LETTER TO SENATOR WYDEN/SENATE COMMITTEE ON FINANCE by Dede Ranahan

November 1, 2021

Dear Senator Ron Wyden, and other members of the Committee on Finance:

This is in response to your request for input from stakeholders to help you better understand how Congress can address behavioral health care challenges.

First, thank you, Senator Wyden, for keeping at it. I’m sure you don’t remember, but back in the late 1990s you intervened for my son who was delusional and psychotic in Oregon. He died in a California hospital psych ward in 2014. He never did receive the help he needed for schizo-affective disorder. In the interim, I became a mother bear and mental illness activist. I’ve written two award-winning books, Sooner Than Tomorrow — A Mother’s Diary About Mental Illness, Family, and Everyday Life (Nautilus Book Awards Gold Medal Winner, Memoir, 2019) and Tomorrow Was Yesterday, Explosive First-Person Indictments of the US Mental Health System — Mothers Across the Nation Tell It Like It Is (Nautilus Book Awards Silver Medal Winner, Social Change, Social Justice 2020). The second book includes stories from 65 mothers from 28 states, and a fifteen-point plan to address serious mental illness (SMI - schizophrenia, schizo-affective disorder, bipolar disorder, clinical depression, etc.). The plan was developed in 2019 by advocates/activists from across the country.

In January 2021, 150 Tomorrow Was Yesterday readers, from every state in the nation, volunteered to send a copy of the book to the White House (Joe Biden, Jill Biden, Kamala Harris, Xavier Becerra, and individual legislators) thinking 150 copies of the same book from every state might get someone’s attention. Five months later, we all began receiving form letters from the White House thanking us for our “gifts” and for welcoming Joe Biden to the Presidency. No mention of the topic. No reference to the books. It was hurtful and insulting.

The 15-part plan was prioritized by the participants. The number 1 priority on their list is to "Reclassify Serious Mental Illness (SMI) from a Behavioral Condition to what it is, a Neurological Medical Condition." Until we look at SMI through a biological/physical lens, the significant changes we users of the system need will not happen.

I’m not trying to specifically address the questions you’ve posed in your letter. The SMI Plan cuts through all of them. More significantly, it raises issues not included in your list. The suffering in the SMI community (11-13 million diagnosed individuals plus their families) is intense. We’re screaming to the heavens for help. So far, no one seems to be listening.

Summary from Tomorrow Was Yesterday:
“As it stands today, the US mental health/illness system is filled with political landmines and gut-wrenching divisions: parents vs. children, peer organizations vs. family organizations, voluntary vs. involuntary treatment concepts, psychiatrist vs. psychologist turf wars, state vs. federal jurisdictions, HIPAA restrictions vs. parental rights, lack of beds vs. incarceration, unions vs. providers, psychiatry vs. anti-psychiatry, civil rights vs. dying with your rights on, NIMBYism vs. housing, traditional medicine vs. holistic medicine, and funded advocacy organization vs. unfunded grassroots advocacy efforts. I watched my son Pat die because the system is tied up in bureaucratic and philosophical knots.”

I would be happy to send you a copy of Tomorrow Was Yesterday which includes the 15-point plan to address SMI. My hope is that you, and others on the committee, might read our stories, take the plan seriously, and pursue some of its recommendations. It’s a beginning. It’s from the people in the trenches -- the sufferers, the families, the folks the system is supposed to help.

Thank you for reaching out. Let me know if/where I should send a copy of Tomorrow Was Yesterday.

Sincerely,
Dede Ranahan

Available on Amazon.

TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (OHIO) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan

Nikki Landis —NIKKI AND KEVIN — Ohio


My heart is breaking. Our kids' hearts are breaking. Please pray for us, and if you have a family member with a brain disease/mental illness, rethink how you talk about it. I have never been ashamed of my boys with autism. Talk about it without stigma and the stigma disappears.

I know I have so much to be thankful for. My family's been blessed beyond measure in so many ways. I go day-to-day relatively happy. And then it will hit again and I just want to cry. I don't always get to because there's a little face that needs to be kissed or a little behind that needs to be wiped and I don't want them to see me so sad. But sometimes I just need to cry.

I am such a fighter and that's not always a good thing. I've accomplished so many things that were supposedly impossible, and because that's my nature it makes this harder. I seem to always be looking for ways to figure everything out so we can have the life I envisioned, even when it's not something I should be fighting for anymore.

Read more of Nikki’s story in the upcoming book, TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY - Explosive First-Person Indictments of the US Mental Health System -- Mothers Across the Nation Tell It Like It Is. It will be available on Amazon.

Nikki and Kevin

Nikki and Kevin

FROM THE DIRECTOR OF NURSING AT A STATE PRISON

I’m the director of nursing at a state prison. I received a shipment of supplies yesterday and 200 toe tags had been added to my order. The state has rented coolers to store bodies and it hasn’t been able to get body bags. We’ve been instructed to order extra trash bags and refer to them as "plastic bags" when utilizing them for bodies.

We’ve managed to keep this pandemic out of the prison so far, but it will arrive. It’s evident that, when it does, the resources will have already been expended on the general population. My patients will be left to me and my 19 nurses who are trying to help 1200 inmates armed with nothing but one mask each and an eight-bed infirmary that never has an empty bed. I have three oxygen concentrators, four nebulizers, and no IV pumps. Only dial flow tubing.

I know much of society believes these guys are expendable but they aren't all "bad." Many of them are young people who’ve made poor decisions and gotten caught. They have parents and kids who love them and so many will be productive, law-abiding citizens when released. Unfortunately, many will receive the “death penalty” because we’re not prepared to handle the influx of illness that is imminent in the next weeks.

I love these guys the same way nursing home staff members love their residents. Yet I’m forced to put on a face that reassures staff and inmates that everything is under control.

NOTE TO READERS: If you know an SMI prisoner who would like to receive mail, please send me a brief description, a photo if you have one, and a mailing address. Email it to me at dede@soonerthantomorrow.com. Or message me with your information on Facebook. I’ll add that person to the blog Pen Pal page. SMI prisoners need to hear from us — more than ever — in the midst of this COVID-19 pandemic.

Photo credit: Marcelo/Flickr

Photo credit: Marcelo/Flickr

ANNOUNCEMENT by Dede Ranahan

I learned a lot writing and publishing my book, Sooner Than Tomorrow — A Mother's Diary About Mental Illness, Family, and Everyday Life.

My beautiful mother, Evelyn (GG), just passed at 101. Maybe that's why I'm feeling my mortality. Limited time to try to make a difference. Every day, I'm saddened, infuriated, and inspired by the stories I read and receive from the SMI population. I'm honored to count myself among you.

So, my wonderful mom left me a few dollars. I could die and leave them to a "worthy organization" or I could entrust them to a "worthy person" — myself. 🙂

Self-publishing a book is a time-consuming and costly endeavor. (Forget a publisher — I'm an unknown author over 70. Don't get me started on age bias.) But I want to self-publish another book. I already have a lot of the material — your stories from my blog. My blog is now being read in over 85 countries. SMI is a global humanitarian crisis.

I'm going to combine your stories into a collection. I already have the title of the book — Tomorrow Was Yesterday. Of course, if I select your story, I will ask you for your permission to use it. If I don't already have your story on my blog, I welcome your submission.

This is a scary thing I'm doing. Announcing an endeavor before it's begun. But I operate this way. My self-motivating quotient won't let me stop until I've realized what I'm proposing.

There are too few of us advocating. There are too many of us not standing up to the status quo. We're exhausted. We're humiliated. We're often hopeless about ever getting help for SMI. We're afraid to tell our stories.

Well, let's begin. We'll do it together. If you need help writing your story and it fits into the format, I'll help you write it. Let's go! Let's do this! What do you think?

Available on Amazon

Available on Amazon