IT FEELS LIKE THE STATE OF MICHIGAN WANTS ME DEAD by Sarah C.

I am at my wit’s end. I can't take it anymore. I have a mentally ill son, Christopher, who will be 17 in February. I was a victim at 13, and he was born at 14. I read so much when I found out I was pregnant — everything that would tell me how I should have the baby and where there would be help. I thought I was doing the right thing. Fast forward. He’s now at a residential treatment facility. Since he was seven or eight, my son’s been receiving treatment for mental illness. It was a battle every day to make sure nothing made him mad, and when he did get mad, we followed safety plans to a “T.”

Christopher has bipolar disorder, ADHD, intermittent explosive disorder, and possibly, and probably, more. When he gets mad, he physically assaults people and it happens out of no where. He's gone after his infant siblings, strangers in the street, classmates, and teachers. He will attack anyone who’s around. He says, “I will kill everyone.” His main desire is to stab people to death. He attempted to stab me. He hid in the house with a butcher knife my grandmother used and forgot to lock back up.

We’ve exhausted all mental health services, and I mean all. I even drove him out of state to be hospitalized. The residential treatment facility is the last thing that can help, but I can't afford it. Child Protective Services, therapists, other family members, and medical providers all agree he needs this, but insurance won't pay for it unless he is a drug user. 

So here we are. All involved agree my son cannot be in my home. It's too dangerous for me and his younger siblings. He’s strong and over six-feet tall. I love him, but I'm deathly afraid of him. So are my two daughters who he attempted to sexually molest as well as physically assault. The state of Michigan would help me pay for his treatment, but here’s the catch: I'm being charged with child abuse and child neglect. Authorities say it’s the only way to keep everyone safe and to get him help. They’ve put me on a child abuse registry. I won’t be able to go back to working with children (I previously worked in an elementary school.) I can't go on field trips with my other children because my name is on that list. My trial isn't until January 10. The attorney they gave doesn’t seem to care about my right to a fair trial. He's only showed up for two hearings, talked to me less than 90 seconds each time, and has never looked at my son’s medical documents and other evidence that I carry with me to every hearing. 

January 1, 2019: I just now looked at my mail that didn't come until late yesterday evening. There is a letter from the court. It says a pre-trial management conference was scheduled for 12/18/2018 and that all witness lists and evidence were due by 12/21/2018. My attorney has none of this information and I'm being informed by mail that wasn't sent out until 12/28/2018 (stamped on the envelope). 

To make matters worse, the state promised me they wouldn't involve my rapist/abuser, a man I’m greatly afraid of. They said it would be in my son’s best interest not to involve him as he has a lengthy record. They lied. The letter I just opened says they sent a copy stating my name, my information, and the date for trial, to this man. He ruined my childhood and essentially scarred me for life. I never put him on my son’s birth certificate. I am scared to death, angry, and hurt. It feels like a set-up. 

Everyone I talk to feels bad but no one can help. The problem is legislation. I've contacted all local officials, from my local state representatives to the governor’s office. However, because of elections and terms being close to an end, no one could help. Here I am. I’ve never been in trouble with the law in my life. Now I’m being persecuted for having a mentally ill child, and not being able to afford the $300-a-day treatment he needs. Seems there’s no way to help a parent get the treatment her mentally ill child needs without charging the parent (me in this case) and labeling her as a child-abuser. The state’s stripping me of my parental rights, and sending me a bill for my son’s expenses while he’s in their care.

I have a therapist and, after he looked at all my documents and heard the story, he was in shock and felt bad. He said, “Nothing can be done.” It's a Catch-22. Usually, he tries to help his patients work toward a goal, but he doesn't have a goal for me to strive for. He can only allow me to vent which, at this point, isn't enough. God help me. I don't know what to do anymore. It feels like the state of Michigan wants me dead.

Note: Sarah cancelled her court appearance for 1/10/2019. She says, “I'm too afraid to go to trial Thursday and risk being found by my childhood abuser. My concern is his being in front of me at the trial, possibly following me home, or getting my address while at the trial. I was told by the judge's secretary they would ‘try not to disclose my address.’ However, I don’t put it past the courts that they would hand him a document with my mailing address on it, or say it out loud during the trial.”

Sarah and Christopher

Sarah and Christopher

NEED YOUR HELP. WHICH COLOR DRAWS YOU IN? by Dede Ranahan

I’m trying to choose the color for the cover of my book. Which color draws you in — blue, white, or gray? Thanks so much for your help. I have no objectivity about this and appreciate your feedback.

Why the carnation? The carnation is the official flower for Mother’s Day. Pat used to give me and his sisters white carnations on Mother’s Day. White carnations represent pure love. Pink carnations represent a mother’s forever love: “I will never forget you.” My book is dedicated to Pat and his sisters, and to the mothers (millions of them) who fight, every single day, for their children who live with serious mental illness.

P.S. If you receive this post twice in your email, it’s because you’re subscribed to my stories blog and to my diary blog. I try to not duplicate posts often. Thanks for subscribing to both blogs.

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A HAPPY STORY TO END 2018 by Kathy Day

Remember the homeless kid I wrote about who had a really bad episode outside my apartment? The cops refused to take him to the hospital because he would, likely, be released. 

Two months ago he had a similar episode. I hadn’t seen him since. 

This A.M., Nick showed up at my door. Clean cut. Calm. He said, “I’m on meds and living in a group home a couple towns over.”

Omg! He looked so good. 

He said, “The second episode made me realize I needed help. I went to the ER and asked to go to inpatient.”

He was an in-patient for a month. While there, he was connected with outpatient services and placed in a room and board home. He has 60 days clean.

Bless his heart. He looked so good and said, “I’m happy.”

I love happy follow ups.

Read Kathy’s story about Nick, September 19, 2018 — The “Right” to be So Ill

Nick holding an Alcoholics Anonymous book and his 30-day sobriety chip.

Nick holding an Alcoholics Anonymous book and his 30-day sobriety chip.

TIME TO GET GUARDIANSHIP by Sherri McGimsey

There came a point in Matthew’s illness that his doctor flat out said, “It’s time to get guardianship.”

I drove down the mountain from the veteran’s hospital and started applying for guardianship that same day. It was rough. The tears, the uncertainty, and the sadness were heavy. I want to thank everyone who helped me when I walked into the courthouse and asked, “How do I get guardianship of our son?”

The doctor had been telling us we would have to do this, but it’s a difficult decision to make for an accomplished adult. It’s heart-breaking to stand nose to nose with a veteran with serious mental illness and take his rights away. He’s survived so much and still is, but we weren’t going to let our son die with his “rights on.”

Anosognosia, also called "lack of insight," is a symptom of severe mental illness. It impairs a person's ability to understand and perceive his or her illness. It’s the single, most prevalent reason why some people, with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, refuse medications or do not seek treatment. Our son has anosognosia.

(Anosognosia according to Wikipedia: Anosognosia results from physiological damage to brain structures, typically to the parietal lobe or a diffuse lesion on the front-temporal-parietal area in the right hemisphere, and is thus a neurological disorder.)

Double click on the link below if you want to better understand the impact serious mental illness has on families, especially mothers.

Sherri’s YouTube video

Matthew

Matthew

END PROLONGED SOLITARY CONFINEMENT by Dr. Mariposa McCall, Psychiatrist

On February 8, 2018, I along with Dr. Everett Allen (an internist who worked for several years at California Pelican Bay State Prison's solitary confinement), Cyrus Ahalt (a UCSF Public Health and Criminal Justice researcher), and Steven Czifra (a UC Berkeley MSW intern who was confined in solitary confinement for eight years while in juvenile then adult corrections facilities), presented on the relevance of solitary confinement to community mental health at the California Contra Costa County Psychiatry and Psychology monthly meeting.

Solitary confinement is being held in a small cell for 22 to 24 hours a day with minimal property and no meaningful human contact. We reviewed the physical and psychological harms of this most restrictive housing placement. In addition, we explored the dual loyalties for providers as they participate in this practice. As providers, is it ethical to declare someone fit for this high risk containment? This is what is happening — we are witnesses and participants.

Canada's Supreme Court declared solitary confinement unconstitutional in January 2018. A few months later, India, too, acknowledged this preventable harm. When will this nation reach this decision? On any given day in the USA, 100,000 are held in these extreme conditions, some unconscionably for years and decades. Fifty percent of suicides occur in these restrictive segregations, and self injurious behaviors are rampant.

This is preventable. We, as providers, will see these individuals as patients when released. Ninety-five percent of those incarcerated will be released. As community members, we will walk, shop, eat, live with them. Do we want traumatized or rehabilitated individuals? Some of you may feel this issue does not pertain to you, but ethical guidelines of "first do no harm" and human rights concern us all.

I am hoping you will join me in signing the petition I wrote to end prolonged solitary confinement (greater than 15 days) in American jails, prisons, and detention centers. Please share with others. Click on link below to read and sign the petition.

https://www.change.org/p/helping-professional-organizations-end-prolonged-solitary-confinement

Photo credit: Tim Pearce/Flickr.com

Photo credit: Tim Pearce/Flickr.com