« Reply #91 on: November 16, 2007, 02:56:09 PM »
I can understand your desire to share your experience at PV, it was probably horrible and there were a lot of things about my experience that were horrible-I was there for three consecutive years from when I was 13 to when I was 16. It gave me a pretty distorted upbringing, the field staff in my opinion are not qualified to do their jobs. It really isn't going to help me to dwell in that or feel sorry for myself. Life really does go on. Living in those conditions should make you a much stronger person. I just know that there is no way my children will ever experience anything like that.
I can understand that, but should it continue to happen to other kids, whose parents don't know what they're sending their children into?
Living in those conditions could result in a
dead person. Catherine Russe will never be the same physically after her stint in PV - she'll have life-long debilitating problems after contracting E. Coli in the program. She nearly died from it.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

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\"Allah does not love the public utterance of hurtful speech, unless it be by one to whom injustice has been done; and Allah is Hearing, Knowing\" - The Qur\'an
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A PV counselor\'s description of his job:
\"I\'m there to handle kids that are psychotic, suicidal, homicidal, or have commited felonies. Oh yeah, I am also there to take them down when they are rowdy so the nurse can give them the booty juice.\"