Read Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul on Tough Stuff Online
Authors: Jack Canfield
CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE TEENAGE SOUL ON TOUGH STUFF
CHICKEN SOUP
FOR THE
TEENAGE SOUL
ON TOUGH STUFF
Stories of Tough Times
and Lessons Learned
Jack Canfield
Mark Victor Hansen
Kimberly Kirberger
Backlist, LLC, a unit of
Chicken Soup for the Soul Publishing, LLC
Cos Cob, CT
www.chickensoup.com
www.teenagechickensoup.com
Contents
I Kiss Like a Horse
Rebecca Woolf
Have You Ever
Tiffany Blevins
I Am Loni
Loni Taylor as told to Cynthia Hamond
Again
Teal Henderson
Why I Have to Take U.S. History Again
Tal Vigderson
Good-Bye My Angel Dear
Tyler Phillips
Applying Myself
C. S. Dweck
The Last Song for Christy
Rebecca Woolf
The Final Act
Lisa Teller
A Sobering Experience
Sarah Jackson
as told to Jennifer Braunschweiger
Hitting Bottom
Jenny Hungerford as told to Susan K. Perry
That Warm Night
Sarah Woo
What She Doesn't Know
Kate Reder
The Man My Father Was
Kristine Flaherty
A Sobering Place
Monique Fields
What Siblings Know
Danielle Collier
How to Scare a Big Sister
Natalie Atkins
Sixty-Second Flashback
Tiani Crocker
Change
Carrie Hill as told to Cynthia Hamond
Table for Three
Isabel Philley as told to C. S. Dweck
A Most Precious Gift
Jessica Colman
Memories of My Mother
Amy Jo Johnson
as told to Linda Friedman
The Last Months
Traci Kornhauser
Our Song
Jennifer Dalrymple-Mozisek
It's Been a While
Catherine Starr
Reaching Mom
Analise Antone
I Never Knew
Rosanne Martorella
I Am
Krysteen Hernandez
Beyond Surviving: Suggestions for Survivors
Iris M. Bolton
Learning from My Past
Rachael Bennett
Another Statistic
Amanda Parmenter
An Unbreakable Bond
Sara Preston
Losing the Best
Garrett Drew
Turn It Upside Down
Jessie Williams
Sorrowful Lesson
James Kisner
Someone to Watch over Me
Eva Unga
A House Is Not a Home
Zan Gaudioso
Building Bridges
Charlie Simmons
Losing Myself
Jenny Deyo
Help Me
Hawon Lee
Nightmares
Kara MacDonald
The Birth of an Adult
Jonathan Krasnoff
Unstoppable
Nick Springer as told to Stephanie Booth
The Long Journey Home
Phillip Thuss
Born to Win
Jake Repp
Lumps
Christina Angeles
Go for the Gold
Michael Munds
The Walk That Changed Our Lives
Maggie McCarthy
What My Father Wore
Bret Anthony Johnston
The Graduation Speech
Cheryl Costello-Forshey
The Purse
Tal Vigderson
Friends to the End
Jenny Michaels as told to Cynthia Hamond
I'm Sorry . . .
Teal Henderson
A Different View
Zan Gaudioso
It's Just the Way We Are
Kristy Glassen
My Greatest Teacher
William Elliott
9. EATING DISORDERS & DEPRESSION
Starving for Control
Jamie-Lynn Sigler
Just One of Those Days
Jenny Sharaf
Suffering in Silence
Ruth Greenspan as told to C. S. Dweck
Cookie-Cutter Hands
Kelly Peters as told to Rebecca Woolf
Numb
Jessica Dubose
This Too Shall Pass
Kimberly Kirberger
Seize the Day
Teal Henderson
Some People Come
Lauren Anderson
My Guardian Angel
Meghan O'Brien
And Then I Tell My Story
Maria Piñedo
I Wonder as I Wander
Hilary Begleiter
The Death of a Friend
Cassius Weathersby III
Timeless Friendship
Andrea Wellman
Grandma's Words of Wisdom
Heather Deederly
Smiles in My Heart
Sara Tylutki
Let's Go Dancing in the Rain
Claire Hayenga
When Tomorrow Starts Without Me
David M. Romano
Wherever You Go
Kari Fiegen
Somewhere in the Middle
Liza Ortego
Losing Becky
Gwynne Garfinkle
Something I Couldn't See
Caroline Smith
My Grandma Told Stories
William Elliott
Where the Locks Click Open
Stephanie Hsu
Rolling Down Summer's Hills
C. S. Dweck
Dear Teens,
Six years ago we had the idea to write a
Chicken Soup for
the Teenage Soul
book for teenagers. As you know, it was very well received and millions of teens have found comfort and support in the stories that were written by their fellow teens. We received thousands of letters requesting that we compile more books for teens. These requests, combined with the deluge of stories that were being sent, gave us the needed motivation and resources to continue the series.
Every week we continue to receive hundreds of letters and stories from teenagers around the world via the Internet and through the mail. As we read the mountain of mail, we began to notice that the chapter on tough stuff was the most popular chapter in the books. After a while, we began to get requests for an entire book on tough stuff. Our response to these requests is the book you now hold in your hands.
For those of you who might be new to the
Chicken Soup
for the Teenage Soul
series, Tough Stuff has been a chapter in all of our previous books that included the more challenging issues and experiences of being a teenager, such as drugs and alcohol, rejection, loss of friendships and relationships, death, suicide, divorce, physical and emotional abuse, and eating disorders.
Although the content of these stories is often disturbing and sometimes even tragic, the potential for insight, learning and “growing up” is enormous. We believe this is the reason for the overwhelming response to these types of stories. For example, we have had stories in previous books that dealt with the death of a parent. This is one of every child's worst fears and one might question the benefit of including such stories. However, we have repeatedly heard comments such as these from our readers: “After reading that story, I immediately sat down and wrote my parents a letter apologizing for giving them such a hard time.” And, “Though my mom and I still have our little arguments, it is different now. I appreciate her so much more and I KNOW that everything she does is because she loves me. I didn't really understand that before reading that story.” We rarely print a story unless the person writing it has learned or realized something profound from their experience. Hopefully, this lesson gets passed on to you, the reader, and will spare you similar pain. At the very least, it will let you know that you are not alone in the world with your challenges.
One of our most important criteria for including a story is that it leaves the reader a better person for having read it. An example of this is the much-loved poem “Somebody Should Have Taught Him” from the first
Chicken Soup for
the Teenage Soul
book. In this poem a young girl is killed by a drunk driver on her way home from a party where she chose not to drink. It is an extremely emotional poem that still makes us cry when we read it. The response this simple but powerful poem has evoked from thousands of teenagers is a newfound commitment to never drink and drive. Many teens have written letters promising this to their parents; others have designed contracts that they have signed with witnesses, while in other cases some teens simply made a promise to themselves that they have written about to us. The most gratifying part of all of this is that years later we have received follow-up letters informing us that they have kept their solemn commitment.
Another subject we touch upon in our Tough Stuff chapter is eating disorders. There was a story in
Chicken
Soup for the Teenage Soul
about a girl and her difficult, but ultimately successful, recovery from anorexia. Several months after the book was released, Mark Victor Hansen was approached by two people in tears at a booksigning asking if they could have a minute of his time. They told him that their daughter had received the book as a graduation gift. She was about to leave for college and everyone was excited. When she spent the entire weekend before her departure alone in her room, they became upset. The parents thought their daughter should at least find some time to spend with them before she left.
Sunday night she came downstairs and asked if they could talk. She sat down with them and announced she would not be leaving the following day for college. She went on to say that she had an eating disorder and now, after reading
Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul
, she was able to find the courage to be honest with them about it. She said she felt weak and scared for her life. She asked her parents to take her to see a doctor first thing in the morning. They did and her fears were confirmed. She was on the brink of death and, had she not come forward when she did, she would have died. At the time they told Mark this story, she was still in the hospital.