Help for troubled teens, from one who's been there
Lisa Fatu, teen outreach coordinator with Social Advocates for Youth.Here she is in the Sponge Bob room at the Dr. James E. Coffee House Teen Shelter in Santa Rosa, which offers meals and a place to stay for teens.
JOHN BURGESS / THE PRESS DEMOCRATPublished: Sunday, July 4, 2010 at 4:49 p.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, July 4, 2010 at 4:49 p.m.
Wise, always available, tough yet loving,
“I'm used to the 3 o'clock
“They're thrown away,” Fatu said at her own home-away-from-home, the James E. Coffee House teen shelter in Santa Rosa run by Social Advocates for Youth.
“We had a kid just left on the doorstep,” she said. She pondered a moment and came up with three cases of teen abandonment in just the past four months or so. “That's a lot of cases,” she said.
The Coffee House had a different name when Fatu took shelter there as a drugged-up and combative kid of 15.
Many of the teens who show up and often
“I don't find anything too shocking anymore,” Fatu said. Though no longer shocked
Fatu regularly witnesses success stories.
Often they'll return to hug Fatu, thank her and tell her their good news: They've finished high school, or maybe college. They're working a good job or getting married, or they're about to have a child.
“That's my reward,” Fatu said.
On the other hand, she can anticipate that about once a year, a teen she's come to love nearly as a daughter or son will die of street violence or be sent to prison, or raped. She grieves or rages like any mother would, and she keeps on.
When she leaves the Coffee House after a long and probably emotional day, Fatu switches roles. She and her husband, David McCloud, have two children, Julian, 7, and Malia, 8, and Fatu is more a mother than an aunt to her 18-year-old nephew, Alfonso.
Through most of her own teens years, Fatu was so angry and out of control she couldn't have imagined having a family of her own, much less a job as a positive force in the lives of other young people.
“I liked drugs,” she said with characteristic candor. She said experienced abuse as a youngster and it played a role in her
She was 15 when she made her way to Social Advocates for Youth's Teen Shelter, later renamed in honor of Community Baptist Church pastor and youth advocate Dr. James E. Coffee, who died in April at age 76.
At the shelter she met counselor Jennie Nestor, who's still working with kids at the Coffee House. Nestor slowly befriended the defiant young Fatu, recognized her intelligence and potential and talked her into becoming — at age 16 — the Teen Voice on the board of SAY.
Fatu was pulling her life together but still using methamphetamine and playing with trouble when, at 18, she became pregnant.
At age 19, she realized there was one thing she could do for the daughter who'd died. She vowed to herself, “I'm going to prove to her I'm a good mom.”
“That was the last time I used drugs,” she said. She was hired by
“This job is 24 hours a day,” Fatu said at the Coffee House. “Kids have my cellphone number and I don't hide where I live.”
She said
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