I wish I had moved the wilderness chunk of this to a thread of its own, since it really has very little to do with Carlbrook, but oh well.
Some very good points were raised, and in the usual manner on Fornits (or anywhere else) we didn't really resolve anything, but the exchange of ideas, opinions and info is valuable.
Looking back on it, it's kind of weird to read what I wrote earlier today in what I would call my "ST persona" vs. some of the anon stuff I have posted here over the last 6 months. Even more weird when I recall some of the things I have written to other parents along the lines of "stay away from this industry." In many ways I wish I had never gotten involved and wish my kid had never gotten involved. I wish I hadn't felt compelled to make a radical choice for him. I wish I didn't feel compelled to help other parents get educated and avoid making huge mistakes. But in spite of my support of the whole concept of community-based options, I wish to hell that there truly were some more of those that were viable. We tried everything, and we live in a big city where we have more options than many people. Nothing worked. Things just seemed to go from bad to worse. One local 'legitimate therapeutic situation' even did a lot more harm than good. Maybe it wasn't the therapy or the therapists that were "bad" -- maybe he just wasn't ready to be helped or to help himself at that time.
After learning all I have learned about the horrors of this industry -- after reading Help At Any Cost, and 63days.com and watching the French TBS documentary, and the Montana PBS thing, all I can say is that my son and my family is fucking lucky. He is happy, healthy and safe, and maybe that's just a coincidence.
I am, however, thankful that some degree of regulation has hit this industry -- although much more needs to be done. I am grateful that he got enough calories -- he neither lost nor gained more than a couple pounds in those 7 weeks. I am grateful that he was not over-exerted -- he thought the hiking was easy and no big deal. I am grateful that he got the kinds of things out of it emotionally, psychologically, that I would hope to get myself if I did a similar program myself. Was he abused? Some of you will say "yes" no matter what. He doesn't think so, and I don' think so, and I am a bigger critic of all of this than he is, but we all have to live with it and we have to take from it what we can.
The bottom line is all is good now. The money might have been wasted, or might not.