The New Social Worker Vol. 19, No. 4, Fall 2012 | Page 5

Student Role Model Christine Webb by Barbara Trainin Blank Christine Lauren Webb has what she calls a “social work disposition.” An intense desire to help others has led her to volunteer in a Haitian village through Kings Cross Missionaries and to lend a listening ear wherever she is. This inclination also explains, at least in part, Webb’s openness in discussing the challenges in her own life. She’d like other people, especially young people, to learn from them. Webb is young herself—only 23—with one year to go in the BSW program at the University of Indiana at Bloomington. It is a milestone she might not have reached if not for the realization that she had serious drug and alcohol problems. She denied those problems for a while because she was otherwise fairly functional—although, as she acknowledged later, many of her relationships were troubled. Webb had begun to use drug and alcohol after her parents’ divorce when she just graduated high school. (Both of them later remarried.) She might have continued on that path had not one particular college course changed her life. It was a course about substance abuse— to which she often came stoned or hung over. “It didn’t register that I was where I needed to be,” Webb says. “The class taught us how to identify an addict and how you could be emotionally dependent on a drug without being physically dependent—that dependence could be different from abuse.” Judy L. Malschick, adjunct professor at the School of Social Work, who had developed the course and teaches it, had no idea at the time that her student suffered from addiction. “She revealed that after the class was over in an e-mail, in a kind of appreciation, along with a message that the class had saved her life,” Malschick says. What Webb did acknowledge during the class was that other members of her family had addiction problems. “I admired the collegial way in which Christine worked on group projects,” the professor adds. “Her ability to share about these issues encouraged other students to speak about theirs.” The later revelations not only enabled Webb to face her addictions, but to reach her potential. “It’s since she came out with her own problems that she has really demonstrated a leadership role,” Malschick says. “She has done a lot of volunteer work. I connected her with the executive director of Amethyst House, where I do contract work. She has spoken to groups there to inspire others, and to my class—as part of a panel. It’s incredibly important to get speakers the students can connect with, and she’s close to their age. She has an amazing style.” A transitional living facility with inand outpatient services, Amethyst House has many clients who are in college. “That’s the age when many people first experience abuse and possible addiction,” Webb says. She also volunteers at Martha’s House, where she began doing intake work when the homeless shelter was short staffed. “It was my first experience with active listening and finding dignity and worth in everyone,” she says. Webb had to struggle to find that dignity and sense of self-worth in herself. For a time, she was able to give up drugs Christine Webb and alcohol—but then she relapsed. “Maybe it’s because I had proven myself,” she says. “But two months later, I almost choked to death on my own vomit, and that was a wake-up call. I found a 12-step program that worked for me. I was really ready.” Webb has spent nearly her entire life in Indiana, growing up in Lafayette. One sister goes to IU, as well, and another to its “rival school,” Purdue. But she seems like a citizen of the world. Webb is active in Fair Talk at IU, a grass-roots organization that raises awareness about HJR6, a suggested amendment to the State Constitution that marriage must be between a man and woman. “There’s already a law banning gay marriage in the state,” she comments, “so to add this is insulting.” Webb also worked with Stone Belt, a nonprofit that provides group homes and day services to people with developmental disabilities. There she learned an important lesson. “The clients who were encouraged to express themselves soared, but when they’re completely taken care of or seen as a burden ??F?V? ????W2?F?W?F?F?( ?BF?vV?????B?b?B?0?V?f?&???V?B?( ?vV&.( F6??F??VVB??vR# ??F?R?Wr6?6??v?&?W ??f??# ??0???