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Substance Abuse
How to respond to friends' grief
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<blockquote data-quote="ksm" data-source="post: 738988" data-attributes="member: 12511"><p>If you have some good memories of him, tell them. Maybe he waved and smiled when you saw him outside. Or he made some kind gesture. </p><p></p><p>One of our girls friends passed yesterday, 20 years old, he was in to drugs. But he was shot, I don't know if it was self inflicted or not. But, I looked back on the only FB message I sent him over a year ago, and saw how caring and concerned he was about my daughter when she ran off.</p><p></p><p>I texted him, because her phone showed her at his house. But I found out he had already moved out, and he told me not to let her go to that house any more. That there were dangerous people there. To keep her home, keep her safe. Those words are what his family should remember him by. Not the last tragic day of his life. Ksm</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ksm, post: 738988, member: 12511"] If you have some good memories of him, tell them. Maybe he waved and smiled when you saw him outside. Or he made some kind gesture. One of our girls friends passed yesterday, 20 years old, he was in to drugs. But he was shot, I don't know if it was self inflicted or not. But, I looked back on the only FB message I sent him over a year ago, and saw how caring and concerned he was about my daughter when she ran off. I texted him, because her phone showed her at his house. But I found out he had already moved out, and he told me not to let her go to that house any more. That there were dangerous people there. To keep her home, keep her safe. Those words are what his family should remember him by. Not the last tragic day of his life. Ksm [/QUOTE]
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How to respond to friends' grief
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