Fornits
Treatment Abuse, Behavior Modification, Thought Reform => Vision Quest => Topic started by: Anonymous on August 24, 2008, 07:07:30 PM
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I'm creating a list of kids that have died in wilderness programs since the treatment model emerged in the 1970s. From things that I have read on the Internet, there have been several deaths at Vision Quest. However, some of the details about Vision Quest are confusing. Could someone please answer the following questions for me:
• Was VisionQuest a single program over the year that the reported deaths occurred, or was it a collection of different programs under the same name?
• Was this (or were these) residential treatment centers, boarding schools, or were they 24-7 outdoor wilderness programs?
Any answers that you could provide would be very much appreciated. I can be contacted by e-mail at shawney@gmail.com.
1980
24-Nov Eric S. Schibley 17
24-Nov Bernard Reefer
24-Nov Robert Zimmerman
24-Nov Charles Lucas
24-Nov James Lamb
24-Nov Robert D. Erwin 15
24-Nov Lyle Foodroy
1982
11-Sep Tammy Edmiston
16-Sep Leon Anger
April Mario Cano 16
June Danny Lewis 16
1990
John Vincent Garrison 18
1994
16-Dec Carlos Ruiz 13
1995
28-Jun Dawnne Takeuchi 18
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It was a ship with teens in foreign unknown waters and they got caught by a storm. All hands lost.
The program was called Seaquest back in those days. Later it became OceanQuest but all the sea-based programs shut down some years ago, when the ships needed too much repear.
According to survivors those programs were rather good. There wasn't much time for LGAT's and hour long therapy when the ship has to get going. It is about learning how to work with other people or down. I think that if you are a kid with low self-confidence, then learning that other people can work with you can change that.
In Denmark we have two programs like this still functioning Fulton (http://http://fulton.dk/index.php?lang=en) and Ocean Life (http://http://www.secretprisonsforteens.dk/fornitswiki/index.php/Ocean_life_%28Denmark%29). While Ocean Side is somewhat controversial because they - according to the Spanish authorities - marooned a child, Fulton is rather open and if you want to get inside the program, you just call them and hire them for a group of people.
Many ordinary school-classes have been onboard this ship for shorter trips with the at-risk teens as crew. It shows that at-risk teens can be integrated with normal people. You can even entrust them your life. There hasn't been any incidents since they kicked the former director out some 20 years ago because he acknownledged to have hit a child.
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It was a ship with teens in foreign unknown waters and they got caught by a storm. All hands lost.
Wait, WHAT? When the fuck was this?
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It was a ship with teens in foreign unknown waters and they got caught by a storm. All hands lost.
Wait, WHAT? When the fuck was this?
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I'm creating a list of kids that have died in wilderness programs since the treatment model emerged in the 1970s. From things that I have read on the Internet, there have been several deaths at Vision Quest. However, some of the details about Vision Quest are confusing. Could someone please answer the following questions for me:
• Was VisionQuest a single program over the year that the reported deaths occurred, or was it a collection of different programs under the same name?
• Was this (or were these) residential treatment centers, boarding schools, or were they 24-7 outdoor wilderness programs?
Any answers that you could provide would be very much appreciated. I can be contacted by e-mail at http://www.vq.com/ (http://www.vq.com/)
And yeah, there are many "vision quest" type programs out there (separate and different from the aforementioned), and a few of them even have "vision quest" in their names. I suppose you could say it was a sub-species of wilderness program!