Page 27 - Layout 1
P. 27
NONPROFIT
ACE vs. Resiliency: So what does this process look Her greatest desire is to bring her kids up in
While a high ACE score can mean greater like in the life of a real woman a stable, loving environment. At Magdalena
and her children? House, she says, she is “learning to be a bet-
likelihood for many risk factors, this is not ter mom, to guide them.”
always the case. ACE scores don’t measure (The following names have been omitted
the positive experiences in childhood that or changed to protect the family’s identity.) By Christine’s count, she would score a 7
can help build resilience and protect a child on the ACE test, and her children’s young
from the effects of trauma. Research sug- Christine was 7 years old when she first lives also would indicate a high ACE score (4
gests that just one caring, safe relationship realized her mother was addicted to drugs; or more). However, both Christine and her
early in life gives any child a much better she also was 7 the first time she was abused. children are changing things for the better.
chance at growing up healthy. Having a By age 13, Christine began using drugs, fre-
grandparent who loves them, a teacher who quently alongside her mother. By eighth At Magdalena House, Christine’s girls are
believes in them, a trusted friend to confide grade, she stopped going to school and taking part in Kids Connection Too, a cur-
in can mitigate the effects of childhood began taking care of her 9-month-old riculum-based support group created for
trauma. brother, and while her mother told her that kids in shelters as a direct response to the
she was out working various part-time jobs, ACE studies. Magdalena House has four
Magdalena House provides an Christine knew, even at her young age, that trained volunteers to take the children
environment designed to foster her mother was working as a prostitute. Al- through this curriculum, which builds pro-
resiliency. though she wanted to finish high school, to tective factors to mitigate the high-trauma
become someone different from her mother, situations that these children have experi-
Positive relationships are at the heart of Christine ultimately dropped out of school enced. The goal is to foster positive beliefs
the success of women and children who live her senior year. about oneself and a community of healthy
at Magdalena House, a transitional shelter relationships.
near the South Texas Medical Center. Mag- At 18, Christine began working as a
dalena House serves mothers and their chil- dancer at a strip club and became addicted Christine, as well as the other mothers at
dren who have fled dangerous and abusive to drugs. She danced at the club until she Magdalena House, have one-on-one parent-
lives by providing “Home. Help. Hope.” to became pregnant with her older daughter, ing coaches through the Methodist Health-
alleviate the effects of high ACE scores. and she and her mother continued to use care Ministries’ “Parents as Teachers”
drugs together. By age 24, Christine’s life program. And as a group, the mothers at
Home: was being wrecked by her addiction and Magdalena House take Systematic Training
At Magdalena House, a mother and her also by an abusive relationship with a man for Effective Parenting (STEP), an eight-
who would later go to jail for his violent be- week course that helps parents at risk for
children live in a beautiful, safe and nurtur- havior toward her while she was pregnant parenting problems learn effective parent-
ing home while they put their lives back to- with her second child. Ultimately, Chris- child interactions. After all, life stories like
gether. tine’s two children were removed from her Christine’s, one in which love, security and
care. This event, however, proved to be a stability were rare, are unfortunately com-
Help: turning point in Christine’s life. Christine mon at Magdalena House. Positive relation-
An individual program of supportive had always promised herself that she’d be a ships, both with the other moms in the
different kind of mother: “It took losing my house, staff, volunteers and parenting
services is created for each mother and kids for me to say ‘no more’ to drugs and coaches, are producing growth and strength
child, focused on educational and voca- the lifestyle I was living.” for these families.
tional training, life enrichment classes, ac-
countability, volunteering in the Three months later she was reunited with Christine is determined that her daugh-
community, spiritual formation, and out- her children, and she has stayed sober since. ters’ lives will be different from hers. Mag-
sourcing to other agencies to meet the full dalena House is her partner is this quest.
gamut of a family’s needs. Families may live
at the Magdalena House as long as they re- Demand for Magdalena House’s services
main working toward completion of their is high. Having recently purchased their 5-
educational goals. acre property, staff and board members are
working with KFW Engineering to design
Hope: and build a gated neighborhood with seven
A process that works toward empower- homes so eventually 28 families may be
served at any one time.
ment, self-awareness and achievement of
personal goals. Magdalena House strives to A benefit for Magdalena House
create a space that cultivates authentic rela- is planned for Oct. 24 at the JW
tionships and nurturing community where Marriott Hill Country Resort.
families move beyond their past to a future For more information, visit
full of hope and new possibilities. www.maghouse.org.
visit us at www.bcms.org 27