shape. When most people describe their home they would mention the color of the walls, what sorts of belongings, and how many rooms. But, Ackerman describes her home as a, “big, beautiful, blue, wet ball.”
The novel, The Glass Castle, shows how the Walls family lived without welfare. Both Rosemary and Rex refused to take charity or government aid despite the children and others pleading them to take it. Rosemary objected to conforming to what the society thought was best. Rex argued that his sporadic income was enough to keep the family afloat. However, the children begged their parents to accept other 's help to ease the financial burden on all of them.
They used to follow her everywhere and even waited outside her office. This continued, until one day the defendants grabbed and forced Sandra into a van against her will. They taped her mouth and tied her up to stop her from screaming and running away. They drove Sandra to an abandoned house some 300 miles away from California and restricted her in a house basement. Both Alex and Michale is to be found guilty of quite a few crimes, including ‘conspiracy’ to do a kidnapping; ‘false imprisonment’; battery, penal code 242; and ‘assault PC 240’.
In Miami, the bungalow arrived as an option for moderate cost housing that was in demand due to the extraordinary overnight growth of the city in the beginning of the 20th century. With the arrival of the railroad in 1896, new business and residents started to pour into the city which started to grow speedily, especially across the Miami River. The area known today as Little Havana was the new suburban neighborhood of the working class and the bungalow was a popular choice for single family homes in the area. According to “The Tropic Home” magazine article entitles
“Almost Home” a 90 minute DVD (on reserve in the Learning Recourse Center). View this documentary about changing culture in a nursing home setting. Submit answers to the questions below in the ELearning drop box by orientation day to the Extended Care facility. Questions: 1. The administrator of St. John’s talks about culture change.
A Separate Peace by John Knowles and Fun Home, a musical by Lisa Kron, both exhibit themes of identity. In A Separate Peace, the narrator, Gene Forrester, is looking 16 years back at his past when he attended the Devon School during World War II. In the story, Gene is dependent on his friend and roommate, Finny. The story starts during the summer of 1942, where Gene and Finny are attending the summer session at Devon. Knowles writes about Gene’s jealousy of Finny, as he manages to seem perfect.
Alison Bechdel’s “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic” is an enthralling memoir about a young girl’s peculiar childhood, which involved her family’s funeral business, infatuating trips, family turmoil, solitude, and her befuddling relationship with her masterful artificer of a father; in which similarities ranged from obsessive compulsive disorders and literature to sexuality. The most profound being homosexuality. Bechdel utilized duo-specific, speech bubbles, as well as, subject-to-subject paneling to illustrate the complex father-daughter relationship where Alison and Bruce Bechdel perpetually attempted to compensate for each other’s eccentric gender behaviors. Initially, both Bechdals yearned for different genders, imposing expected behaviors upon the other.
The market is saturated with memoirs written in prose. Alison Bechdel, however, puts a spin on the dysfunctional family memoir in her graphic novel Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic. By using the graphic novel narrative form, Bechdel tells the tale of her family tragedy through words and graphic images. Fun Home tells the story of young Alison’s life of dysfunction with a father who is a closeted gay man, a family that lives in isolation and her own struggle with anxiety and OCD. The chapter “The Canary-Colored Caravan of Death” focuses on her father’s death by suicide, and her own isolation and mental struggles.
Diagnostic Impressions Sharon is a 34 year old mother that is being forced by Department of Human Resources (DHR) to complete treatment to get custody of her two children. Sharon was married 10 years to her husband after he passed away from a car accident two years ago. Client reported that she started using opiates two months after her husband passed away. Sharon’s husband was her high school sweetheart and was the only reliable man in her life. Sharon married two years after graduating from high school and hasn’t had the opportunity to live by herself.
Lisa's mother was question regarding any history Mood Disorder, Bipolar Disorder, or ADHD in the family of origin. Lisa's mother reports that on her husband's side there is a history of mental illness and Bipolar Disorder. Lisa's mother reports that she has struggled with some depression