Michael holding a butterfly |
Three days before 20 year-old Adam Lanza killed his mother, then opened fire on a classroom full of Connecticut kindergartners, my 13-year old son Michael (name changed) missed his bus because he was wearing the wrong color pants.
“I can wear these pants,” he said, his tone increasingly
belligerent, the black-hole pupils of his eyes swallowing the blue irises.
“They are navy blue,” I told him. “Your school’s dress code
says black or khaki pants only.”
“They told me I could wear these,” he insisted. “You’re a
stupid bitch. I can wear whatever pants I want to. This is America. I have
rights!”
“You can’t wear whatever pants you want to,” I said, my tone
affable, reasonable. “And you definitely cannot call me a stupid bitch. You’re
grounded from electronics for the rest of the day. Now get in the car, and I
will take you to school.”
I live with a son who is mentally ill. I love my son. But he
terrifies me.
A few weeks ago, Michael pulled a knife and threatened to
kill me and then himself after I asked him to return his overdue library books.
His 7 and 9 year old siblings knew the safety plan—they ran to the car and
locked the doors before I even asked them to. I managed to get the knife from Michael,
then methodically collected all the sharp objects in the house into a single
Tupperware container that now travels with me. Through it all, he continued to
scream insults at me and threaten to kill or hurt me.
That conflict ended with three burly police officers and a
paramedic wrestling my son onto a gurney for an expensive ambulance ride to the
local emergency room. The mental hospital didn’t have any beds that day, and Michael
calmed down nicely in the ER, so they sent us home with a prescription for
Zyprexa and a follow-up visit with a local pediatric psychiatrist.
We still don’t know what’s wrong with Michael. Autism
spectrum, ADHD, Oppositional Defiant or Intermittent Explosive Disorder have
all been tossed around at various meetings with probation officers and social
workers and counselors and teachers and school administrators. He’s been on a
slew of antipsychotic and mood altering pharmaceuticals, a Russian novel of
behavioral plans. Nothing seems to work.
At the start of seventh grade, Michael was accepted to an
accelerated program for highly gifted math and science students. His IQ is off
the charts. When he’s in a good mood, he will gladly bend your ear on subjects
ranging from Greek mythology to the differences between Einsteinian and
Newtonian physics to Doctor Who. He’s in a good mood most of the time. But when
he’s not, watch out. And it’s impossible to predict what will set him off.
Several weeks into his new junior high school, Michael began
exhibiting increasingly odd and threatening behaviors at school. We decided to
transfer him to the district’s most restrictive behavioral program, a contained
school environment where children who can’t function in normal classrooms can
access their right to free public babysitting from 7:30-1:50 Monday through
Friday until they turn 18.
The morning of the pants incident, Michael continued to
argue with me on the drive. He would occasionally apologize and seem
remorseful. Right before we turned into his school parking lot, he said, “Look,
Mom, I’m really sorry. Can I have video games back today?”
“No way,” I told him. “You cannot act the way you acted this
morning and think you can get your electronic privileges back that quickly.”
His face turned cold, and his eyes were full of calculated
rage. “Then I’m going to kill myself,” he said. “I’m going to jump out of this
car right now and kill myself.”
That was it. After the knife incident, I told him that if he
ever said those words again, I would take him straight to the mental hospital,
no ifs, ands, or buts. I did not respond, except to pull the car into the
opposite lane, turning left instead of right.
“Where are you taking me?” he said, suddenly worried. “Where
are we going?”
“You know where we are going,” I replied.
“No! You can’t do that to me! You’re sending me to hell! You’re
sending me straight to hell!”
I pulled up in front of the hospital, frantically waiving
for one of the clinicians who happened to be standing outside. “Call the
police,” I said. “Hurry.”
Michael was in a full-blown fit by then, screaming and
hitting. I hugged him close so he couldn’t escape from the car. He bit me several
times and repeatedly jabbed his elbows into my rib cage. I’m still stronger than
he is, but I won’t be for much longer.
The police came quickly and carried my son screaming and
kicking into the bowels of the hospital. I started to shake, and tears filled
my eyes as I filled out the paperwork—“Were there any difficulties with....at
what age did your child....were there any problems with...has your child ever
experienced...does your child have....”
At least we have health insurance now. I recently accepted a
position with a local college, giving up my freelance career because when you
have a kid like this, you need benefits. You’ll do anything for benefits. No
individual insurance plan will cover this kind of thing.
For days, my son insisted that I was lying—that I made the
whole thing up so that I could get rid of him. The first day, when I called to
check up on him, he said, “I hate you. And I’m going to get my revenge as soon
as I get out of here.”
By day three, he was my calm, sweet boy again, all apologies
and promises to get better. I’ve heard those promises for years. I don’t
believe them anymore.
On the intake form, under the question, “What are your
expectations for treatment?” I wrote, “I need help.”
And I do. This problem is too big for me to handle on my
own. Sometimes there are no good options. So you just pray for
grace and trust that in hindsight, it will all make sense.
I am sharing this story because I am Adam Lanza’s mother. I
am Dylan Klebold’s and Eric Harris’s mother. I am James Holmes’s mother. I am
Jared Loughner’s mother. I am Seung-Hui Cho’s mother. And these boys—and their
mothers—need help. In the wake of another horrific national tragedy, it’s easy
to talk about guns. But it’s time to talk about mental illness.
According to Mother Jones, since 1982, 61 mass murders
involving firearms have occurred throughout the country. (http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/07/mass-shootings-map).
Of these, 43 of the killers were white males, and only one was a woman. Mother
Jones focused on whether the killers obtained their guns legally (most did).
But this highly visible sign of mental illness should lead us to consider how many
people in the U.S. live in fear, like I do.
When I asked my son’s social worker about my options, he
said that the only thing I could do was to get Michael charged with a crime. “If
he’s back in the system, they’ll create a paper trail,” he said. “That’s the
only way you’re ever going to get anything done. No one will pay attention to
you unless you’ve got charges.”
I don’t believe my son belongs in jail. The chaotic
environment exacerbates Michael’s sensitivity to sensory stimuli and doesn’t
deal with the underlying pathology. But it seems like the United States is
using prison as the solution of choice for mentally ill people. According to
Human Rights Watch, the number of mentally ill inmates in U.S. prisons
quadrupled from 2000 to 2006, and it continues to rise—in fact, the rate of inmate
mental illness is five times greater (56 percent) than in the non-incarcerated
population. (http://www.hrw.org/news/2006/09/05/us-number-mentally-ill-prisons-quadrupled)
With state-run treatment centers and hospitals shuttered,
prison is now the last resort for the mentally ill—Rikers Island, the LA County
Jail, and Cook County Jail in Illinois housed the nation’s largest treatment
centers in 2011 (http://www.npr.org/2011/09/04/140167676/nations-jails-struggle-with-mentally-ill-prisoners)
No one wants to send
a 13-year old genius who loves Harry Potter and his snuggle animal collection
to jail. But our society, with its stigma on mental illness and its broken
healthcare system, does not provide us with other options. Then another
tortured soul shoots up a fast food restaurant. A mall. A kindergarten
classroom. And we wring our hands and say, “Something must be done.”
I agree that something must be done. It’s time for a
meaningful, nation-wide conversation about mental health. That’s the only way
our nation can ever truly heal.
God help me. God help Michael. God help us all.
This story was first published online by the Blue Review. Read more on current events at www.thebluereview.org
This story was first published online by the Blue Review. Read more on current events at www.thebluereview.org
3,760 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 1801 – 2000 of 3760 Newer› Newest»Thank you for trying every avenue for Michael. Perhaps with blogs such as yours that raise awareness, more help will be established in the U.S. for persons with mental illness.
Thank you for sharing. The lack of help for families dealing with mental health issues is appalling. I hope you can find a single therapist to work w/ you and your son going forward -- an outpatient therapist he can learn to trust and see weekly, rather than having access to therapists only when he has been "bad" and needs behavioral control (so that mental health help is equated with punishment for misbehavior). In addition, please contact the gifted development center about ways to enrich your son's life through his gifts, and to help him find intellectual peers to have relationships with. Gifteddevelopment.com. Some of the stress he feels is being a fish out of water. You might talk to a child psych about how to make sure your son feels your emotional attunement even as you set limits. He is at a very young state in terms of separation/autonomy (toddler tantrums w/ teen's rage). Use mirroring statements before refusing. Hand off control to him whenever possible (e.g.,not arguing over small things like pants -- as he's 13 -- let him go to school and if the school has a problem let them deal with it.)
Thank you for sharing.
thank you for sharing this. My heart goes out to you and your family. I wish there were real solutions that could work for families like yours,but our system is SO broken, especially when it comes to mental health services. Stay strong, you are not alone.
Prayers for you and your family, Linda. Look to God in the quiet to find clarity and peace.
@ Bill Tackett
"is having problems with her son that appear to be mental illness related."
Now that is an understatement. Mental illness has many nuances and does not easily fit into one category or label. While your son may be quite manageable and have the semblance of a normal life, many disturbed children do not.
Bill, you obviously know what you are experiencing. And the writer knows what she is experiencing. But until you have walked in her shoes, shame on you for attempting to draw comparisons and pass judgment.
Oh my god, my heart goes out to you so much. You're a beautiful person to write about the other side of things. Much luck to you.
Check out the books "Scattered: How Attention Deficit Disorder Originates And What You Can Do About It" (a different approach); also "Misdiagnosis and Dual Diagnosis of Gifted Children and Adults"; and "Brainstorms: Understanding and Treating Emotional Storms of ADHD." Frontal lobe executive control of emotions is slow to develop in adhd but also in many highly gifted kids. You have someone wired neurologically w/ the emotional brakes of a 8-9 yr old or younger maybe -- but emotional modulation is a skill that can be developed. Best to you.
I cannot relate in anyway to what you are going through. But I just wanted to say I am sorry and I will say a prayer for your struggles. Also thank you for being so courageous.
I had a son who was mentally ill. He is dead now, not a violent death but nonetheless gone. He too was a very intelligent person. I know how she feels. Although I didn't have to deal with violent behavior he was yet ill.
The state govt's who found it cost saving to close all the mental hospitals are now looking at the backlash from their brilliant ideas. The cost to house them in prison is greater because the "caretakers" salary's are higher.They are not criminals and do not belong in a facility where criminals of all sorts are housed. That is just wrong, wrong, wrong. This lady is brave in as much she has been dealing with the child's behavior for quite awhile now and she is exhausted I know she has to be. I pray that the right thing will be done by this family and the child will get the right kind of help and soon. Can't believe a Social Worker would even say that out loud...but some of them belong on the other side of a key too.
Hi Liza - two last thoughts - I have perused very roughly the comments - will do so in depth later - and I am appalled at those who criticize the parents - although I know they will. All I can so to those who have so judged what they do not know - SHAME ON YOU!
Next, re: how mental health problems have been shifted to prisons and criminal arena - read the book CRAZY by Pete Early - very good information , history and story of his son.
This is a great story and it had some valuable insight into a serious public health issue. I question why you would name the child in the article Michael when the name Adam would have had a much more powerful and significant impact.
I know someone who might be able to help. He's a homeopathic doctor and is one of the best in the US. I'm not sure exactly what he'll do to help, but he's treated kids (and adults) with nervous disorders before and he has the best results of any doctor I've seen. Anyway, if you're looking for help, it's worth a try. His name is Jason West and the number for his office is (208) 232-3216 or the website is www.westcliniconline.com.
Your naked honesty and willingness to expose and share what most of us will never know sincerly amazed me as I read this. Thank you.
Sending you prayers. You mentioned autism was tossed around. What you are describing does not sound like Autism (we have that in our family). If he has a form of PDD (pervasive developmental disorder - autism is in this spectrum) then it sounds like he has another diagnosis too - which if he has two things could explain the difficulty in diagnosis. http://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/autism/hcp-dsm.html
I will keep you in my prayers that you find an answer for you and for "Michael". I also pray that the responses do not hurt you too much - that is a risk when posting on the internet what is happeing, however it looks like it gave you positive responses as well. I pray the positive responses help you find the help you and "Michael" need.
WHEN A CHILD HAS A MELTDOWN DO NOT ATTEMPT TO RESTRICT HIS MOBILITY BY HOLDING HIM. Children who have actual meltdowns can't stop themselves until the meltdown runs its course. STAY OUT OF THE WAY. STOP CONTROLLING THE CHILD. Get out of the way. The more controlling you are on small things, the more the problem escalates. This child is NOT a murderer; this child is a child who has meltdowns. It ISN'T the same thing. A meltdown isn't the same as a murder.
Hello, Liza:
I am so moved by your story of your son, and I do hope your son can get the help you need.
I wanted to reach out to you because I am a holistic health counselor...and I wanted to share something with you. You may already know all this, have tried, etc....just want to share in case you haven't!! There is a strong connection between diet and behavior. Some children with autism have even been fully cured with the right diet/nutrients (conversely- their condidtion has been exacerbated by food dye, preservatives, etc) Two resources are:
Book--http://www.amazon.com/Food-Behavior-Barbara-Reed-Stitt/dp/0939956098
web info-- http://bodyecology.com/autism.php
Like most people here, I came across your blog after seeing the entry circulate on Facebook....I just wanted to say that you did a beautiful job of illustrating and really driving home your point. Your story is truly touching, and I want to thank you for sharing it. As an aside, after going through the rest of your blog entries, I would like to add that you are a very talented writer in general. Best of luck to you.
I, too, am that mom. Only mine are daughters, not a son. Yes, unfortunately, the options for mental health treatment are not ideal..... Jail, the foster system....nothing that heals, promotes growth or helps repair the relationships. It is backwards. Something must be done. Some states make Medicaid more available for those needing assistance, despite their financial well being. Some states don't. We didn't know this until we moved from PA to OH. Where we once had long term residential mental health treatment available for our children, now our only options are jail and foster homes. People don't understand what mothers of these children go through. Our lives revolve around them...our jobs, our homes, our friends, our own safety. Things are finally looking better after a few nightmarish years. I wouldn't aw tbto live the over again... And I wish that the system could be different for those coming after me going through the same issues. May God bless us all, and God bless our country.
Hello ASM.
My name is James. I think that's important for you to know because, quite frankly, I rarely ever associate my name with my online identity. It's a demonstration of honesty, and this is going to be honest.
I am Adam Lanza. I am Dylan Kiebold and Eric Harris. I am Jason Holmes. I am Jared Loughner and a few hundred others that tortured and hurt other people as a kid. I tried killing my adoptive mother, many times. I tried poisoning her, stabbing her, beating her, getting her arrested, and running away.
------------
My apologies. I cannot post this here, there is a character limit of 4,096. I know you won't be able to follow every link that all 1800+ comments have provided you with, but if you stumble across this one, then I ask you read it.
An Open Letter to The Anarchist Soccer Mom
http://dismalmoron.com/?p=853
Thank you so much for writing this. I am only 15 years old, and I do not have these, problems, nor do I know anyone who does. This story does not directly affect me, nor can I relate very much to it. But reading this article has changed my life. When I heard about the shootings in Connecticut, the first thing I thought was, "What must that mother have done to make her son do such terrible things?" My friend's reaction was, "Some people are just born evil." But because of your article, my eyes are opened. I don't believe that. I understand how hard it must be to raise a child like that and have no idea what to do or how to help him, but just trying your very hardest to keep going. I also understand what someone else commented, about not punishing your child but rewarding him. I know that it may not be in any way similar, but when my family was training our dog, instead of scolding her when she was doing something bad, we gave her rewards when she was doing something good. I believe that we have a lot to learn about mental diseases, but I also believe that dogs are a lot like humans. We can learn so much from them. There is one other thing that I believe may help you. I think someone else commented this already, but I just wanted to give proof that it works. Giving your child music is the best thing you can ever do for him. I am not going to go into it, but I used to be in major depression because of things going on in my life. I thought about committing suicide. There were two things that kept me alive throughout this time. The love of my friends and music. I knew that as long as my best friends, or someone, would miss me, I couldn't die. I no longer cared for myself, but I cared for them. I knew that if they lost me it would destroy them, and I knew that I could NEVER put them through that pain. Remind your child how much he is LOVED. he needs support, and DEFINATELY professional help. But most of all, he needs love. The other thing that got me through was my ipod. Music is a HUGE part of my life and always will be. I am a singer, and so I listen to artists like Kelly Clarkson, Pink, and others similar to that. Thee artists produce meaningful, relatable music that people with depression and other such problems can relate to. GET YOUR CHILD MUSIC. It truely saved my life. I was inspired, and I had something to live for. I knew why I couldn't give up my life. I wanted to be a singer, to change peoples lives with my words just like my idols had for me. And I will, someday. Micheal is good at lots of things, I am sure. But his PASSION is what he will live for. Show him there is more than what he is forced to live through right now. Show him the future. Show him inspiration. Show him love. Give him music. <3
Hello Liza: I posted this same comment on another site (gawker.com). I'm posting it here as I don't know which sites you check.
I can hear you. I can hear your fear, your frustration, your pleas for help. I don't profess to have answers or solutions. But I want to talk with you. My name is Marnie. I live in Ontario, Canada and have worked in community mental health for 25 yrs. In my work I have talked with hundreds of family members who share the feelings you describe.
Is there some way to arrange for a phone conversation? As this is a public blog, I do not want to put my contact information here for one and all to see (and access). If you are open to having a phone conversation, do you know of some way for us to connect without either of us having to put our contact information out into 'the public atmosphere'?
Kind regards,
Marnie
Wow. Stunning, honest, brutal. You are a brave parent, and you are BANG-ON with your analysis.
Have you considered moving to Canada? They are decades ahead of the USA in treatment (and also dignity, status, etc), particularly in autism spectrum and ODS.
I love playing a Steinway too. I teach piano lessons and am a special needs "specialist." I am glad that someone has come forward to talk about this stuff so poignantly.
Hello Liza:
I can hear you. I can hear your fear, your frustration, your pleas for help. I don't profess to have answers or solutions. But I want to talk with you. My name is Marnie. I live in Ontario, Canada and have worked in community mental health for 25 yrs. In my work I have talked with hundreds of family members who share the feelings you describe.
Is there some way to arrange for a phone conversation? As this is a public blog, I do not want to put my contact information here for one and all to see (and access). If you are open to having a phone conversation, do you know of some way for us to connect without either of us having to put our contact information out into 'the public atmosphere'?
Kind regards,
Marnie
Praying for you and Michael. There are no obvious, easy answers for situations such as these. Anyone who thinks there are is naive. I grew up with a younger adopted brother who was mentally handicapped--he was a fetal alcohol syndrome baby in addition to having a family history of mental illness. He had a variety of diagnoses...ADHD, OCD, bipolar...and was said to be about 6 (mentally and emotionally) when he was in his early teens with an IQ below 50. Before that point, he had exhibited disturbing behavior, including a knife incident that happened when I was babysitting him and my youngest brother (we sat locked inside a bedroom; he sat and watched TV, knife forgotten on the kitchen table, until my parents returned). My father traveled a great deal, and my mother began to fear for her safety--he was big and strong, especially during a rage, and she had failing health. He was placed in a variety of residential facilities and never fully returned home aside from weekend visits.
I am grateful and proud to say that, at 33 years old, he has earned his GED this year (and found he has an aptitude for math) and has been successfully living on his own for several years...as long as he consistently takes his medication. It has been a long journey, and after all that has happened he can say he now sees God's hand in his life throughout all of it. I spoke to him yesterday, and he said his greatest disappointment is that our mother did not live long enough to see his success. I pray for you, Michael, and your other children that you will have a "happy ending" to your family's story, whatever that means in your situation.
Thank you for writing this. My brother struggled with mental illness and like you say, getting help was next to impossible. Sending you and your son lots of love and hope. And hope that our country will figure this shit out.
Please look at food allergies as a possible cause. You are describing behavior I saw in a client's family several years ago that was based on an allergy to milk. The mother had identified the issue through trial and error, but no mental health or pediatric people believed her. She found a pediatric allergist at Johns Hopkins who was willing to evaluate her son and confirmed the allergy as the source of the outbursts.
Good luck and keep trying.
Dear Liz,
Have you heard of Family Constellation work? It's about healing unconscious contracts passed down through lineages. Bert Hellinger, a German, is responsible for this amazing healing process. According to Bert, mental illness is directly related to a murder upstream in which the person with the mental illness is trying to reconcile by playing both the victim and the perpetrator. Not sure where you live, but there are a few very competent facilitators that I could recommend. My mother is schizophrenic. I have done three Family Constellations in the course of a year and half, focusing on a topic that directly impacted my mother and her changes have been incredible significant. I am happy to share details.
I wish you the very best of luck!
Your essay was posted on my neighborhood listserv. I'm a gun control advocate, but I think gun control alone is too little, too late. I'm a foster parent, so I have some experience with traumatized kids. I generally assume that mass murderers either have some sort of mental health disorder, or experienced severe trauma as a child, or both. Either way, the solution has got to involve better mental health care. As I'm sure you well know, some parents are forced--due to lack of any other options--to relinquish their children to the foster care system so they can get the care they need. These kids DON'T need foster care or incarceration. My best wishes to you, and thanks for sharing your story.
So many people send you love and prayers, yet not knowing how to focus that love and intercession upon those in their own community who face the same fears.
We have faced similar difficulties in our family, to a lesser degree. You wrote, "I’m still stronger than he is, but I won’t be for much longer." I have wondered what on earth we would do after our strength runs out. This year - thanks be to God - things are better at school and outbursts are very rare.
I promise you my intercession. Let the hateful comments roll like water off a duck's back. Soak in and share the love.
I deeply feel for your child and what you are going through as a Mother . I do however have a problem with your diagnosis or "names being thrown out there" like Autism, ADD ect. I have a son on the Autism Spectrum, and in order for me to get a diagnosis of that we had to pay out of pocket for a neuropsychologist, along with occupational therapist and speech pathologist to do so. Not one counselor or teacher in our school or Dr's would ever throw out those names and because of liability. I feel your blog has done a disservice to those of us dealing with Autism spectrum and other disorders and what the public may now feel towards these children. That they are all on the breaking point to do this sort of thing. Please get your child evaluated by professionals before you throw out diagnosis on your blog before mentioning what "counselors" have thrown out there. You can not lump in our children with what you are going through.
Thank you so much for this post. It brought tears to my eyes because I myself am very familiar with the very unique pain caused by family members with mental illness---loving so intensely people who you know are dangerous to themselves and others. I thank you for your honesty and your strength to share your opinions which I happen to fully agree with. As a person who works every day with clients struggling with mental illness, and as a woman who has spent my entire life navigating the roller coaster ride that is loving male family members with mental illness- the abuse, the manipulation, the helplessness, the sadness, the rage, and most importantly the feelings of fierce unwavering love and protection for these people who are simply not getting the help that they need to function without more agony than the rest of us can imagine-I thank you kindly for your openness in the face of great suffering. Thank you for helping to further, on a national level, an understanding of the overwhelming need in our country to increase the availability and affordability of mental healthcare for all people and furthermore to decrease the stigma attached to each and every diagnosis in the DSM IV and beyond. I will carry you and your family with me throughout my days marching ahead. Stay strong.
Thank you for sharing this. Too often mothers that go through this are too ashamed to let others know. I too have gone through these issues ending in a 14 day psych hospital stay. So far things have been better but I live in fear it will happen again. You let me know I am not alone in this and I thank you!!
Has anyone ever done an EEG on Michael? You're story is so similar to that of our son, who was treated for limbic seizures at Michael's age and has successfully overcome the raging violence that used to overcome him. I will be glad to talk to you about it.
I agree, ask a psychologist where is the mind and they can't answer. How can they be the authority on the mind if they don't know where mind is? They are experts on prescribing legal drugs which many times makes the patient violent! Chemicals affect mind, Detoxify your child , go organic as much as possible, get rid of processed food, no more dairy, and most important apologize to your child for making him feel like the enemy. Give him a safe place without judgment. Keep his mind busy. Homeschool him so he can learn at his pace with his interests. Homeschooling also inhibits outside problems like being bullied. Rebuild trust mutually. He needs a calming environment where he feels safe, loved, and mentally stimulated in a positive way. Sacred geometry would be a good example. Love , patience, redirection of anger in a positive way. Have fun with him and the family laugh. Bring out the child that is scared and broken. I feel for you and know you have been mis-informed in some aspects. Your right the system is backwards for many different reasons. Having to call the police on your own child is ridiculous on multiple levels. Maam , there is no quick fix pill or treatment. With various seemingly unrelated aspects affecting childrens' minds. There is much research from the food we eat and water we drink, legal drugs, vaccines, environment chemicals, messages in music tv's and video games , to experiences in itself that must be done by you and by society. There are other ways to fix and overstand this problem utilizing love rather than fear. I agree this situation is long overdue in righteous remedy. I truly hope you and your family reunite in peace.
Dear Liz,
Have you heard of Family Constellation work? It's about healing unconscious contracts passed down through lineages. Bert Hellinger, a German, is responsible for this amazing healing process. According to Bert, mental illness is directly related to a murder upstream in which the person with the mental illness is trying to reconcile by playing both the victim and the perpetrator. Not sure where you live, but there are a few very competent facilitators that I could recommend. My mother is schizophrenic. I have done three Family Constellations in the course of a year and half, focusing on a topic that directly impacted my mother and her changes have been incredible significant. I am happy to share details.
I wish you the very best of luck!
Thanks for sharing what must be a very difficult story to tell. Your story will send a valuable and necessary message for the need for better mental health services for children who suffer this way. I have to ask why would you choose to use the name of Michael when the name Adam would have had a far greater impact in getting your message out.
He obviously needs to be checked thoroughly for Lyme Disease. Adam Lanza's autopsy desperately needs to check for this, as well. I have Lyme Disease and this sounds exactly like Lyme Rage, or Lyme Neuroborreliosis. Please have him checked!!
Your essay was posted on my neighborhood listserv. I'm a gun control advocate, but I think gun control alone is too little, too late. I'm a foster parent, so I have some experience with traumatized kids. I generally assume that mass murderers either have some sort of mental health disorder, or experienced severe trauma as a child, or both. Either way, the solution has got to involve better mental health care. As I'm sure you well know, some parents are forced--due to lack of any other options--to relinquish their children to the foster care system so they can get the care they need. These kids DON'T need foster care or incarceration. My best wishes to you, and thanks for sharing your story.
Just wanted to let you know I read your post, and as a mental health therapist for children, I totally understand your frustration with the system, and your need for help. Know that there are good clinicians out there, and if one does not help, find someone who will. A clinical psychologist and pediatric neurologist should do extensive testing to rule out the diagnoses that do not fit, and recommend one or more that do. Your son may also be a candidate for residential treatment, or in-home treatment, to help you discover patterns to his behavior and create crisis plans and behavior management plans. I know this may be expensive, but if you qualify for your state's Medicaid program or children's long term support waiver, this may help. Please don't despair. You will find help if you keep reaching out. If you need help or support, you may email me anytime. God bless you and your family.
Jennifer Robers Miller
I hestitate to mention this, as I do not want to waste your time: Dan Waschbusch at Florida International University runs a program for children like Michael. It may be something worth considering. Best of luck.
I'm sorry, but I could not spend the time to read all of the comments.
As a mom of a child with aspergers, I have a feeling the way it is now is not how it has always been. That your fear of your son has increased the way you have felt like you've HAD to respond for your own safety and the safety of your other children.
Something I wanted to share that may not have been said, seeing as it made such a massive improvement in my son, is that we found out he had digestive allergies, and bacterial dysbiosis in his gut, that after having it cleared up he became a different kid. I had a friend whose son was extremely violent and on several psychotic medicines and she found out that he was off the charts with exposure to arsenic. (which is on all of the wooden playground structures)
I have no idea if you've had your son tested for any biomedical issues (which the testing is all frowned on upon by the medical establishment), but many, many children are being helped by biomedical treatments.
I suggest reading Healing the New Childhood Epidemics:Autism, ADHD, Asthma and Allergies by Kenneth Bock and Cameron Stauth.
May God bless you with wisdom and healing for your son.
Ignore the goofy people who have criticized you. As a teacher in an alternative education school, mental health plays the biggest role in what I do everyday. I also second the suggestion in reading Dr. Amen's work-I picked up the book to read more into ADD for my child, but see so many of the students that I work with in the portraits that he describes. You are absolutely right of your entire point WHICH IS our society doesn't truly help those in need-regardless of how they can to be in that need-until it is too late.
Thank you for courageously sharing your experience and educating us about mental illness. I cannot imagine how difficult this must be for you. Please ignore the hate and ignorance and keep speaking out. It is my sincere hope that someone with the power to help you and your son will eventually listen. Stay strong.
Your son sounds so much like my kid brother was when he was younger. It started with puberty and got worse with age. He was called bipolar, ADHD and oppositional defiant...that glazed over look in their eyes where it seems like they're not even connected to the moment. After quitting school (got his GED later), developing a drug habit and a string of minor offenses, he landed himself in prison for burglary. My mom and I prayed so hard for the best outcome. He came out, married, had a family and is a changed human being. It's like he grew out of whatever it was. I personally think the mental health community is missing something. It feels like a different category of illness, a different kind of rage than what the DSM provides. Thank you for sharing your story. I know that fear, accompanied by that unending love. Some unfortunate souls just do not get the help they need.
Dear Liza,
thank you for sharing and God bless you and your family... there are answers for your boy and for you... perhaps not through the mainstream system, but hey, your son is a living proof that we are not designed to fit in the "box"... thanks to my children (9), i've been shown a way to so-called alternative treatments which give and opportunity to resolve whatever the "illness" that is holding us back by maintaining the reactive state of being... if you or anyone else here are interested i'm prepared to share in a greater detail what i now know about the process of healing... you can find me on facebook (Elka Leibovitch) or email me to leiboviv@hotmail.com. peace and blessings
Have you heard of the Hunter School? I read about it online and thought it sounded like something that you might be interested in reading more about. http://www.savingzach.org/testimonials.html
Travis Mays, get your hating out of here. You are ignorant, and prove by calling psych meds "mind-altering." They are mood-altering, not mind-altering. This is obviously a parent who has tried the usual stuff and is looking for better, more sustainable answers.
I hope a facebook page will be created for all these sympathetic mothers who have more than they can handle. Yes, it IS time for this country to give the mental health care needed. I hope together they can influence the mass media to give more attention to their plights and act on their behalf.
Perhaps it is time for alternative healing and at the level of Spirit. Sounds to me like possession of his innocent spirit/disassociation. Yes we can put psychological diagnosis on this, however, I have worked with many that have acted in psychotic ways and having been involved in Shamanic healing for 20 years know there are other alternatives besides hospitals and jails. Happy to correspond with anyone needing assistance.
This is my 7 year old daughter. She has OCD. It took 3 years to diagnose her then next 4 learning how to cope. Every day brings something new we have to adjust to. Others don't understand; OCD is not just about hand washing and turning off light switches. It's about patterns, repetitions, routines, and anxiety. I first thought it was rage, but it goes far beyond that.
We refused drugs for her and opted for an elimination diet of whole unprocessed organic foods and natural supplements. It's helping- A LOT!
Do your own research beyond that of doctors and government. Doctors couldn't help her, then wouldn't, only we are. We have been fed half truths and have had drugs pushed at us. We refused. She's now learning to cope, but it is taking everyone in her life to help and be on the same page.
Thank you for that very heartfelt story. I think more people need to read this!
I have a son very much like Michael--these tales chill me. Your comments are very precise and accurate, most people come by this knowledge by a long hard route. After some very dark times, we are all doing pretty well. If it helps, here is my advice.1-Forget about a diagnosis. 2-Forget about what your friends, family, and most experts tell you. No one will stand in your place to make the hard choices. 3-get as much help as you can--teachers, other parents, family members who get it, and some professionals actually know and understand. 4-get a good advocate, and/or a good lawyer. You will need them. Most programs intend "pre-incarceration". Know your rights, because you will need to rely on them at every turn. 5-know the limits, at some level your son can only survive if you do. 6-maturity of the kid seems to add a lot--hang in there and pick your battles. 7-we tried many interventions, including harmful drugs. By far the best has been a consistent behavioral plan. Trying to understand what motivates a kid like Michael is not that useful, having some ability to control the worst parts is. Hope that helps even a little--can not say I am sure about anything--but we have endured a lot of the behaviors you describe. At times we have despaired, and now it seems much better--our son is 20 now, so it's been a long haul. But I would not trade places with anyone on the planet-but neither would I wish this problem on anyone. Basically we do the best we can,get as much help as we can find, and hope it helps knowing we do not owe explanations to anyone. All the best.
Liza,
I just wanted to tell you that you are not alone! Likely, you have become aware of this based on the many replies to your post;)
I was just settling in from a long days work and watching the news unfold with the recent school shootings. It is one of many shootings over the years that continues leaving me feeling both sad, outraged, and grateful. Like yourself, my gratitude stemmed from a lonely place inside; a place of reality, that is gut wrenching, maternal desperation. What I want to share with you is that today I have hope, my son is now 20 and he is one of the most gentle, considerate and sweet young men that could be met. But at the early age of 8, I was calling the police before 7am, sometimes as much as three times a week. It was April 1999, when the school shootings in Littleton, Co took place that I realized for the first time, my son was capable of becoming a person whom could kill, and likely I would be his first. The grief of the reality was overwhelming! Luckily, I had the advantage of many close friends that were supportive of my feelings. Many, many hours and days prior I had taken my son to specialists, therapists, new age treatment facilities, counseling, behavior specialists, any and everything. His school had a special evacuation plan for his tantrums, and he had been expelled from 22 daycare centers... there were no solutions! Or so I was told, but it is not true, more like the real solutions are "buried". After much vocalization, my son was the admitted for residential treatment for 7 months. Many persons, even friends, judged me harshly for this decision, however, I will say that he has not been violent since, and has been baker acted less than a hand full of times in the past 12 years. When I saw a brief prelude of your upcoming NBC interview this evening, I felt that I should reach out to you and thank you for being so vulnerable.
Best, Melissa Collier
I can't stop thinking about your post. And can't thank you enough for having the courage to write it. We had great success with helping manage my son's "anxiety disorder" as it was diagnosed with holistic energy balancing. We went through the drug cycle as well but ditched them after they weren't working and he said he felt really down but didn't know why at age 10. I've learned a lot about highly gifted, sensitive, intuitive kids since then and I believe your son is one of these amazing kids. I'd love to help any way I can..or at least try. Please check out http://www.littlelightproject.com and if you feel comfortable reaching out, please do.
Over 1,800 comments... It's not likely that you're going to be able to read this, but i just wanted to add to the other voices on here. Thank you, thank you, thank you for being so open and forthcoming on your blog. Your words and your troubles are incredibly moving and so important to hear. I wish you all the best on your journey.
Thank you for that very heartfelt story. I think more people need to read this!
I know insane asylums are not the "to-do" thing now, but is there no where he can go that he will get the care he needs?
Gee Soccer Mom I have just read your blog on your son Michael and I am afraid I am looking into a crystal ball telling my future.
I have a 7yo daughter who is also extremely bright (there is a YouTube vid of her singing on my blog). She already acts exactly the same way as your son Michael. The first time I had to call the police on her was when she was only 6. She held a knife at my throat. It was a big carving knife and I was unable to grab it off her without grabbing the blade, I was sitting down when she did this. I had to talk her through putting the knife down. She is the tiniest little thing but when she loses it and rages she has punched holes in the walls of our house. She is also on medication which is helping her a little bit but not enough. She often talks about killing herself and others and even says stuff like she can't wait until I die so she can urinate on the ground I am buried under:( She claims to hear voices talking in her head. I am terrified. I am blogging about myy own mental illness (Bi-Polar and SAD) and the thought of her reliving my life is more than I can bear. She started hurting herself by cutting etc at the age of only 5 even though she had never seen anybody else doing it. I cannot even imagine how she thought to relieve her tension that way:(
I have 3 children (2 with mental illness, my eldest is 16) but my young daughter is my biggest concern. She is scary.
Their father left when she was only 6 months old but I later found out he was sexually abusing her up until she was 4 years old and shared this information with me.
I am lucky in that I am able to make a good income from home (my job is based around my blogging) so I am here with her before school, after school and weekends...Nobody else could care for her I don't think.
The neighbours have called the police on her as well as I have and this doesn't even worry her...she is not scared of anything. I get notes home from school about her behaviour but she sees this as OK because she likes being the 'naughty kid'at school and being in the time out room etc.
She is the tiniest, skinniest little thing but she is scary and I have no idea what the future holds for us. I send my thoughts of encouragement and my prayers to you:)
Kindest regards, Jodi
I don't have kids, so I can't even begin to imagine what you are going through... Please just know my heart & thoughts are with you, your son, and your family.
Holding a place for you of strength, courage and peace.
Well, just in case ...
If by chance you are not violently opposed to it, perhaps you would consider using the services of an exorcist (i.e., a Catholic priest trained as an exorcist), in case there a spiritual problem.
This is not meant as a joke.
You do not have to be Catholic to procure the services of an exorcist. Even if you despise the Catholic church and her teachings, you may still request that your case be reviewed for the Rite of Exorcism. The efficacy of any exorcism is not dependent upon your belief(s) or lack thereof.
Exorcisms require the approval the local Catholic bishop before the rite may be licitly performed and is not always granted, unless genuine demonic is believed to be involved.
You could visit the priest of your local Catholic parish for starters -- however (especially if you are not Catholic), I recommend that you call the local Catholic diocese directly.
If you do call, be persistent, as most Catholics do not know that every diocese is supposed to have a trained exorcist. Exorcisms are not something that the Church often publicizes these days (even if Hollywood does).
If you are not successful with attempts to have your case heard at the local diocese, call another Catholic diocese.
Good luck, and peace be upon you.
I can't stop thinking about your post. And can't thank you enough for having the courage to write it. We had great success with helping manage my son's "anxiety disorder" as it was diagnosed with holistic energy balancing. We went through the drug cycle as well but ditched them after they weren't working and he said he felt really down but didn't know why at age 10. I've learned a lot about highly gifted, sensitive, intuitive kids since then and I believe your son is one of these amazing kids. I'd love to help any way I can..or at least try. Please check out http://www.littlelightproject.com and if you feel comfortable reaching out, please do.
Kiersten
for those who are telling her she should take this post down, i disagree. she is not blinded to her sons pain. she is not ignoring him and locking him up. she simply does not know any other option. unless you have a child like this, you have no right to judge ANY parent on how they deal with it, because you cannot hope to understand. it is clear that she loves her son. it is clear that she cares for him. but i want to make something clear. this post should not be taken down. it opened my eyes and changed my life. people NEED to know this, to help them with their situations, or to make them understand. but this cannot be held in. im am sure this has helped so many people already, and it will affect many more lives. for those who dont know how to deal with this, who need help , who just need to KNOW and understand. i believe this should not be taken down.
My husband and i are very carefully avoiding talking about the shooting. If we do you see, we will have to admit that our daughter is more than capable of doing this. "Adopted" daughter. No less my daughter because she is adopted but because of the stygma of it being the mothers fault somehow, it helps to include this when i talk about her. Funny thing is people then say "Ohhhh, ADOPTED". Even if they dont say it out loud, their face says it for them.
For those seeking help, start with your school. Ask your childs dr to ask for an IEP. It MUST be responded to, and the school can help tremendously. Social services can also help. The county I adopted my daughter through has funded 2 years of residential treatment in a level 14 center. In 10 months she will be 18. Then we will be in a period where we are legally bound to see if the control we have been trying to teach her will keep those around her safe.
for those who are telling her she should take this post down, i disagree. she is not blinded to her sons pain. she is not ignoring him and locking him up. she simply does not know any other option. unless you have a child like this, you have no right to judge ANY parent on how they deal with it, because you cannot hope to understand. it is clear that she loves her son. it is clear that she cares for him. but i want to make something clear. this post should not be taken down. it opened my eyes and changed my life. people NEED to know this, to help them with their situations, or to make them understand. but this cannot be held in. im am sure this has helped so many people already, and it will affect many more lives. for those who dont know how to deal with this, who need help , who just need to KNOW and understand. i believe this should not be taken down.
Prayers
for those who are telling her she should take this post down, i disagree. she is not blinded to her sons pain. she is not ignoring him and locking him up. she simply does not know any other option. unless you have a child like this, you have no right to judge ANY parent on how they deal with it, because you cannot hope to understand. it is clear that she loves her son. it is clear that she cares for him. but i want to make something clear. this post should not be taken down. it opened my eyes and changed my life. people NEED to know this, to help them with their situations, or to make them understand. but this cannot be held in. im am sure this has helped so many people already, and it will affect many more lives. for those who dont know how to deal with this, who need help , who just need to KNOW and understand. i believe this should not be taken down.
for those who are telling her she should take this post down, i disagree. she is not blinded to her sons pain. she is not ignoring him and locking him up. she simply does not know any other option. unless you have a child like this, you have no right to judge ANY parent on how they deal with it, because you cannot hope to understand. it is clear that she loves her son. it is clear that she cares for him. but i want to make something clear. this post should not be taken down. it opened my eyes and changed my life. people NEED to know this, to help them with their situations, or to make them understand. but this cannot be held in. im am sure this has helped so many people already, and it will affect many more lives. for those who dont know how to deal with this, who need help , who just need to KNOW and understand. i believe this should not be taken down.
Try prayer, it always works!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VWUtf8HP4E&feature=share&list=PLvVKqwbjMxW0_J1uSaC0nzcUKOn_kubmJ
Please love Jesus, ask him for help and then help your son to love Jesus too rather than Harry Potter. Jesus is the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to God the Father except through Him. And God IS love.
Jesus turns the hearts of the parents to their children, and the hearts of the children to their parents.
Where is the father of your son in the story? If he doesn't is there to take the fathers role in the family, than please urge even more to know Jesus who is the perfect Son and lived and showed us a perfect relationship to God his Father, and so that through the Holy Spirit and Jesus in your son's heart he can get control of all situations, his angry, anxiety, and you all get a whole new life.
for those who are telling her she should take this post down, i disagree. she is not blinded to her sons pain. she is not ignoring him and locking him up. she simply does not know any other option. unless you have a child like this, you have no right to judge ANY parent on how they deal with it, because you cannot hope to understand. it is clear that she loves her son. it is clear that she cares for him. but i want to make something clear. this post should not be taken down. it opened my eyes and changed my life. people NEED to know this, to help them with their situations, or to make them understand. but this cannot be held in. im am sure this has helped so many people already, and it will affect many more lives. for those who dont know how to deal with this, who need help , who just need to KNOW and understand. i believe this should not be taken down.
for those who are telling her she should take this post down, i disagree. she is not blinded to her sons pain. she is not ignoring him and locking him up. she simply does not know any other option. unless you have a child like this, you have no right to judge ANY parent on how they deal with it, because you cannot hope to understand. it is clear that she loves her son. it is clear that she cares for him. but i want to make something clear. this post should not be taken down. it opened my eyes and changed my life. people NEED to know this, to help them with their situations, or to make them understand. but this cannot be held in. im am sure this has helped so many people already, and it will affect many more lives. for those who dont know how to deal with this, who need help , who just need to KNOW and understand. i believe this should not be taken down.
for those who are telling her she should take this post down, i disagree. she is not blinded to her sons pain. she is not ignoring him and locking him up. she simply does not know any other option. unless you have a child like this, you have no right to judge ANY parent on how they deal with it, because you cannot hope to understand. it is clear that she loves her son. it is clear that she cares for him. but i want to make something clear. this post should not be taken down. it opened my eyes and changed my life. people NEED to know this, to help them with their situations, or to make them understand. but this cannot be held in. im am sure this has helped so many people already, and it will affect many more lives. for those who dont know how to deal with this, who need help , who just need to KNOW and understand. i believe this should not be taken down.
I have lived your life! No seriously, your story is what I have lived for the last 20 years. My son Christopher is now almost 20 years and he is the same as your Michael. It was just so nice to have someone else put into words, what I have been going through. I was even deemed an unfit mother because I couldn't handle my son. Long story short, my son went to live with his father, who doesn't think that anything is wrong with him. He took him off all his medications, discontinued follow-up with his doctors and now my son is in a program in Vermont because no one can handle him. I look forward to following your journey because maybe your struggles can help me and others like me! Thank you so much for sharing such an important message!
Thank you for your honesty and frankness. I work with kids on the spectrum and with emotional disturbance. I realize how difficult it can be. Your son is lucky to have you. I hope and pray there will be a change to help families like yours. It's not fair. Hang in there and know that your words in this blog have helped so many. Thank you so very much for your words.
Thank you for this post. I am in the same sense Adama Lanza's big sister. I never had a safety plan, and still do not, other than to decide if I will stay at my parents' home when I visit for the holidays, if he's currently not in jail or in a rehab facility. He has been treated for many issues, most recently drug abuse, which are only symptoms of the real problem. Thank you for teaching your other children coping tactics. The worst thing to feel is to hope your brother succeeds in killing himself this time, or that he will go to jail forever. My parents keep bailing him out because they are afraid of his revenge. And, deep down we know he is not a bad person, but he has no way to cope with himself. I wish you and your family peace, and do hope that somehow we can help young people with this disorder. Namaste.
Your post "Thinking the Unthinkable" was posted by a local talk radio station on FB today. After reading it, I almost immediately commented. I instead went to your blog and read all your posts.
After finishing, I now completely understand why "Michael" treats you the way he does.
Instead of yelling, threatening and just generally making both my Mother's and my life miserable, I chose to divorce myself from her. I did not speak to her the last 19+ years of her life.
She died in May of this year and I truly felt a sense of relief for the first time in my life.
With any luck, "Michael" will learn to do the same thing.
Sounds like a terrible situation. Are you sure your boy isn't on the autistic spectrum? If he is diagnosable on that spectrum there's some interventions for him. Well, there is in Glasgow on the NHS. I don't know where you live but if you get your boy diagnosed with a label (I know not nice) then he can be treated
Been there, done that, I know EXACTLY, nearly verbatim your daily horror...still living it with #2 boy. The last decade has been the medical industry's nightmare in regards to the mentally ill. It continues to be one of the most ignored & swept under the rug issues. My heart aches for you.
Sounds like a terrible situation. Are you sure your boy isn't on the autistic spectrum? If he is diagnosable on that spectrum there's some interventions for him. Well, there is in Glasgow on the NHS. I don't know where you live but if you get your boy diagnosed with a label (I know not nice) then he can be treated
Sounds like a terrible situation. Are you sure your boy isn't on the autistic spectrum? If he is diagnosable on that spectrum there's some interventions for him. Well, there is in Glasgow on the NHS. I don't know where you live but if you get your boy diagnosed with a label (I know not nice) then he can be treated
Just don't teach your mentally ill child how to shoot a gun or a crossbow ("We Need to talk about Kevin") What the heck was Mrs.Lanza thinking?!
Sounds like a terrible situation. Are you sure your boy isn't on the autistic spectrum? If he is diagnosable on that spectrum there's some interventions for him. Well, there is in Glasgow on the NHS. I don't know where you live but if you get your boy diagnosed with a label (I know not nice) then he can be treated
Sounds like a terrible situation. Are you sure your boy isn't on the autistic spectrum? If he is diagnosable on that spectrum there's some interventions for him. Well, there is in Glasgow on the NHS. I don't know where you live but if you get your boy diagnosed with a label (I know not nice) then he can be treated
I'm so very sorry, and thank you so much for sharing your experience. I think people can "get" this right now in a way they never have before.
I grew up with a mother who was a paranoid schizophrenic, and I know what it's like to know you can't trust any good mood, any positive sign, because you will only be let down again. It's something so many people want to deny can be true.
The solution is not to lock up the mentaly ill as crimonals, but to hospitalize them for treetment and then release them to well individuals responsible for their supervision (family if possible) who can see they take meds and watch for problems they may have. Taking away guns will not work. I have delt with mentally ill in a clinical and an emergent setting as well. If they can't get a gun they will grab a knife, a stick, a brick , or even use their hands to attack. It is a sad sittuation, but disarming a whole country and taking away their ability to protect the lives of their families and self as well as their property is wrong. It has failed over and over again, Australia and England are two such cases. The guns were taken and all crimes went up including murder. When I was groing up everybody had guns and could sleep at night with their doors unlocked. You can't do that too many places now. However, I can because People know I will shoot to protect my family, self and property. However, I still lock my doors to be on the safe side. Very seldom does anyone come up my drive after dark. If they do they are lost and don't make the same mistake again.
And yes we are all armed.
Thank you for sharing your story. I am sorry some of the people on here said ignorant things. They just don't understand what it is like to have a child like this.
My son has similar issues and I agree with you entirely about mental health care.
Your blog is flying over the internet and is already making a difference in the world.
Thank you again.
You who judge this woman will be judged by your maker accordingly....you are sad, sad human beings. YOU who speak have NO idea what it is like to be a parent in THIS situation! SHAME ON ALL OF YOU!
I realize you already have 1890 comments to sift through, but my wife and I have been through the same with our son. At the age of 3 or 4, he had his mother cornered in the kitchen at knife-point over a piece of candy.
He now takes Kapvay, and as long as he gets his medicine on time, he's a totally different kid.
May I suggest that you are dealing with extreme human will, and you cannot overcome human will with human will. ALWAYS give him a chance to correct his mistake as you explain the reasonable consequence for his actions. Only if he does not correct his mistake should you follow through with the consequence. And explain with love that adults who do such-and-such go to jail, or lose their job, etc. If my son had on the wrong pants and insisted that it was okay when I knew it wasn't, I would have let him go to school. If there was some reason he absolutely could not make his own mistake in this instance, and when I insisted, he threatened me, I would have told him how much I love him, and lovingly explained that it is important to respect authority, - that employers, landlords, police and judges have authority over adults, and when adults don't respect authority there are much worse consequences. I would have explained that I love him and want him to learn this important lesson, so he had a choice: lose video privileges for a day, or correct his mistake (by apologizing in this instance). I'm pretty sure he would correct his mistake and apologize. Your son may simply be modelling your strong will, ie you are getting back the willfullness you are using in the relationship. Since he is powerless in the relationship, he feels helpless, and strikes out with the only power he feels he has, which is ultimately his own life. I say this as someone who has had to face up to, and correct, my own willfullness as I saw its consequences in my parenting.
I admire your bravery and dedication to raising your son and know you love him very much. But I have to say this: You have to get your other kids out of there. They *will not be able to thrive* in this environment. I understand the challenges in this, but -- would you let them be around your older son if he wasn't your son?
Www.caloteens.com
I'm sorry about your son and the mental problems he has. I know how little support is available for those of "us" with mental health issues. Four years ago, I was diagnosed with PTSD and a severe panic disorder stemming from a childhood in which I was sexually abused from the ages of 7 until I was 15. Three years ago, in a rage and day of panic, my therapist and partner drove me to a local hospital, because there was fear I was going to commit suicide. The hospital refused to evaluate me and told my therapist and partner to take me home and "keep an eye on me."
If people close to me felt I was a danger to others, I would hope they would seek out as much treatment as is available. If no service is available, take me to a police station and tell them to lock me up until I find a way to get better.
These days, I am better... much better. I spend most of my days fighting to keep children safe from sexual abuse and child predators. Some of my abuse took place in a classroom and I have dedicated most of the last few years trying to protect children from anything I have experienced. I could've never imagined I'd also be adding to my many letters I write and send to Senators about changing the laws on sexual abuse, that I need to write in my letters about unecessary ownership of assault rifles and semi-automatic handguns, to protect children from being shot in their classrooms.
Such terrible violence.
I'm sorry about your son and his violent behavior, but I cannot help to say in contrary of your own words, if he is exhibiting violent behavior toward others, he, along with the rest of us would be better off if your son was in a prison cell. It pains me to say that, because your son is just 13 years-old, but will he become the next Adam Lanza? There's no doubt in my mind that you love your son dearly and I hope you never have to experience the grief of a horrible action he might commit.
You and your family are in my heart.
Peace out!
Rich Green
(Childhood Sexual Abuse Victim & Child Advocate)
DrivenByRage76@gmail.com
I'm confused. The Blue Review clearly credits this story to The Anarchist Soccer Mom, who in turn credits it to The Blue Review. Where did this story originate?
Thank you for your brave, honest post. I have dedicated my 16-year professional career to serving and teaching children like Michael. It is such an uphill battle with just enough sporadic rays of hope to keep me and my co-workers going. I have no children of my own...these are my children. I work in the public school setting in a program that serves students with severe emotional and behavioral disorders that have been unsuccessful in their regular school settings. Your comment about this being free public babysitting was so poignant. We are a group of extremely talented individuals, but we are so underfunded and under supported that many days it feels like all we can do is keep students safe from each other until it is time to go home. This population is so misunderstood and honestly, it seems that those in power either don't know they exist or they ignore their existence. We have got to build communities that combine agencies and resources in order to better serve these students and their families. I'm currently working to complete my EdS in Mental Health in Schools and am struggling to figure out how I can use this degree to best serve the children and families who are so dear to my heart....
Oh, and I just read the horrid and needlessly blaming and inflammatory comments from kmackenz.
This is the kind of fingerpointing that is so counterproductive. Kmackenz doesn't know anything about your child. And mental illness is not anybody's fault. How is that this individual thinks their comments will be productive to you or anyone else dealing with this kind of situation. That is truly the insanity, when we're not willing to identify it as such, but instead choose to make someone else's fault.
My heart goes out to you as well. As a NYS Parole officer it was almost impossible for me to find treatment for anyone with a mental illness. When will the country and the individual states stop wasting vast amounts of money, and sending money to other countries when it is so badly needed here at home for care, treatment and housing for the mentally ill. It is appalling that we think so little of ourselves that we cannot provide help to these poor souls and their families. My heart goes out to you as well. Thank you for a wonderful well written article. Lets hope things begin to change.
I applaud our courage and honesty to address the REAL issue at hand...controlling gun laws, higher level of school security, etc. will not cure this problem. Mental illness is indeed at the root of so many of this tragic events and your strength to be the voice calling in the wilderness is so vital. May it grow into a roar that can no longer be dismissed - but rather solutions found for these kids who are so deeply loved but desperately in need of intervention!
I've lived your life. My son is bi polar and was violent on a daily basis. I can't tell you how many black eyes, split lips, and black and blues I've had over the years. He tried to kill me several times, destroyed our home (kicked out windows, punched holes in walls, demolished furniture, and more). They told me the same thing-put him in jail. I refused and fought for right school placements, hospitalizations, proper medication, counseling and training for myself. My son still has problems but he's never been in jail, never used drugs(except prescribed meds), and didn't end up permanently in an institution as doctors predicted.He spent many years in and out of mental hospitals,and for the safety of myself and my family ,when he turned 19 I had to put him out of our house and rent him a small apartment. I taught him to live independantly I still worry that something will set him off badly enough to send him back into his violent behaviors. I still worry that one night he'll come to kill me,my husband or my daughter. Having a mentally ill child is a never ending responsibility, labor of love,and a never ending fear of what he or she is capable of doing.
My heart goes out to you as well. As a NYS Parole officer it was almost impossible for me to find treatment for anyone with a mental illness. When will the country and the individual states stop wasting vast amounts of money, and sending money to other countries when it is so badly needed here at home for care, treatment and housing for the mentally ill. It is appalling that we think so little of ourselves that we cannot provide help to these poor souls and their families. Thank you for a wonderful well written article. Lets hope things begin to change.
Thank you for writing this. I'm glad you changed your son's name and I hope you're able to maintain his privacy as this post seems to be going viral. I just wanted to let you know that I appreciate what you wrote and that I know parents who will find solace in reading your post, to know they aren't alone.
I'm a pediatrician who tries hard to help kids in Michael's situation and their parents. It feels like a big victory when the kids improve but it can be such a struggle along the way. I often feel I have far too little to offer. In-home counseling is so helpful, but so difficult to get. Medications sometimes work at the cost of significantly subduing the child's personality and spunk. Parenting strategies really help but is anyone a perfect parent? All the time? No way!
Thank you for sharing your family's story. I hope that people read it and understand a little better. We are all too quick to judge without walking in others' shoes. I wish you and your kids the best!
This might be a place of healing and help for you. I know it is so very hard:
www.postinstitute.com
Thank you for the courage to share this. It's so important. As a psychiatric nurse for many years, working with adolescents, I feel this so deeply. Love to you.
ABOUT SCHIZOPHRENIA:
http://www.orthomed.org/isf/isfbrochure.html
Mental Illness or Allergy?:
http://www.wholeapproach.com/newsletter/archives/2003/04_April.html
Gluten Sensitivity and the Impact on the Brain:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-david-perlmutter-md/gluten-impacts-the-brain_b_785901.html
Is Gluten Making You Depressed?
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-breakthrough-depression-solution/201105/is-gluten-making-you-depressed
DIET FOR BIPOLAR DISORDER:
http://www.livestrong.com/diet-for-bipolar-disorder/
Dr. Oz's Worry Cure & Diet Plan:
http://www.doctoroz.com/videos/dr-ozs-worry-cure-diet-plan
Nutrition and Traumatic Brain Injury:
http://www.iom.edu/~/media/Files/Report%20Files/2011/Nutrition-and-Traumatic-Brain-Injury/Nutrition%20TBI%202011%20Report%20Brief.pdf
Food & Mood Diary:
http://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/content/assets/PDF/159555/MHF-Food-and-mood-diary.pdf
I am not a mental health professional, nor do I know if this has already been brought up (At over 1,900 posts, someone has probably already done so!) but has the idea of bi-polar disorder been discussed with the psychiatrists?
Thank God somebody has the wherewithal to print the horrible truthful imaginings of what it is like to have a child that suffers with mental demons.
It impacts the entire family.
There is no hope. There is no place to go, no place to turn to, no help is ever offered other than ..."here, take this pill, go home to your family".
As President Kennedy had personal connection (his sister) with mental retardation, he opened the door for avenues of help for those afflicted with the mental disabilities act. "Mental retardation ranks with mental health as a major health, social, and economic problem in this country. It strikes our most precious asset, our children." —John F. Kennedy, February 5, 1963
Unfortunately, and tragically, at the same time doors were opening for those with mental retardation, multiple cuts and hospital closings were occurring for those with mental illness.
Without the intervention and supporting legislation and with a renewed interest in mental illness, these tragic massacres will more than likely occur again and again.
Everybody suffers.
Kudo's to the mother brave enough to write about the atrocities of mental illness. Not an easy subject to write about.
you probably won't read this comment, but if you do: your description of your son is also a description of me in my teens. you are right to be alarmed. however, for me, i learned that i had/have a severe sensitivity to chemicals and once my system was detoxified, i got the be to girl that i was during the "good" times, because that is who i am. best to you, k
I have twin sons which are on the Autistic Spectrum who are 13. They share many of the traits that Michael has. At 160 lb and 180 lb they are getting to a size that is harder to control than earlier. They have been in residential treat (10 days) several times. With Meds and Therapist every week they are doing better!
This was our household and the ticking time bomb of a young man about to go through puberty. We found out he had a food allergy, celiac disease and couldn't have gluten at the age of 10. He is 20 now and is a different person but it was a long hard road even after going gluten free.
I will pray for you, for opportunities to be placed before you to help you, your son and the rest of your family because they are just as affected - as I well know.
http://www.livesinthebalance.org/
I attended a workshop by Ross Greene and he offers this website of resources for kids and parents, especially the ones that traditional punishment doesn't work for...
My heart goes out to you and your family. My son has Asperger as well as his best friend. My son is loved by all his friend is picked on and tormented and his anger builds within him day by day. His mother and his grandmother try their best but the schools do nothing for him. They blame the child. I have seen how the kids torment him. He will react quickly and sharply thankfully with words and not violence but something that no kid should go through. I have read other comments on this page where they blame you, and everybody else. Yes it is a combination. For years I would let my son get away with things and say he can't help it until my boyfriend say I wasnt helping him any by ignoring it. I have started hold him accountable for things and he has stopped. I am seeking out more help but like you they can't find an exact diagnosis. I have found like someone else said that an outlet helps. My son loves to draw and write silly stories and make videos. I wish you the best. THanks for sharing
Hope the pic isn't really of your son, since you don't have your own pic on your profile.
Don't know if this post is true, but what is true is that mental health issues must be discussed. But not just diagnoses and meds, but the true underlying cause of much mental illness...the artificial, divorced from nature world that we've created. Unless and until we are willing to acknowledge that our culture has us plundering resources to work at mostly jobs that offer no real social benefit so we can buy stuff we don't need that ends up in a landfill ... and has us so distracted and rushed that we don't have time to have a real conversation with our kids ... 'mental illness' will continue to be with us. Statistics show that countries with wider income gaps have higher levels of mental illness. We stress ourselves, our kids, and everyone around us to the point of insanity. Not to mention the outrageous pollution and toxins we allow our children to constantly be exposed to, including in our food. Only an insane species would live this way. But, hey, we can just medicate or incarcerate it away.
Start gardening with your son, don't feed him toxins, get chemicals out of your home (well, the ones you can), and help him realize that he is, in fact, connected to everything, not apart and alone.
Have you tried changing your son, Michael's diet? He sounds as if he needs a high protein diet along with B vitamins and Niacin Amide.
The niacin should be taken with meals. If you consult with a trained dietician and an holistic doctor (MD), you could get some help setting up a diet to help Michael.
When bodies have a requirement for certain vitamins, etc., then it affects behavior and that behavior can be adverse to the norm. The person is unaware that they have a need for something or that there is something lacking in their diet that could help them.
Before you give up on him, please try addressing his dietary needs and any vitamins that his body is requiring.
Niacin is supplied in yeast, liver, wheat germ, and kidneys. Some is also supplied in fish, eggs, and nuts.
Sounds as if Michael has a drastic need for unrefined foods and niacin amide especially. Please work with him in explaining that his diet may be causing him his distress and that with a special diet, just for him, he will begin to feel better. And he will!!
Please try this for Michael!
Barbara
Thank you from the bottom of my heart for taking the time to elloquently write this, and for taking the time for your son. You are doing a service to him and the rest of society for documenting your struggle. I hope that you get the help that you need.
I relate to your story so closely as a sibbling and it is absolutely refreshing to read this. My heart goes out to you and your family. The most difficult thing about my brother? Learning to accept that things never get better, that the best we can do is to try to have crisises spaced out as much as possible and keep them as mellow as possible. This life is hard. Judgement is hard.
Thank you for being so brave to share your story. I cannot imagine the pain that you are going through. I have a son with special needs and his anger has scared us many times. It has gotten better as he has gotten older so we are hopeful for the future. You and your family are in my thoughts.
@Macey I think the big difference to me is how loving parents and siblings so easily become the target of severe violence. Really, a gentle and kind person with mental illness is usually loved and supported. A violent and thuggish child is feared by all, family members who are trying to help, and everyone else who are simply trying not to be the next target. Macey's attitude show this massive bitterness and ego centric drive, and I am not surprised at the vitriol.
Society needs places where the Macey's of this world can live their lives in comfort and safety, and away from a vulnerable public. Not jails, but not group homes. Places where their violence can be contained and managed, but where they have an opportunity to grow out of their violent behavior...
Thank you, thank you, thank you. What you wrote is everything I've been thinking since Friday, what I think everytime there is a horrific incident like this, but I'm too afraid to verbalize it. "Could this be my son someday? How do I stop it?" My son has been diagnosed with a million different things, but the one everybody hears is 'bipolar'. As soon as that word makes an appearance, people's good nature goes away, their kindness and willingness to help stops, and a wall goes up. For a long time I thought they were angry at me, for having my child diagnosed as such a thing, and then I realized, this bitterness and resentment is towards my son, a beautiful, caring, genius 9yr old boy that has the horrible misfortune of being labled "Mentally ill". No one wants to help us, but no one would pause to blame us if somethimg terrible happened.
Thank you so much for this wonderful article, with the eye opening heading. I could also write this tragic story with the heading of "I am Adam Lanza's sister". My brother is in his mid- 50's and has refused to accept that he is mentally ill ( bi-polar). He can be high functioning at times- has even started and run a successful business- but has been admitted for treatment against his will over 25 times in the last 30 years. After his former wife left, our parents died and other brother died- I am it. I spent four months this summer living in fear that he would hurt someone- he was off his meds, and getting him treatment was virtually impossible since he has refused to allow anyone access to his history. He is smart enough- even in the midst of insanity- to know how to play the system. We managed to get him involuntarily committed once, and the police committed him twice. In the midst of this, I was getting reports of wrecked cars, speeding tickets at high speeds, and attempts to get an assault rifle ( among many other things). The police could do nothing without a court order, and the judge would not order him committed unless I saw him within 24 hours- and I lived 12 states away. The police actually picked him up several times, and my brother was able to act as if he were perfectly fine- so he would be let out of jail after wrecking cars, etc. He was also able to buy his way out of jail- courts were more than willing to keep things off his record by letting him pay a high fine. So within the space of three days he wrecked three cars and drove at 90 miles an hour- but was never held accountable by the court. There are so many things wrong with the laws around mental health- starting with the law that they have the right to make decisions for themselves and can choose not to allow anyone to have access to their history. I found that even the treating facilities had no idea of my brother's history- there is no central data base for information/mental illness admissions and each time he was treated it was as if it was his first admittance. He has been involuntarily committed in at least 6 different states, yet none knew his history. And NAMI was a joke- I called a number of times for help and they could offer nothing- apparently the laws also change by state, and maybe even county within a state. Thank God for a few brave clinicians who talked in "code" and "hypotheticals" to me to give me an idea of what he was doing. But even they clammed up when his "advocate" ( yes, he gets to have an advocate!) threatened them if they continued to talk to me. I could go on and on- but we have got to do something about mental illness treatment and laws. My heart goes out to you, soccer mom. Thank you for the courage to speak up.
I want to help you in any way you think I can. I am a father of four. I am moved by your openess - you speak the truth whan it must be so hard. You are not alone and I hope your strength will change our nation. sthalleran@gmail.com.
I am sure you've explored every avenue for helping your son, but I have to ask if you've ever had him tested for parasite - recognizing this is somewhat controversial and not acknowledged by western medicine, treating (cleansing) the body of parasites has been known to significantly reduce most of the signs of such behaviours your describe in your article. You are a brave and brilliant mother and I commend your strength and will. I just wanted to ask because I know there are alternative solutions that can help.
@Macey -- Thanks for speaking out. For all of those who are tempted to just ignore what Macey's said, please take a moment to put yourself in this kid's shoes. Have you read through the rest of the blog? It clearly states that this boy's father was abusive to him and then had him sent to prison 4 times when he was 11 just for "not doing his chores" (note: in the timeline given here that was BEFORE the violent ideation began) and that at that point his mother believed that the father was acting in a controlling, manipulative way. But in her later blog posts she references threatening to send him back to prison for silly childhood things like "poking" his brother in the car.
To Liza, I urge you to recognize the degree to which "Michael's" issues may be related to the abuse that you allowed to occur. I'm sorry to sound so rude, but do you honestly think that there's no connection between receiving abuse and being under the constant fear of going to prison (do you realize how violent juvenile prisons can be? Have you researched whether he was further victimized there?) and the fact that he's acting out now. You're making him a scapegoat for all the problems that you failed to address in your own marriage.
I'm sure he needs help, but it also sounds like he needs someone to understand that his emotions are legitimate, that his anger with you is legitimate, and that he needs someone to listen to him and be in his corner, instead of posting his picture all over the internet and saying that he's a future mass murderer. I can't even fathom how painful this must be to him, and just another instance of his family dramatically failing him.
Just thinking where are the fathers of these Adam Lanza's?
You are an awesome mom and you will not alone. You have the support of all mothers and we all care about your child.
1. I am bipolar and am still alive because my mom never stopped praying for me and never stopped communicating with me.
2. Yes, SOMETHING MUST BE DONE AND SOON.
3. That something must be done by psychiatrists, therapists, etc., parents, caretakers, etc., and those of us living successfully w mental illness. How about something like A MILLION MOMS OF MENTALLY ILL MARCH ON WASHINGTON?!
I have lived in your shoes. It sadly ended when my adopted son did commit a real crime and was put in juvenile detention. The prosecutor sat across from us, looked me in the eye and told me my son was a serial killer in the making. We fought for 4 years to keep him in treatment, ending with the court ruling that he was "better" and could be back in society. Another stint in jail for the same issue a year later proved them wrong. While he now lives 1000 miles away from us, I live in fear of the phone call that will come telling me he has finally snapped and killed someone. We fought to get him all the help we could, and sadly there is nothing further we can do but wait for the explosion and horror to happen. I will be vilified, I will be questioned as to how I could raise a son like this. But I know like you do, I have done everything in my power to prevent it. ANd my three other kids have lead normal lives - much more so when he left our home. They are productive wonderful adults now. Whatever is in his brain that is wrong, just cant be touched without further medical intervention. And no one can force that on my adopted son.
Emotional and understood. My 11-year-old son has issues though not to this extreme. I now homeschool him so that he lives a calmer life with a quality education. But one day, when his anger is high, I also will not be physically stronger than him. I fear that day.
Just thinking...where are the fathers of these Adam Lanzas?
You're absolutely right: The national discussion must now be about mental illness, not guns. I can relate to your story because of my experience with my nephew, and I know that your lack of viable options to help your son and the rest of your family is horribly and incredibly all too real. My thoughts and prayers are with you.
Liza, I just read your article. I don't want to IN ANY WAY make light of the obvious difficulties you face. A very famous man once said that as a teen, he attacked his brother with an axe and set the family home on fire. At the age of 15, his mother took him to a talk by a nutritionist, and that was his salvation. That man who was a terror in his youth was Jack LaLanne, the founding father of modern fitness. It would be far better to have your son's diet examined and altered by a super-nutritionist like Dr. Joel Fuhrman or Dr. John McDougall than have him swallowing mind-altering drugs with God knows what kind of side effects. It seems like the mental health professionals you have consulted have all run out of ideas. Have they ever expressed any curiousity about what your family eats day to day? Some brains are very sensitive, and without the right nutrients something may get out of whack. It's not an easy solution but it may get at the "pathology" as you put it. There has been much press given to the nation's epidemic of obesity, cancers and cardiovascular diseases. Wouldn't the nutritional problems affecting us physically also affect us mentally? As a nation we are in poorer health than we were just a few decades ago. Medicating problem children without first overhauling the diet is a criminal act in my opinion. God bless you and I pray something works out with your son!
Hi I am a mom to a 10 year old diagnosed with PANDAS. I urge you to explore this. Your son very well may be fighting something medical and not mental. Read the book Saving Sammy. And please dont brush it off if he has never had strep. It doesnt matter, there are many other infections that can trigger PANDAS.
There is a cure for an extremely bright child, who has violent tendencies. It's a very simple solution. I know, because I was a child like that, and my IQ is also off the charts. The anger comes from seeing something or some action he desires, and proceeding to act in any way possible to accomplish his goal. Out of pure frustration, he explodes because he feels that no one understands his presumed clear thought. The cure is introducing an understanding and purpose to life that is pure and logical. Once that purpose is understood with such clarity, life becomes a challenge to conform to this purpose. The purpose in life that I speak of is life itself. To be a benefit to life is the purpose of life, all life. To understand the physics that support this supposition and to see the clear and straight line of logic that demonstrates undeniable proof of a Supreme Being, such consolation brings a higher meaning to life than merely his own selfish desires. Sure, he will still always be excessively “assertive” and even be described as “overly sensitive”, but, he will never be violent and will never pose a threat his loved ones or society. He will face many challenges in life, and many people will choose to not like him because they don’t understand him. With good fortune, he will marry a strong woman who will give him further purpose in life. And if he is fortunate to have children, he will finally understand the real purpose of life, to give life again, and to take responsibility to care for it and love it, because it is a part of him and his purpose.
not sure How many times this will appear. Please look into PANDAS. even if your son has never had strep. there can be other Triggers. You may need to think about treating him medically rather than mentally. Read Saving Sammy please. Please at least keep an open mind to PANDAS.
As a mental health professional committed to prioritizing and including parents voices, I am extremely moved. This is the discussion we need to be having...to compassionately support those with mental health conditions and their families. To provide empowering mental health services, not jails.
For the past 12 years, I have been touched by the amazing work at Wediko Children's Services. I have been able to work 10 summers in the residential progam and currently run our New York office, supporting parents who have their child at our residential setting. Please check out their residential services at www.wediko.org
I lived this. We called our daughter's problems the "Alphabet Soup Disorder." She was every three letter diagnosis you could think of. We were also told that her best route to treatment was in the juvenile justice system.
It is a long story. If you ever need to talk to someone who has been there, I am happy to oblige.
Splitter
Wow, it isn't about you. And while you, and Michael, are victims of the disease, your and his caregivers are also put in a desperate and unenviable situation. You cannot expect the world to bend over backwards for you AND smile while doing it, and you cannot pretend that the mother is the sole or main catalyst for psychotic behavior just because you are unwilling to confront your own role in emotionally hurting your caregivers.
You are absolutely correct. This a mental health issue. In the case of Adam Lanz, a mother who has guns in the house with a child like Adam, shares the blame for his actions.I have seen with my own eyes friends who share your story. There are two kinds of parents in these situations those who deny their child is mentally ill and those like you who beg for help. We do nothing for either of you.
The effort should go beyond the USA. Mental illnesses should be understood (and treated, not medically neglected as they are in Mexico), not stigmatized. Your blog is very brave.
I am grateful for your bravery in discussing this difficult subject. I have several family members who suffer from bipolar disorder and ADHD and they are ridiculed in our society as being crazy or insane, when they are just ill individuals who need help. The mind can become sick, just like the body. I am praying for your son and for you as well. God be with you, and may you be successful in this fight. You have my full support. God bless you!
You truly are a very inspirational mother. It is very sad to live with mental illness. My brother has schizophrenia. Everyday is a challenge with "demons" and "evilness" for him. It is such a sad life. Your story reminded me too much of what I go through everyday. I really wish people would stop saying, "I'm sorry for your brother" and instead make a difference. We need to help spread mental illness awareness! Yes, I do feel terrible for the victims killed in mental illness attacks but part of me feels even more terrible for the killer because he/she has a mental illness that nobody knows about. People are scared of the word mental illness. But society needs to change!
Please look into PANDAS. https://www.facebook.com/groups/PANDASParentsGroup/
I'm not sure where you live, but there is an incredible doctor in Westlake Village, CA, named Dr. Edward Kassman, who tends to be the doctor people go to when no one and nothing else has helped. Maybe he can help Michael? http://www.ucomparehealthcare.com/drs/edward_kassman/
I urge you to consider a Paleo diet - as an intervention for your son. I am a physician, using paleo diet to treat traumatic brain injury and mental health problems and am studying this in others with progressive multiple sclerosis.
check out my work at www.terrywahls.com.
Liza Long,
No, you are not Adam Lanza's mother. You, Ms. Long, are a responsible parent. You Ms. Long appropriately took responsibility as a parent by transporting your mentally disturbed son by force, against his will to be committed and get the help he needs. Did you have guns in your home knowing that your son is mentally disturbed? No, you do not have guns in your home because you know how dangerous it is to you, your family, and the community to have guns in your home with a mentally disturbed person living in that same home. You Ms. Long are a responsible wonderful parent. You Ms Long, took responsibility to protect your family and your community. Ms. Long, you are not Adam Lanza's mother. If Adam Lanza's mother were as responsible as you, 26 people (including 20 children) would be alive and well today in Newton Connecticut.
I urge you to consider a Paleo diet - as an intervention for your son. I am a physician, using paleo diet to treat traumatic brain injury and mental health problems and am studying this in others with progressive multiple sclerosis.
check out my work at www.terrywahls.com.
You definitely need a highly trained professional. Stop messing with social workers and police. The antipsychotics are probably causing great harm. Please check out Dr. Peter Breggin, as well as teach son transindental meditation, which has been shown in research to be very helpful. A family systems approach would also be very helpful. Do not give up!!!
My heart aches for you. I'm 27 and expecting my first child. I also have Bipolar 1, borderline personality disorder, PTSD, OCD, Anxiety, Panic, and Major depression.
When I was 8, I started acting out. I would physically fight my mother on a daily basis. I would scream, yell, cry, hit, punch, kick, scratch. I was a handful to say the least. I had my good times too, like Michael. But when I was mad, you didn't want to be around me. My dad asked a therapist if I could possibly be Bipolar, she said no, that I was too young.
When I was 21, I had my first huge manic spell. I left my boyfriend of a year, and started living out of my car and stealing metal with a horrible man and his friends, thinking I was doing nothing wrong. I broke into my dads house, and stole thousands of dollars worth of stuff.
The man I was spending my time with got arrested, and two hours later, I got arrested. My dad came and picked me up and told me to start looking for homeless shelters. My step-mom didn't want me in their house after what I did. My mom had to come home early from a trip, because my Grandfather called her and said that my dad couldn't make it through this. That he was going to die if I stayed with them. (I stayed three nights) She came home and took me to a psychologist who diagnosed me with Bipolar. I was put on Depakote, which I don't recommend. It worked if I took it, but I also gained almost 150 lbs on it. My boyfriend welcomed me home after going to treatment for 2-3 months. An outpatient program.
I've had a lot of ups and downs since then, am now on better medication, and I never forget to take it.
I don't know if this could be what Michael has, but reading your story brought me back to my childhood. My parents were good parents, but I have a mental issue that makes it hard to handle me.
I wish you and your family the best of luck, and hope Michael can find the help he needs.
I urge you to consider a Paleo diet - as an intervention for your son. I am a physician, using paleo diet to treat traumatic brain injury and mental health problems and am studying this in others with progressive multiple sclerosis.
check out my work at www.terrywahls.com.
Again, for emphasis, in hopes it will jump out at you amongst the 1945 comments thus far (and to any other parents and/or "mental" patients out there:
Get a notebook. Write down EVERY SINGLE THING eaten (described in detail, as it's often an ingredient that is the culprit) and times...in detail. Write down every mood swing and time of occurance...in detail.
A pattern WILL emerge. One you can control.
Abnormal can almost ALWAYS be explained and corrected by diet. It's different for each individual, however, as individual sensitivities/allergies are very specific to that person.
My heart goes out to you, but I know something you probably need to know too.
I've been to 3 different mental hospitals, because of severe depression throughout my life. Each one abused its patients and lied. At one of them, they would pull a few people at random out of bed around 3 in the morning and pull them to a room they called the "time out room". They backed the kid into a wall, push their head forcefully into it, and then throw them on the ground and kick them.
If the kid tried to fight back or resist, they would threaten to tie you to a table and inject "medicine" into you. You were left there until you calmed down after being beat up, then they put you back in your room and pulled in another kid.
Usually they took 5 kids each morning, usually the same ones. I had to go through it twice. Each hospital I went to had some form of horrible abuse. No one believes you, they just say "He doesn't like where he is, he's lying because he's upset." You're crazy, they don't believe you.
If your child says anything claiming he was hit/yelled at, take it seriously. Those places are horrible.
Its amazing, things with my son haven't gotten to that extreme, but he occasionally flys off the handle and goes on a rampage screams at my daughters. My son is 13, and as sweet as an angel but if he doesn't get his way he gets very angry... I don't want to be another statistic help!!
My heart goes out to you, but I know something you probably need to know too.
I've been to 3 different mental hospitals, because of severe depression throughout my life. Each one abused its patients and lied. At one of them, they would pull a few people at random out of bed around 3 in the morning and pull them to a room they called the "time out room". They backed the kid into a wall, push their head forcefully into it, and then throw them on the ground and kick them.
If the kid tried to fight back or resist, they would threaten to tie you to a table and inject "medicine" into you. You were left there until you calmed down after being beat up, then they put you back in your room and pulled in another kid.
Usually they took 5 kids each morning, usually the same ones. I had to go through it twice. Each hospital I went to had some form of horrible abuse. No one believes you, they just say "He doesn't like where he is, he's lying because he's upset." You're crazy, they don't believe you.
If your child says anything claiming he was hit/yelled at, take it seriously. Those places are horrible.
Its amazing, things with my son haven't gotten to that extreme, but he occasionally flys off the handle and goes on a rampage screams at my daughters. My son is 13, and as sweet as an angel but if he doesn't get his way he gets very angry... I don't want to be another statistic help!!
My heart goes out to you, but I know something you probably need to know too.
I've been to 3 different mental hospitals, because of severe depression throughout my life. Each one abused its patients and lied. At one of them, they would pull a few people at random out of bed around 3 in the morning and pull them to a room they called the "time out room". They backed the kid into a wall, push their head forcefully into it, and then throw them on the ground and kick them.
If the kid tried to fight back or resist, they would threaten to tie you to a table and inject "medicine" into you. You were left there until you calmed down after being beat up, then they put you back in your room and pulled in another kid.
Usually they took 5 kids each morning, usually the same ones. I had to go through it twice. Each hospital I went to had some form of horrible abuse. No one believes you, they just say "He doesn't like where he is, he's lying because he's upset." You're crazy, they don't believe you.
If your child says anything claiming he was hit/yelled at, take it seriously. Those places are horrible.
If there's any way I can shoot you an e-mail, I'd appreciate it - I have a reply, which I've posted to my own facebook and would love to share elsewhere, but it's a bit too long to stick in a comment. Send me an email, at somebodybond at gmail, or look at the facebook post directly: https://www.facebook.com/notes/will-bell/my-response-to-adam-lanzas-mother/10151128299671707 - I'd appreciate it.
I am a Special Education Teacher at a special facility in Wisconsin that provides residential treatment, day school programming, respite care, and more . The name of our facility is Genesee Lake School (formerly known as The Oconomowoc Developmental Training Center- ODTC). This article described many of my students and is a good resource for a parent to know about.
To learn more, take a look at their facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/GeneseeLakeSchool
I am a Special Education Teacher at a special facility in Wisconsin that provides residential treatment, day school programming, respite care, and more . The name of our facility is Genesee Lake School (formerly known as The Oconomowoc Developmental Training Center- ODTC). This article described many of my students and is a good resource for a parent to know about.
To learn more, take a look at their facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/GeneseeLakeSchool
This was our life when we took in a foster child 5 years ago....he was placed in a residential treatment and is now in a psychiatric hospital. I love the boy he can be very charming but very violent and he is now hurting people. 16 yrs old 6'6" tall and very scary when he is in a rage. I do not know what will happen in 2 yrs when he will be out of the system. Very scary because I can see him doing something horrific in his future. We must help our mentally ill people more!
As the child of a schizophrenic father i know what the piss poor mental health system can be like. he has been in and out of prison for most of his life and at one point even killed someone but somehow he was able to escape punishment by reason of mental illness. the alternative they gave him was nothing more than shitty. I don't understand how the law can recognize him as not being responsible for taking a life but then turn around and let him loose to society so long as he agreed to take his meds. Someone please help me understand. My heart goes out to every single parent child or loved one in this nation that has had to live this life. I feel like too many people take this attitude that mental illness is someone problem to deal with. One of my college professors used to tell me all the time, "mental illness is not a personal struggle but is often seen as one, we must recognize it as a societal issue and only then can we do what is right".
I applaud your strength and your effort as a mother. Based on how I grew up it encouraged me to become a behavioral specialist as an adult and I can tell you I come across plenty of parents that spend more energy ignoring that their child has an issue than actually doing something
I know your pain. My family and I live your life with our 13 y.o. daughter. There is no REAL help - sadly. We have sought it for years. All we get is blah, blah, blah and more or different meds.
@HeyBunnie_Lu,
I'm curious: If you knew all that about yourself, why didn't you prevent yourself from becoming pregnant??? After all, it's hard to get pregnant these days unless you just want to. Pregnancy is VERY easy to prevent..."accidents" are no longer commonplace.
I know to some this will sound crazy, but have you tried Christian spiritual healing? An exorcism to us Catholics. Spiritual warfare is real and present even today, and if the system can't help you, what do you have to lose? I don't know if you're a praying person but I will be praying for your son's healing and your and your family's physical and spiritual protection. Jesus can heal. I've seen it!
I so totally understand this that I could have written it. Maybe all of us could start a grassroots awareness and get something going because there is no help for the ones who need the most help. These are the crimes they end up committing when the police and all authorities MAKE us wait until they commit a crime before taking needed action, and then ALL to often it's way, tragically way too late. I've been crying out for help for years and NO One is paying any attention to me.
I hear the Mom here trying to control her son, label him, threaten him, and manipulate him, but I don't hear any suggestions of empathy or understanding of how he might be feeling or what his emotional or psychological needs might be. Could this be a major part of the problem?
please please please read the explosive child by dr. ross greene, if you have not already. i know he can help you.
He obviously needs to be checked thoroughly for Lyme Disease. Adam Lanza's autopsy desperately needs to check for this, as well. I have Lyme Disease and this sounds exactly like Lyme Rage, or Lyme Neuroborreliosis. Please have him checked!!
Reading this story hits close to my heart.My son has struggled in school, with peers and family since he started school. He is 15 yrs.old and living in a residential treatment facility. To try and save him from the legal system"the paper trail".because no one knows what to do. Countless therepists, medications, alternative education, menyal hospital visits...what is wrong with him??? Still no actual diagnoses. But still commited to figure it out. Fear of what may happen if we don't.Fear of the man he willbecome, his future and our families.He is the oldest of my four children.I can't begin to wonder what the signs were before this tragic event in CT. Signed....A loving MOM
Dear Liza,
I just read this fantastic article that is attributed to you. I suffer from mental illness as did my paternal grandparents. My grandfather died from it and my grandmother was hospitalized from it. My immediate family struggles with it as well.
Interestingly enough, I worked in it also. I have the perspective of being both the patient and the professional. I worked as therapeutic staff support for youth with psychiatric diagnoses, as a county child protective caseworker, as a family based mental health worker, and as a county mental health caseworker.
I agree with you 100% that it is time to start talking about mental illness. There is still a stigma. Ironically, I just created a project that I posted on kickstarter.com early last week. It is my attempt to start that conversation. Please check it out and watch the video. I don't even care if the project isn't funded. I just want to tell my story. And I thank you for telling yours.
I ache for you in regards to your struggle with your son. I have worked with many families in your shoes. It isn't easy. I admire your fortitude and bravery.
Regards and prayers for your son,
Stef
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1646135227/black-dawg-a-memoir?play=1&ref=search
What did El say?! Why did you remove?! Isn't freedom of speech allowed on your blogs?! We want to see what everyone says, those who applaud you or those who criticise you. Thank you!
I agree. Who could I write or what could I do? My heart breaks for you. Please email if there is a way I could be involved.
Oh my friend~may I call you that? For after reading just one post I feel I know you and I definitely know that I love you and will be in prayer for you and all your children from now on. Promise. You are so right. It is indeed time to talk about mental illness.
I pray that your brave and open post will stimulate the discussion you have in mind. I also pray especially for your physical safety and for a friend to come along side you to give you a release valve and perhaps some much needed rest. I am grateful to be one of the thousands who read this. You have changed my outlook, or rather, reinforced my gut feelings in a very real way. Again, I thank you with all my heart for your bravery in putting your story "out there," and for hanging in there, moment by moment with your son. I will pound the gates of heaven with requests for a true diagnosis and the right treatment. God bless you today and every single day.
It is a shame to see the negative comments from this amazing post. Your story is so poignant, and I pray that your son gets the help he needs, and that you find peace in this difficult situation. It is a great service to our society that you share your situation.
I was working on a research project a few months ago to determine the benefits of some nutrients I was studying and came across a nutrient named "Niacin".
With some additional research, I came across an article written by Dr. Mercola that you should read, Ms. Soccer Mom. Please take the time to read it and try the Niacin experiment with your son.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2012/10/21/pellagra-causes-violent-crimes.aspx
May God bless you and your family!!!
@ "Wise Man" - Unfortunately national media and writers such as the one who wrote this piece have started to irresponsibly make connections between autism spectrum disorders and mental illness. We have had parents shoo their kids along after finding out that our son has autism as if they were afraid their kids were going to catch it. I agree that I have not lived in her shoes, but that is because my son does not have mental illness, he has a developmental disorder called Autism and they are NOT the same thing. And quite frankly she has not walked in my shoes either since my son was an infant and was diagnosed with severe autism at 18 months old. But the more times that "journalists" like her publish articles and tell people in the news that they are, and more people hear in the media that they are, the worse things will get for individuals that suffer from developmental disorders while less attention gets focused on true source of the real problems associated with mental illness.
And no, contrary to your assumptions my 9 year old son does not live a normal life. He can't tie his shoes or do snaps, or buttons and at 9 he still can't use the bathroom like a typical child because he doesn't feel the sensation of the need to have a bowel movement. Before people casually throw the words "autism spectrum" into a conversation, they should actually take a few minutes to find out what it is and think about the harm that it causes to people who have it before throwing it around as if it is a mental disorder and the source for violent behavior, because it isn't and irresponsible "journalism" like this does it make people think that kids like mine are ticking time bombs!
There is a cure for an extremely bright child, who has violent tendencies. It's a very simple solution. I know, because I was a child like that, and my IQ is also off the charts. The anger comes from seeing something or some action he desires, and proceeding to act in any way possible to accomplish his goal. Projection of thought into the future and the tailoring of action to receive a desired outcome, … such being the separation of human intelligence from all other animals. Out of pure frustration, he explodes because he feels that no one understands his presumed clear thought.
The cure is introducing an understanding and purpose to life that is pure and logical. Once that purpose is understood with clarity, life becomes a challenge to conform to this purpose. The purpose in life that I speak of is life itself. To be a benefit to life is the purpose of life, … all life has this as its purpose for existence. The more one benefits life and the energy of life, the stronger one becomes. With human ability to influence the outcome of the future comes the responsibility for our actions. Animals and plants are a benefit to life by their very existence as they fit into life’s cycle. Humans, with their intelligence, have the ability to be more or less of a benefit than would be their “animal” place in nature. This is further played out with mathematical proofs in physics and astronomy that demonstrate an undeniable proof of a Supreme Being and the existence of life as a separate and confirmable source. Such consolation brings a higher meaning to life than merely his own selfish desires. If there is interest in sharing this logic with him, please reply and I will post some of the research and conclusions I have reached.
With this higher purpose and meaning in life, one that can be understood and proven, your son will be able to be consistently productive and be a benefit to his world. Some of the down side is that he will most likely always be excessively “assertive” about issues and matters in life that he embraces and also meets defiance and opposition with. He will most probably be described as “overly sensitive” and even socially awkward, but; he will never be violent and will never pose a threat to his loved ones or society. He will face many challenges in life, and many people will choose to not like him because they don’t understand him. With good fortune, he will marry a strong woman who will give him further purpose in life. If he is fortunate to have children, he will finally understand the real purpose of life, to give life again, and to take responsibility to care for it and love it, because it is a part of him and his purpose. A big and loving dog, like a Golden Retriever or a Newfoundland (mine was a mix of these breeds), can be a really good starting step to reach these goals of understanding intimacy and to care for another life. But first must come the complete understanding of how important he is and each other person is in playing out the true purpose of life, that being a benefit to life, and how such plays into a clear understanding of life’s purpose to us.
"Our outer world is a reflection of our inner world." My heart goes out to all of these children and individuals with mental illness who are a mirror for the deep societal wounds that live within all of us at some level or another. Most of us do not act them out to such extremes, but their fears and anger live in all of us to some degree.
Our culture reacts to life from a place of scarcity and fear of not having enough money, time, material possessions, and ultimately love. Healing of these children and our cultural wounds will only come with love and forgiveness of how fear, anger, and hate live within each and everyone of us.
As a society and on personal levels as well, we need to shift our actions to be driven by love, not fear. It my hope that in our response to these societal tragedies, we all take a look into our own hearts and forgive all the times we have acted out of anger, envy, revenge, or have been aggressive or mean-spirited towards another human being. Love ourselves more in these times with compassion and forgiveness and it will ripple out to all. Eventually, the "mentally ill" in our society will no longer need to carry this societal baggage for all of us. Namaste.
I was a school bus driver. My elementary afternoon route included a small cherub-faced first grade boy that had wonderful days and horrible days. I witnessed him biting, punching, and kicking his aide that was assigned to him. His strength and viciousness was so strong that he had to be physically taken down to the ground by four teachers (three female and one male) to get him to stop the assault. He would have episodes on the bus. The behavior would begin if someone he wanted to sit by was sitting by someone else. I was told, by the school, to always call the principal to the bus if anything started. Many days we sat in that parking lot for an extra 10 to 15 minutes while the principal calmed the boy down. A few times the principal even rode the p.m. route so the boy wouldn't cause trouble. The elementary kids knew about his behavior as they witnessed his behaviors. I would like people to realize that mentally and/or behaviorally challenged kids don't just suddenly happen. Your documentation of your son's life shows there is a long trail and all the pitfalls that occur along that trail. Thank you!
I really *really* hope you will try the dietary approach -- it isn't 'woo woo' at all, particularly not for a child with sensory issues, which just screams spectrum. And spectrum kids very often have dietary sensitivities that put their behavior all over the map. They make the sensory stuff so much worse and harder to deal with.
He's clearly overwhelmed, and it's coming out on you and your family, which is horrible, but there may be a relatively easy fix at hand -- it's so worth a try, and results are generally pretty quick in coming. Please, please try removing soy, milk, and gluten from his diet, and avoid anything with synthetic dyes as they also cause behavioral problems in susceptible children.
The suggestion to get him headphones and enabling him to do something creative with music is also an excellent idea. He is desperate to control what is out of control, and that is something that will both quiet the sensory input issues and give him that control over his internal environment.
I understand that you're at your wits' end and it is totally understandable -- you haven't (and Michael hasn't) gotten the proper approach, just bandaids in the form of some really nasty (and dangerous) drugs when things are so out of control that no one is able to really properly assess Michael.
I wish you and your family the very best.
PLEASE, if there is a way, be sure Liza Long reads this message: Go to truehope.com and read and read and read. Then call them and talk as much as you need to. If there is a way for you to safely try their product, EmpowerPlus, then do it. All over the Internet you will find compelling success stories. For those who receive help--about 80% who give it a full try--it is invaluable. Unlike meds/drugs, it allows for true recovery and healing, rather than a suppression of symptoms. I do not consume their products, nor am I associated with their company. I am simply a believer.
I can say, I know exactly how you feel. I am the mother of 2 bipolar young adults, it is not easy and sometimes you want to give up (please don't). After numerous suicide attempts, run aways, court, psychotherapy & residential treatment (LTC & STC), my two younger thinking that mental illness is normal, I decided that I have a life to live and so does my mentally ill children. Each state has a Department of Disabilities (State Gov), if you can't find yours, the one in Washington D.C. will direct you to the right one. Groups for parents of Mentally Ill Children, was a big help. I am asking GOD to grant you with an Abundance of Love, Peace & Strength.
I really *really* hope you will try the dietary approach -- it isn't 'woo woo' at all, particularly not for a child with sensory issues, which just screams spectrum. And spectrum kids very often have dietary sensitivities that put their behavior all over the map. They make the sensory stuff so much worse and harder to deal with.
He's clearly overwhelmed, and it's coming out on you and your family, which is horrible, but there may be a relatively easy fix at hand -- it's so worth a try, and results are generally pretty quick in coming. Please, please try removing soy, milk, and gluten from his diet, and avoid anything with synthetic dyes as they also cause behavioral problems in susceptible children.
The suggestion to get him headphones and enabling him to do something creative with music is also an excellent idea. He is desperate to control what is out of control, and that is something that will both quiet the sensory input issues and give him that control over his internal environment.
I understand that you're at your wits' end and it is totally understandable -- you haven't (and Michael hasn't) gotten the proper approach, just bandaids in the form of some really nasty (and dangerous) drugs when things are so out of control that no one is able to really properly assess Michael.
I wish you and your family the very best.
My son has Aspergers, we have anger issues and ODD, but we use the Feingold program and feed him whole foods. It makes an incredible difference for him. When he goes off the program he is incorrigible. When he is following the whole foods diet he is sweet and compassionate. We started the program when he was 3 1/2 and
We also did gluten-free for 3 years to 'heal' his gut. I honestly believe the Feingold program has saved his brain because we have not used harmful medications, and saved him psychologically from forming harmful patterns of interactions and behaviors. He is now age 22.
Thankyou for showing me and other moms..we are not alone in this nightmare.
I could not agree more with you. Guns are a problem in your country, but also this control should start at home. I am also worry about the medication that this kids are given. Your post, help others realized that as a mother, both parts need our sympathy. I wish Adam's Doctor could speak about his treatment and the medication he was given, instead of the medias trying to find out what was the cause for this tragedy.
Greetings from Mexico and my heart goes to you and Michael.
Every comment shared on this page only highlights the need the author put forth in her original post. There is a tremendous need for studies, treatment centers and financial and emotional assistance for families who find themselves in this kind of nightmare. The reasons are so complex that we can't begin to find insight or healing without putting great resources into the problems--but the cost of not doing so continues to mount. How much will it take to tip the balance toward the investment necessary?
My heart goes out to you. I can't imagine the pain you must go through, and this definitely a conversation way overdue. However, I think we do have to talk about gun availability too. I am guessing you don't have a handgun in your home. And that may have saved your life and that of your other children. Do you ever think what your Michael could have done in one of his episodes had he had a gun nearby?
Unfortunately, there's a false sense of safety having a gun around. And unless guns are banned, more of these tragedies are going to happen, regardless of whether mental illness is part of the equation.
I am sorry ma'am, but who really cares if your son is wearing blue pants or black ones to the school? The school administration? Your neighbors? Really... I can understand what kind of mental stress your actions might have created for him in that situation. You say your son posses a unique mind that processes way too much information. So, he is unable to get past your treatment of him and yourself in that situation (and in many other similar instances, it seems).
I am no one to judge, but after reading your post, I can't get past the feeling that what has really failed here is the relationship between a mother and a child. Modern doctors aren't gonna stop giving him pills, because they are not legally allowed to. Re-directing his frustrations to them for a solution might have repeatedly undermined the relationship and re-affirm his inner believes.
I am so sorry for your situation. I understand that it's creating a hardship on you and your life is being threatened, but locking him up as a solution that day is understandably troubling from a child's perspective, even if he is "mentally sick". I hope you will find a solution other than locking him up again. God bless you and your family.
Wow-I have to stop reading this blog. The number of people who are bashing the mother is appalling. I am absolutely sure that she has sought and continues to seek help for "Michael" just as I did/do for my son. I did not cause the chemical malfunction in his brain to make him act the way he does nor did he. It happened.
Actually we adopted our son at birth and we have since learned that he has tremendous issues with substance abuse and the the law. But throwing the mother under the bus is inexcusable. Spend 24 hours at her house or come to mine. It is quite common for the parents (especially the mother) to be the one who is battered (literally) by the child and the one who is criticized by others who don't see my son when he rages. My son is bipolar and it's common for the child who is violent to "save" it for home. And for the mother. One woman (Janice Papolas-wife of Demetri Papolas who wrote The Bipolar Child has a great DVD where she addresses this-"Why does the child who is violent take most of his/her rage out on the mother? Because the child knows that there is one person who will never walk away, no matter how 'bad' he/she acts and that's the mother." And (my words) the involved and plugged-in father as well. But if you have never seen the eyes of a child shift, with no apparent trigger, and become "feral" and attack you, you will never know what it's like. He's 13 now and he's taller and stronger than I am so we have plans that were developed with the help of a fabulous family based stabilzation team and our son's doctor and, yes, our town's police department. But PLEASE stop blaming the parents. It serves no purpose except to make the parent(s) isolate even more and it's support we need the most-not criticism. And for those parents who are reading this and know exactly what I'm talking about, don't read the entries that blame you, don't associate with people who suggest that it is your parenting that caused your child to become mentally ill. And find a parent-support group because I guarantee that whatever you say there, several heads will nod in recognition, not shake with
criticism. Love your child even when it's tremendously hard - when you turn around and a fist comes flying and splits your lip open. Find help for him/her and find help for yourself. God Bless.
You just described my childhood. My brother was/is your son. We've since lost our parents; and Hes about to be 25, I still pray there's a way for him to get and accept help.
Wow-I have to stop reading this blog. The number of people who are bashing the mother is appalling. I am absolutely sure that she has sought and continues to seek help for "Michael" just as I did/do for my son. I did not cause the chemical malfunction in his brain to make him act the way he does nor did he. It happened.
Actually we adopted our son at birth and we have since learned that he has tremendous issues with substance abuse and the the law. But throwing the mother under the bus is inexcusable. Spend 24 hours at her house or come to mine. It is quite common for the parents (especially the mother) to be the one who is battered (literally) by the child and the one who is criticized by others who don't see my son when he rages. My son is bipolar and it's common for the child who is violent to "save" it for home. And for the mother. One woman (Janice Papolas-wife of Demetri Papolas who wrote The Bipolar Child has a great DVD where she addresses this-"Why does the child who is violent take most of his/her rage out on the mother? Because the child knows that there is one person who will never walk away, no matter how 'bad' he/she acts and that's the mother." And (my words) the involved and plugged-in father as well. But if you have never seen the eyes of a child shift, with no apparent trigger, and become "feral" and attack you, you will never know what it's like. He's 13 now and he's taller and stronger than I am so we have plans that were developed with the help of a fabulous family based stabilzation team and our son's doctor and, yes, our town's police department. But PLEASE stop blaming the parents. It serves no purpose except to make the parent(s) isolate even more and it's support we need the most-not criticism. And for those parents who are reading this and know exactly what I'm talking about, don't read the entries that blame you, don't associate with people who suggest that it is your parenting that caused your child to become mentally ill. And find a parent-support group because I guarantee that whatever you say there, several heads will nod in recognition, not shake with
criticism. Love your child even when it's tremendously hard - when you turn around and a fist comes flying and splits your lip open. Find help for him/her and find help for yourself. God Bless.
Thank you for posting this. It was almost autobiographical for my wife and me. Certain parts of it were like watching home movies.
We lost our own mentally ill daughter. She was a casualty of self-medication for her problems. She died of an accidental drug overdose at age 27.
Please stay with Michael. He needs you.
I hope you find the help that you need; the help that's so unavailable when you need it the most.
Wow-I have to stop reading this blog. The number of people who are bashing the mother is appalling. I am absolutely sure that she has sought and continues to seek help for "Michael" just as I did/do for my son. I did not cause the chemical malfunction in his brain to make him act the way he does nor did he. It happened.
Actually we adopted our son at birth and we have since learned that he has tremendous issues with substance abuse and the the law. But throwing the mother under the bus is inexcusable. Spend 24 hours at her house or come to mine. It is quite common for the parents (especially the mother) to be the one who is battered (literally) by the child and the one who is criticized by others who don't see my son when he rages. My son is bipolar and it's common for the child who is violent to "save" it for home. And for the mother. One woman (Janice Papolas-wife of Demetri Papolas who wrote The Bipolar Child has a great DVD where she addresses this-"Why does the child who is violent take most of his/her rage out on the mother? Because the child knows that there is one person who will never walk away, no matter how 'bad' he/she acts and that's the mother." And (my words) the involved and plugged-in father as well. But if you have never seen the eyes of a child shift, with no apparent trigger, and become "feral" and attack you, you will never know what it's like. He's 13 now and he's taller and stronger than I am so we have plans that were developed with the help of a fabulous family based stabilzation team and our son's doctor and, yes, our town's police department. But PLEASE stop blaming the parents. It serves no purpose except to make the parent(s) isolate even more and it's support we need the most-not criticism. And for those parents who are reading this and know exactly what I'm talking about, don't read the entries that blame you, don't associate with people who suggest that it is your parenting that caused your child to become mentally ill. And find a parent-support group because I guarantee that whatever you say there, several heads will nod in recognition, not shake with
criticism. Love your child even when it's tremendously hard - when you turn around and a fist comes flying and splits your lip open. Find help for him/her and find help for yourself. God Bless.
Thank you for posting this. It was almost autobiographical for my wife and me. Certain parts of it were like watching home movies.
We lost our own mentally ill daughter. She was a casualty of self-medication for her problems. She died of an accidental drug overdose at age 27.
Please stay with Michael. He needs you.
I hope you find the help that you need; the help that's so unavailable when you need it the most.
That you for sharing your story. I have not had the same experiences, however, I do understand! Something must be done to help those who need it. I am glad you are making your voice heard. It seems that so may people feel you pain! My heart goes out to you as well as others who are in the same situation.
Post a Comment