Friday, December 14, 2012

Thinking the Unthinkable

Michael holding a butterfly
In the wake of another horrific national tragedy, it’s easy to talk about guns. But it’s time to talk about mental illness.

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


3,760 comments:

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Bewildered mom said...

You are brave. You are strong. My child is 10. People, Dr.'s, schools... EVERYONE over-simplifies and rationalizes away why these children do what they do, feel how they feel; mental illness is a "label" no one wants to acknowledge can and does exist in children. The brave love enough to help them. The scared go into denial. Your article shows the multitude of the scared how to transition into the brave. Thank you.

Megan said...

I am a first responder for a mobile child crisis unit. About 50% of my calls are for kids like your son. I have nothing but empathy for both of you.

Most of the kids I see with this constellation of symptoms have trauma and/or attachment issues or PDD. A lot of it is sensory integration stuff. Some of it, I think, is ASD stuff we don't understand yet. And there are some kids for whom these symptoms are standalone issues, and trying to figure out how to help them is such a challenge. The upcoming DSM-V will have the new Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder, which I think will help us develop new services for these kids and get them paid for.

Thank you so much for your courage in sharing your story. I hope you understand how it is changing the dialogue on social media about how to see and respond to these challenges through early intervention. You are in my thoughts.

fslewis said...

I understand exactly what you are dealing with. However, I would like to point out that I, like you, actually HAVE used gun control as our first line of defense. We have rightly chosen NOT to have firearms in our homes. You have chosen to keep sharp objects out of Michael's reach. Obviously, removing the most destructive means of violence is important while we attempt to address the underlying problems.

Anonymous said...

Thank you so much for writing this. For the insight to so many who have no idea. I found your blog through a friend on FB and I am so glad that I did. My heart goes out to you and your son. I am in similar circumstances. I have shared with many of my friends because it gives so much good information on what we as parents deal with on a daily bases. Thank you so much for your courage to write. People in this world are so much in there own bubbles and refuse to see or do not have the capacity to. These kids need all of us to help them succeed. Hugs to you and for sharing such a important issue in our society.

Cathe Shubert said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
ALB said...

My heart is wrenched by this story and I have nothing but compassion for you, but I'm going to comment from my brain: Biochemistry is a very delicate thing. Tiny genetic flaws can set large reactions in motion. Your dear son obviously doesn't want to be that way. He's not in control. Since this is unsolicited advice, I'll be really brief: remove gluten and casein (wheat & dairy) from your son's diet (100%) and get a genetic test of his methylation pathways (holisticheal.com; finger stick for blood, $500, takes 12 weeks). Another test option is 23andme.com (saliva, $99, takes 3 weeks, but less comprehensive). (I'm not affiliated with either lab.) I'm happy you shared your story- we all need to hear it. I'm sending your family warm thoughts.

Potoroaca Madalin said...

You people really need to see this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eZJoCfgAEuE

Leah said...

Judge much?

d squared said...

I AM SENDING YOU LOVE AND HUGS AND A HUGE THANK YOU. MY 12 YEAR OLD HAS BEEN DISPLAYING VIOLENT OUTBURSTS FOR THE PAST YEAR AND WHILE I DO EVERYTHING I CAN TO HELP HIM AND THINK WE ARE HELPING HIM, MY FIRST THOUGHT WHEN I HEARD ABOUT THE CT MASSACRE WAS "THAT IS GOING TO MY STORY ONE DAY". IT WAS A RAW HORRIFYING THOUGHT THAT HAS HAUNTED ME AND I CANT TELL YOU HOW IT FEELS TO KNOW I AM NOT THE ONLY ONE STRUGGLING WITH THIS. MAY GOD BLESS YOU AND HELP YOU AS CONTINUE TO FIGHT THE GOOD FIGHT AND DO YOUR BEST TO PARENT THE CHILDREN YOU HAVE.

Amy said...

Thank you.

Tanya Malott said...

I think that separating "how I feel" from "what I said/did" can be helpful for everyone involved. Impulse control as it relates to rage is a necessary requirement of living in society.

I understand @Maceys perspective, but I am pretty certain she/he is not a parent. It is easy to criticize other people's parenting. It is harder to actually do the job. There is no handbook. We are all screaming to the Universe "understand me!" and expecting parents to do somehow it better. With what tools? How does any parent find MORE compassion for another human being who is continually threatening bodily harm? How do you surmount that fear? that confusion? that unpredictable behavior? I don't even know how mental health professionals do their jobs. Summoning that depth of understanding and compassion on an ongoing basis, at such a high level, seems almost inhuman to me.


Medication works (not always, not always the first thing you try, or the second....), but then people taking it feel better....and stop taking it.... Or gain weight, and stop taking it, etc...

I am no expert, but for our situation (bi-polar or personality disorder) I did have one idea: VIDEOTAPE.

It seems to me that there is a big disconnect between the high and low episodes...and that the mentally ill person is not fully aware of the really intense and dangerous episodes. In the heat of the moment, it is hard for anyone (mentally ill or not) to see that their expressions of their feelings are quite scary to others. But what if, in their well moments, they could see their 'unwell' moments? Might that help them stick with their medication? Rather than telling them what they did, could we show them? Obviously this needs to be done carefully....not "in your face", but more like a hidden camera.

No one wants "cookie cutter" children, but @Macey, when your panic attacks and emotional breakdowns are threatening to my life, or the life of others, what choice do I have but to go into self defense mode, particularly if I have zero experience with this issue? This is sort of a chicken and egg situation....and I think there is no definitive answer to what comes first: escalation of illness or lack of listening/patience/parenting.

Lesser parents have managed to produce better adjusted kids.

I would love to see more mentally ill people (in their lucid moments) write books about what it is like to BE that mentally ill person, and how they think their situation could have been better handled.

Rather than placing blame, why not WRITE A HANDBOOK?

I believe in being solution oriented.

Esteban said...

Thank you so much for writing and sharing this. You have bravely brought honesty and nuance to a conversation that have been sorely lacking those qualities. People should not have to struggle isolated on their own because of some dream about bootstraps. If we can ever build a society based on communities of support and an economy of care, you will have made such an incredibly important contribution. And thank you also to all of the commenters who are struggling with similar issues. We all have to be in this together. We all have to take a shared stake in your children, and I am so, so sorry that we have failed you.

Barbara said...

Thank you for sharing. You are very brave. I wish you and your family all the best.

Unknown said...

I'm so sorry you and your son are going through this. I cannot begin to imagine what you are experiencing. It took so much courage for you to write about this. Looking at the cause and not the symptom is not the usual American method. Placebos, like gun control, are what people usually focus on at times like this while the real problem continues to rage on.
Thank you for your courage. thank you for speaking out. God bless you, your family and your son especially.

Danielle said...

Why do they not do more research on mental illness? A person that is mentally ill will not take his or her medication when they do find one that works. Why do they not do research on an implantable/slow release of these medications such as the birth control device that is implanted into a female's arm?

Anonymous said...

Also you did not label your son. You just stated what you are going through. I highly commend you for that. We cant hide ourselves away and pretend it will go away. It is what is and labeling and not labeling is going to change that. Some may choice to "hide" and treat it shamefully but that is just wrong. I love the photo with the butterfly. Someday when he does succeed people will see how far he has come and nothing else will matter.

Amy said...

Thank you so much for posting this article - you are very brave and my heart goes out to you. I am SURE this has come up in the many conversations with medical professionals, but have you done any research into DID (Dissociative Identity Disorder). I work with young girl, two of which have been diagnosed with DID. Your son sounds like he may be a classic case. I have many resources - people and books - if you are ever interested. We have been in and out of countless psych wards with the girls and watching the suffering (and the suffering they can inflict) is heartbreaking. Generally, psychiatrists don't have a ton of experience treating DID and you have to find people who specialize in it to have him properly diagnosed. One of the hallmarks is that one has to have an off-the-charts IQ to have DID. Again - thank you so much for sharing. There are so many others out there walking through life with the mentally ill - but to be the parent of one is harrowing. I am praying for your whole family.

Maremare said...

You are brave to speak about your experiences. I wish that you weren't bullied, hurt or misunderstood. God helps give me strength. I have prayed for help overcoming anger and rage. Im not a freak, just someone who believes and has found a little more peace than I had. You are not weak! A weak person doesn't reach out or care like you do. A weak person preys on someone he thinks he can defeat, mentally n physically. You are not that :) peace!

Ceramicists travels said...

I feel for you and your son. You have done the hardest thing any parent can do! But you did the right thing. The mental health system is in crises, it's almost impossible to get care if you are not insured, and if you are most insurance only pays for drug therapy, not counseling. Mental health care is the answer, not more guns. I'm so glad you shared your story

Unknown said...

Are you aware of the Treatment Advocacy Center? http://www.treatmentadvocacycenter.org/
They have resources that might help, along with the National Alliance on Mental Illness, www.nami.org. I have a daughter with bipolar disorder who first showed symptoms at around the age of your son. I too have faced my child with a knife threatening to kill me. All I can tell you is that you have a long and difficult road ahead, but there is hope. After many, many medication trials, my daughter has stabilized and is in college. Take care of yourself and do what you can to continue to love your son. It's SO difficult, but it's what he needs more than anything.

Unknown said...

This post is raw and amazing. Thank you so much for putting your story out there. The dialogue here is enlightening and wonderful, and necessary. I hope it continues on. I have 4 typical kids, but have always worked near or with families "on the spectrum", or had kids in my life, or my kids' lives who are such. As a complete outsider, but close observer, and as a parent, I have witnessed the unique and intricate design of all these children. The answer is in everything offered by the comments here: nutrition, finding connections/cause and effect, self-evaluation, communication skills, finding your kids' strengths and weaknesses (nature, carpentry, art, music, math), love, spirituality, discipline, learning, and the list goes on. Macey had a point in screaming "what about me!?" There is an inner core to every person that others can't see until we communicate it outward. Maybe the pathway outward is disconnected somewhere, or built in a certain way that seems "atypical", maybe it is lacking proteins or enzymes, or maybe it speaks the language of music or numbers. I think there is a pattern or key, and we are all trying so hard to just seem "normal", when hardly any of us are. Everyone has their own path. Will healthcare recognize the individuality of these pathways and stop relying on cookie cutter therapies and medications? Wouldn't it be great to be able to get a wholistic screening of your child - from hearing and sensory testing, to nutritional panels and allergy testing, to Multiple Intelligence classifications, to whatever? Developing IEPs based on more than just an academic evaluation seems like it would be helpful. Also, community support for families, kids, and parents would really make a difference, wouldn't it? It seems that parents feel more alone these days than ever. One of those reasons might be the feeling that we will be judged so we keep out little secrets well-hidden and just do the best we can to keep things seemingly even. Thanks again for not hiding and for posting your story. Maybe it will help your healing, your son's healing, and that of many people you do not yet know.

Unknown said...

I pray for you, for your son, and for all those that need love and light, understanding and compassion.

I pray you will read Many Lives, Many Masters and Same Soul, Many Bodies. Maybe it will help? Not to take place of what is helping, but in addition to. Regression therapy can help. I pray help is granted.

Barbara Fisher said...

To Macey and the others who are verbally beating up on the mother in this case--shut it.

No, I mean it. Shut it.

How do you KNOW the child isn't mentally ill? You don't. You're projecting -your- life's experiences on this woman and her family and assuming you know better than all the doctors, educators and social workers who have intimate knowledge of her and his case.

You are not being helpful. You are not helping Micheal or his mother. You are just making yourselves feel better. And you are doing it at the expense of a brave mother who is doing the best for her son and other children with very little help from the rest of society.

To Micheal's mother--keep up the good work, and be strong. Know your story will help inspire others. I had been invited to start going to the NAMI meetings in my town months ago but I never did because I was shy. I'm still not great at articulating what it was like growing up with a violent, mentally ill mother. I still feel like I should be ashamed and that I'm betraying her by talking about it, but after the events on Friday, I resolved to start going, sharing and working. If I can help just one person who is suffering, I can make the world better. If I can give my support, maybe NAMI can help move our country forward into a better direction when it comes to mental health care, because what we have now is abysmal.

Your story strengthened my resolve to join this fight. Blessings on you and your family, and don't listen to the negative voices--you will note that the supportive ones outweigh the others.

Unknown said...

I feel your pain ! I know your pain ! I have been there, as I call it I've been to hell and back.
The mental health problem was created when in the 80's they stopped caring. They opened the doors and threw every mentally needy person on the street. It took a good 5 years for me to get help for my son, yet still living every nightmare scene with him in mental institutions, while at the same time I was keeping an eye on treatment, etc. We, as a nation need to care again for our children, adults, afflicted with a mental disorder to prevent violent acts from happening. My heart goes out to you in your struggles & I hope & pray you will continue the hard fight to get the help your son needs and deserves.

Unknown said...

What a very brave and honest woman. Thank you. I appreciate you so very much.

jackie said...

Your story so CLEARLY and FEARLESSLY describes our son who just turned 14. Last Thursday I felt an urgency to start the ball rolling to get him neuro-psych evaluated. A few hours after feverishly writing lengthy e-mails including an audio recording of one of his outbursts, I heard the news about the Lanza shooting. I wish you would start a blog solely devoted to raising your troubled child. Thank you for your loving courage.

fern said...

Thank you for this post. My heart goes out to you, and I have a pretty good idea of what you are going through. My son was/is much the same way. He is now 23 and has been diagnosed bipolar and personality disorder. We had many years of explosive violent behavior. Right now, he is doing very well with good medication and therapy. I am all too aware that the medication works only for a while and then something happens and he needs a change. The adolescent years were the worst and I hope that as your son gets older he becomes more stable, as my son seems to have. But, I am always waiting for the next shoe to drop. He has been hospitalized twice--and it was good for him, but also for me and his sister. We needed the break. It is horrible, but I live with the horrible hope, that if it comes to it--my son would hurt himself before others.

Anonymous said...

This is a new concept going around as a cause for mental health issues. I don't know if it will help or not http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/253802.php

Unknown said...

Thank you for writing your heart in this post. Part of your story is my story, too.

Aquinas Shrugged said...

I certainly feel for you and what you are going through. My son, while only 3.5, has been having outbursts for several years. He is normally a very kind, gentle, and intelligent boy, but something will set him off and he goes in a rage. He used to throw himself head first into walls, doors, his dresser, anything hard and it didn't seem to affect him at all.

2 things we have done which have helped immensely are changing his diet and receiving cranial sacral massage therapy. I have learned that there is very poor nutrition in most of the standard American meals, coupled with toxins from preservatives, pesticides, etc. used in the processing of foods for sale. For a while, I had to completely cut out wheat from his diet because on the days where he had it, he would have very bad behavior (it can be a form of allergic reaction). Through cranial sacral massage, we learned that hitting his head was a reaction to try to rid him of pressure. The massage work seems to have ended the head banging.

I can't help but wonder if many of these problems are the result of a mixture of poor nutrition (the lack of actual nutrients in our food) and sensitivities to chemicals added for preservation reasons. We now have several generations who have been raised on these foods, and increasing mental illness and cancer rates as well. Our bodies and minds are struggling more and more.

I would recommend you at least research such things as the GAPS diet, which has been known to cure autism, as well as the studies which show non-allergen diets to completely cure ADD and ADHD. Like I said, the dietary changes we have made have drastically changed my 3 year-old's behavior.

I have to wonder about the efficacy of administering brain-altering chemicals to a developing child. No one really knows what they do in the long run, how they affect the ability to reason, and it seems like suicidal thoughts are always a side effect. Our children are crying out for health, not toxins.

Anonymous said...

Thank you so much for your courage. I have a son who has troubles that are not so severe right now, but could be. Thank you for reaching out. I think we need to find a way to come together on this issue in compassionate, thoughtful manner. Thank you.

Zeinobia said...

May God help Micheal and you
Thank you for your great courage to write this amazing honest post.

chris peters said...

I too live this with my son, and I have also been told the EXACT same things as you have. I am now in grad school and my thesis is on this exact topic. The CT tragedy has now placed enormous added responsibility to my research and I can't stop crying all morning since reading this. THANK YOU for so bravely sharing your story. No mother plans on raising the next Charles Manson and no one is helping us. Now is the time to have this conversation about BOTH - access to mental health and better gun control.

jackie said...

Your story so CLEARLY and FEARLESSLY describes our son who just turned 14. Last Thursday I felt an urgency to start the ball rolling to get him neuro-psych evaluated. A few hours after feverishly writing lengthy e-mails including an audio recording of one of his outbursts, I heard the news about the Lanza shooting. I wish you would start a blog solely devoted to raising your troubled son. Thank you for your loving courage.

Rae said...

I'm sorry this is happening to your family. If it makes you feel in any way better our family has an action plan (the other kids said no way they would call it safety.) We eventually had to build an addition sealed off from the house it has it's own own hvac, water pipes, power, security door, and deadbolts, to keep our other children alive. I still get anger from people who feel like I don't try hard enough and judge me.

Anonymous said...

Just wanted to say thank you for being so honest and putting this article out there for all to see. You are a very brave person and you are absolutely right that our mental health system needs help. I hope your son gets the help he needs somehow and that we can all band together and improve our mental health system. God bless you for your strength, courage, and honesty.

Unknown said...

I just want to say I understand and I have felt the same.

chris peters said...

I too live this with my son, and I have also been told the EXACT same things as you have. I am now in grad school and my thesis is on this exact topic. The CT tragedy has now placed enormous added responsibility to my research and I can't stop crying all morning since reading this. THANK YOU for so bravely sharing your story. No mother plans on raising the next Charles Manson and no one is helping us. Now is the time to have this conversation about BOTH - access to mental health and better gun control.

Rebekah said...

Dear Soccer Mom,

I love you so much for sharing your story.

I am a social worker who has been around mental illness my whole life. My mother suffers from depression and she was a psychiatric nurse in a state institution. I have lived up close and personal with all the disorders your son could possibly have.

I have had clients who have killed their family members as well as a 6 year old with sensory integration problems and intense rage upon consuming any form of sugar.

This new generation of children is going to dramatically change psychiatry, I believe. There is hope and help.

I have some resources and am happy to share if you would like to email me. Rebekah@blink.is

You are not alone and you are doing a really great job taking care of yourself and your other children.

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. You are taking one for the team.

Sincerely,
Rebekah Gainsley

Mother of 3 said...

Thank you for sharing. This sounds exactly like my 7 year old, who began getting treatment at the age of 3. He has ADHD, mood disorder (NOS), oppositional defiance disorder, general anxiety disorder, broad spectrum autism, and bipolar disorder....I think I've covered them all. He was kicked out of his first daycare when he was 2. I didn't know what to do, because he was about to be kicked out of the second. He has purposely killed 1 animal (a bird, and not for hunting). Anything in his hands, or within his reach, is a potential weapon during his outbursts. He threatens suicide, and has voiced wanting to kill everyone in his immediate surroundings. I also have two other children. Both older than he, and for some reason he's easily set off by my middle child. He's very smart, but is not succeeding in school. Oh, how this list could go on for days. My heart goes out to you and your children. And mental health does need to be taken just as seriously as cancer, heart disease, etc., because it can and will affect not only the person him/herself, but anyone surrounding them at the point of the outage. My son is taking many meds, and I can't begin to tell you how many times they've been changed. He's been in and out of the psychiatric hospitals over a dozen times in the last 4 years, both acute and residential treatment. And because the insurance doesn't want to pay anymore, the child has to be released from care, long before it's time. Thank you so much for sharing your story, and thank you to the older people who've commented about being able to live with it, manage it, and control it. That gives me hope for my son, when I was beginning to think that we were going thru all this for nothing, because the behavior still continues, treatment after treatment.

Babble Blog said...

Thank you! My heart aches for you and for your son and for your other children. I was a bipolar child and am now a bipolar adult with a 5 year old who is exhibitting similar symptoms. It is my biggest fear that one day he will become one of"those monsters.". I pray you find an answer!You are being a good mom! And doing great things! God bless you.

chris peters said...

I too live this with my son, and I have also been told the EXACT same things as you have. I am now in grad school and my thesis is on this exact topic. The CT tragedy has now placed enormous added responsibility to my research and I can't stop crying all morning since reading this. THANK YOU for so bravely sharing your story. No mother plans on raising the next Charles Manson and no one is helping us. Now is the time to have this conversation about BOTH - access to mental health and better gun control.

KSinKS said...

My sister sent me here, as she said I could have written this myself. I empathize with you to depths you will never know. Your son sounds exactly like mine and my heart aches. I can hardly get people to understand or even acknowledge the mental health needs in this country are so severely lacking. I wish I could help you and Michael. I wish that I could help myself and my son. I wish someone would help all of us. Thank you. *Hugs*

Alaniya said...

Thank you so much for breaking the silence about this. I have seen this pattern of behavior as well, privately and in my practice as a classical homeopath. It seems to be worse in boys, exacerbated perhaps with the onset of increased testosterone levels? It does need to be taken seriously. I applaud you for being strong, firm and consequent. It provides at least some structure for your son.
I have seen homeopathic treatment mellow the symptoms out without changing who the child is at his core. Should you consider this alternative at all, you will need a really good certified homeopath who has treated cases like these before, preferably one who works with what is termed "the sensation method", but has a strong classical background. I hope one lives near you. My heartfelt best wishes for you and your family.

davis_foodster said...

Great post, very insightful!

KSinKS said...

My sister sent me here, as she said I could have written this myself. I empathize with you to depths you will never know. Your son sounds exactly like mine and my heart aches. I can hardly get people to understand or even acknowledge the mental health needs in this country are so severely lacking. I wish I could help you and Michael. I wish that I could help myself and my son. I wish someone would help all of us. Thank you. *Hugs*

Lisa M. Cherry said...

Thank you so much for your post. You said exactly what needs to be said.

As a health journalist, I've come across many ideas and one which may really help you and others is the work of DR. DORIS RAPP--she was on Oprah (and other shows) and showed kids before and after who were just like Michael (before).

Believe it or not, allergies to even food colourings, and just eating some sugar were flipping them out. Please check her out and get him tested for all this--by following her protocol, you may change his life.

Please also check out the work of the late DR. ABRAM HOFFER (and the International Orthomolecular Society at www.orthomed.org) who changed the lives of many.

I'd love to hear back from you to see how it goes. Take care and I wish you all the best,
Lisa
www.lisacherry.ca

Kathleen said...

Thank you for this post -- now, if we could only all get together, we might achieve some change in Washington. I lived a life very much like yours, and I know in agonizing detail what that life is like. We were lucky, though: my son had the support of an amazing school district and everything was as contained as it could be -- until he turned 21. That's when he signed himself out of treatment and is living on the streets, and we can't do a thing. Talk about scary.

Katrina said...

Thank you so much for your beautifully written and insightful commentary into raising a child affected by severe mental illness. I think it is extremely difficult for anyone to understand what it is like until they have been there, but your openness and expression really helps. I applaud you, and pray that you are able to get the support you need.

Frank Sykes said...

I agree with your mental illness point. But guns are also part of the issue. You chose to take away sharp objects and carry them around with you. Would you leave guns unlocked in your house? Not even pistols - semi-automatic weapons. If they are not in the house, the worst he can do is attack one person. Not gun down 28 people in 5 minutes.

Mental illness assistance needs to be addressed. But so does the gun laws. And common sense.

Solar Mom said...

Mental illness runs in my family, too, and there were times that my brother terrified us as well. (Ultimately he committed suicide). This was twenty-five years ago before a lot of the currently available meds, but it sounds like you haven't found anything to help.

One thing my brother did do that helped intermittently was smoke marijuana. It's not a panacea, but you could try baking it into brownies and giving him some every day, fwiw. Just grasping at straws, but it does have a calming effect.

chris peters said...

I too live this with my son, and I have also been told the EXACT same things as you have. I am now in grad school and my thesis is on this exact topic. The CT tragedy has now placed enormous added responsibility to my research and I can't stop crying all morning since reading this. THANK YOU for so bravely sharing your story. No mother plans on raising the next Charles Manson and no one is helping us. Now is the time to have this conversation about BOTH - access to mental health and better gun control.

Lisa M. Cherry said...

Thank you so much for your post. You said exactly what needs to be said. As a health journalist, I've come across many ideas and one which may really help you and others is the work of Doris Rapp--she was on Oprah (and other shows) and showed kids before and after who were just like Michael (before).

Believe it or not, allergies to even food colourings, and just eating some sugar were flipping them out. Please check her out and get him tested for all this--by following her protocol, you may change his life.

Please also check out the work of Dr. Abram Hoffer (and the Orthomolecular Medical Society) who changed the lives of many.

I'd love to hear back from you to see how it goes. Take care and I wish you all the best,
Lisa
www.lisacherry.ca

Unknown said...

I don't read any signs of "mental illness" in this story.

Tom Smith said...

So, how about this? All you people with the crazy genes STOP MAKING BABIES. My children are exceptionally bright, good-natured, well- mannered, and delightful. They don't deserve to be brought up in a world where people with schizophrenia have access to weapons of mass lethality. Show some fucking responsibility. If you have these genes in your family, adopt.

Truth Teller said...

Your social workers and therapists are idiots, as most are. If you want some help, contact me and I will hook you up with the best one out there. Your children and probably your lives depend on it. Stop messing with fools.

Easy Traveling said...

I can offer some advice to you and him if you want, I'm a 23year old man, I am much like your son and I vividly know what he's probably going through.

Keely Sadira Dorran said...

Thank you for this amazing post, and for your courage, perseverance and intelligent approach to problem solving with your son. I would like to contact you privately to share my ideas about possible influences affecting your son. Kudos to you for your courage and intelligence in dealing with this. Keep up the good work. I discovered this article because a friend posted a link on Facebook, and here is the comment I left: "I see a Mom trying to cope and doing a darn good job. However, there are definitely issues that she probably doesn't know to look for- PTSD signs and symptoms associated with mind control and ritual abuse, for instance. (See www.ritualabuse.us for more info.) Many survivors (myself included) look at these stories and think there's someone accessing this child and messing with them so bad, that the parent is fully unaware of- could be a close family 'friend,' a relative, a psychiatrist, even, who seems totally legit on the surface and is NOT. MANY shootings associated with assassinations, etc., like Sirhan Sirhan (Bobby Kennedy's assassin), were under the 'care' of psychiatrists who are well-known as (generally Nazi) mind control doctors in the survivor community. Drugs can help, but they won't solve the problem. That kid is likely enduring traumas his mom is unaware of- intended to make him into something he's not." I speak at child abuse conventions and assist in the education of law enforcement and psychologists/therapists about mind control and ritual abuse. I am a survivor myself, and belong to a loose network or community of survivors and their supporters working to end the abuses that we generally did not become aware of until we were adults. Please look into this subject, as it may help you protect and heal your son. You may contact me via my website or by googling my name, Keely Dorran. Peace.

Unknown said...

I read your article and it amazed me how much your son sounded like myself at times. I was told I was "10 People In One." I have landed in hospital various times and I picked up an alcohol habit, which made it worse. I feel out of control sometimes like my emotions take over me. I will get outbursts that people do not seem to understand. I am not a violent person. I am a hypersensitive compassionate person so much at times it makes me cry. My emotions take over me and everything is magnified 100%. I put others through sheer hell and didn't even mean to. Once I was better, she would tell me I'm back, like I had just left...that is what it's like.

I am on meds that I continue to take off and on and I see a significant change when I do. I do not suggest meds being thrown around the way some psychiatrists do, but in some times I have realize through these years that for some people, like myself, it can actually help.

I empathize with your son. I empathize with you. Thank you for being brave and sharing your story.

I hope your son gets well.

Unknown said...

Thank you for sharing your story -- a story we NEED to hear. My heart goes out to you.

julie said...

I am writing in hope this helps. I have spent my career as a therapist and daily work with people young and old who are struggling. I truly have come to believe that we have to focus on what part of the brain is showing up in these cases. Trying to have a person learn from their cognitive centers does not work when they are in fight flight or right brain (sensory) mode. I have seen immediate and lasting help for people who work with the brain (and this at times benefits from medication at other times not at all and can be managed by the individual over time). I think we are treating people head down instead of roots up. What I mean is we have to notice where the sensation of the feeling starts and calm it there. Once fully calm we can do the cognitive work such as change your pants etc. people such as your son are often overly effected by the sensations and apt to go into fight flight quickly. Pat Ogden and the sensory motor institute is looking at the brain and how it interacts with attachment. Her work is critical in my opinion and she works out of Boulder colorado.

Lyn Adamson said...

I raised a son who exhibited many behavioural problems alongside learning disabilities and ADHD. Although I found the elementary school did what they could to keep his experience there positive, once he reached high school with its expectations of success very serious problems started because he could not fit in and could not succeed in that setting. Puberty set in with testosterone, and he jumped to 6 foot 3; his anger exploded in a split second if he every felt disrespected so he had incidents with teachers and was excluded from their classrooms, banned from certain school properties, and even expelled from an alternative school. He was so upset over that he broke his own hand against the gym wall. Very hard to contain, I finally knew I had to get private resources for him (by borrowing money) when the school told me they considered him 'conduct disordered'. I decided it was a toxic environment for him. I found a residential program for him that really helped to contain his behaviour (not with drugs). He benefitted from neurofeedback, from nutritional changes (supplements very important for him, for the brain, such as Omega 3s and vitamins B and others),also Chinese medicine helped (helped smooth the testosterone surges, very helpful). I am grateful for a youth counsellor who told me my son was in pain - physical and emotional - a lot, and to a psychiatrist who advised finding a non-stressful environment for him where he could succeed. A wilderness training program in the mountains did wonders for him. He loves horses and worked well with both the people and the horses. The physical side was really important for him. It was a combination of problems and took a combination of solutions. Very important for my son was a program called Arrowsmith (www.arrowsmithschool.org) which treats learning disabilities. this may not be an issue for your son but sometimes great strengths go along with great weaknesses. They provide exercises for the brain that develop important areas such as reasoning that my son was very weak in. Learning how to use words to describe feelings and learning to delay response and think through your options are other ways to go. I totally loved the book 'Transforming the Difficult Child - A Nurtured Heart Approach'. I don't think the trying to contain by force and use of police is going to work in the long run though I can very much sympathize with your desperate desire to maintain safety for all of you in the home. Keep trying different approaches till you find what is right for your son. These are the critical years. My son is now 25 and doing well. I hope this will also be true for you.

Unknown said...

Okay, I am just going to throw this out there, it may apply, I know this is what happened to me. I was very much like Michael and I think that it is really interesting that you can almost point to the exact time when you noticed a change in his behaviour. This took a long time for me to figure out. Through most of my adolescence I tried to wrap my mind around what was wrong with me, more like what had happened to me, and I just couldn't, it was like my mind was trapped in a box. It didn't come overnight either, first I had to remember, then I had to acknowledge, and then I had to discuss with others, all were painful processes. It actually took me decades to finally solve what was a mystery, I believe most of these kids just know something went wrong and won't wait to solve it themselves.
A long time vitim of bullying throughout school, I can now remember two distinct instances when I was drugged, probably with LSD, one in the 4th grade and one in the 9th, by my tomermetors. I am not going to go over how this happened specifically, there are many ways they can give you drugs without your knowledge. Nor am I and how difficult it is to be the victim of bullying, everyone is aware of that, and due to your social position it makes it that much easier for the bullies to get away with this. I belive that there are three disctinct types of bullies though. In addition to the kids, (and adults), that bully for amusement, and those that bully to take what they want from you, you have bullies out there that really just want to hurt others physically and emotionally. The dangerous psychosis of these later bullies are somewhat protected by the social acceptance they gain from the other groups.

Add to that social awkwardness of constant bullying the effects of drug induced psychosis you have a real recipe for producing a sociopath. So why didn't I act out through violence the way some of these other kids do? I actually believe this is a really simple answer; it had to do with where I grew up. When i was about five my parents moved us to a remote, rather backwards, sort of inbred, little town where we were automatically outsiders along with just a few other similar families. These townies were seriously crazy, (seriously...honestly the type they make movies about...honestly), and I really wanted as little to do with them as possible. Removing the pressure of constantly being judged by others, because it simply didn't matter to me, went a long way towards allowing me to develop a normal fulfilling life.

Thank you for listening

Paros said...

OK Macey - I understand your view point. I see some of myself in what you are saying and I have read other comments throughout the blogosphere that reflect your point - one by a worker who sees well-meaning parents clamping down and taking away voice from the afflicted child. I see myself partially reflected in your comment and I am in the process of changing that. I see that nurture and support will bring about the results that my child needs not clamping down and discipline which exacerbated things. My last sentence could be easily misinterpreted and over generalized but here is an example: my child can be very defiant when it comes to his school work: if I crack down on him and take away privileges until it gets done he tightens up his control and his defiance escalates; if I ask him what he needs in order to complete his assignments and offer something of comfort on completion of the assignment it gets done with haste. But our society decries this latter choice and approves of the former. And in truth the former works for so many but not all, clearly not all.

Unknown said...

I think it is possible that your son may have PANDAS. Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disease after Strep. The clue for me is that the onset was rapid, psychotropic medicines have not helped significantly, and his pupils are enlarged.

My daughter has PANDAS, but, happily, we were able to get help quickly. There is hope. Please seek out a PANDAS literate doctor. You can find more information at www.strepmonster.com . Blessings.

Unknown said...

66Thank you. These are words we NEED to hear. My heart goes out to you.

KSinKS said...

My sister sent me here, as she said I could have written this myself. I empathize with you to depths you will never know. Your son sounds exactly like mine and my heart aches. I can hardly get people to understand or even acknowledge the mental health needs in this country are so severely lacking. I wish I could help you and Michael. I wish that I could help myself and my son. I wish someone would help all of us. Thank you. *Hugs*

Blessings said...

What sort of treatment is being sought by the government? What do these treatment facilities look like? I do believe we need to start addressing this issue, I am just curious how others envision it.

One treatment for mental health that is often overlooked is the power of diet. I would envision diet at least as part of these facilities, which is something that can start at home. I'm not saying that it won't be time-consuming and require a TON of effort, but I will say that I think it'll be worth it.

There are plenty of anecdotal cases, starting with David Briscoe. He was schizophrenic and cured himself with a macrobiotic diet and lifestyle. There is nothing that I can say except that if you are sick of the cocktail of drugs that only work short-term...pair it with macrobiotics and eventually the drugs will become unnecessary.

You can listen to his story here: http://phiyakushi.com/miracles/2010/05/09/david-briscoe-schizophrenia/

And obtain his services here:
http://www.macroamerica.com/about-macroamerica/david-briscoe/


Many Blessings

Unknown said...

My heart goes out to you. Indeed, this problem needs to be solved. Its not just your problem... this is a problem that affects everyone.

eileenjacksonphd@gmail.com said...

Ronald Reagan gutted the state hospital systems both in California and the Nation. Where I live there is no Psychiatrist, child or otherwise, no inhospital facility. If we want this to end, we must create a mental health system that doesn't wait until a child has committed a crime and then throw them in jail. Of the murders committed in the recent past, mentally ill youth and veterans of the iraq war with PTSD or closed head injuries are the perpetrators. Can't we treat these two groups? It would go a long way to solving senseless murders.

Nondescript Human Being said...

I read this post through tears and sobs. Luckily, neither of my sons is violent, but getting them help has been a desperate battle.

People not dealing with it just have no way to fathom all you are going through. Your courage in talking about it is commendable and shows your strength.

I will keep you and your family in my prayers.

Clarissa Passos said...

your lucidity, honesty and love amazed me. and when i finally got my breath back and moved down to your next post, couldn't help thinking that such lucidity was natural, when i read about your father history in the marines.
thank you so much for sharing.

Heidi Grohs said...

God bless you and your family. Such strength and courage to share this story.

equinecoach said...

We have to move forward as a country, what would you suggest we do?

Unknown said...

Okay, I am just going to throw this out there, it may apply, I know this is what happened to me. I was very much like Michael and I think that it is really interesting that you can almost point to the exact time when you noticed a change in his behaviour. This took a long time for me to figure out. Through most of my adolescence I tried to wrap my mind around what was wrong with me, more like what had happened to me, and I just couldn't, it was like my mind was trapped in a box. It didn't come overnight either, first I had to remember, then I had to acknowledge, and then I had to discuss with others, all were painful processes. It actually took me decades to finally solve what was a mystery, I believe most of these kids just know something went wrong and won't wait to solve it themselves.
A long time vitim of bullying throughout school, I can now remember two distinct instances when I was drugged, probably with LSD, one in the 4th grade and one in the 9th, by my tomermetors. I am not going to go over how this happened specifically, there are many ways they can give you drugs without your knowledge. Nor am I and how difficult it is to be the victim of bullying, everyone is aware of that, and due to your social position it makes it that much easier for the bullies to get away with this. I belive that there are three disctinct types of bullies though. In addition to the kids, (and adults), that bully for amusement, and those that bully to take what they want from you, you have bullies out there that really just want to hurt others physically and emotionally. The dangerous psychosis of these later bullies are somewhat protected by the social acceptance they gain from the other groups.

Add to that social awkwardness of constant bullying the effects of drug induced psychosis you have a real recipe for producing a sociopath. So why didn't I act out through violence the way some of these other kids do? I actually believe this is a really simple answer; it had to do with where I grew up. When i was about five my parents moved us to a remote, rather backwards, sort of inbred, little town where we were automatically outsiders along with just a few other similar families. These townies were seriously crazy, (seriously...honestly the type they make movies about...honestly), and I really wanted as little to do with them as possible. Removing the pressure of constantly being judged by others, because it simply didn't matter to me, went a long way towards allowing me to develop a normal fulfilling life.

Thank you for listening

Unknown said...

Thank you for writing this, though it must be a heart-wrenching experience to try to share this insane lack of healthcare in the U.S., including behavioral healthcare, that damages us all so horrifically.

As this goes viral, know that you are an angel, albeit an anarchist angel :-) , guiding us towards kindness and love and action.

Ordinary Bob said...

As a person with a family member struggling with a severe mental illness, I thank you for your courage to share this story.

Unknown said...

As I read this I was wondering who told you my story. my heart hurts for you the same as it hurts for my son. God bless you and I hope you get the help that i never did.

Stepmom and Other Names People Call Me said...

My son was your son. At age four, he threatened to get a knife and and kill me. His temper tantrums were so extreme they left him and me physically exhausted. It sounds simplistic and isn't a solution, but I learned that my son was extremely sensitive to artificial colors, artificial flavorings and certain preservatives. Within a week of changing his diet, his physical and emotional behaviors changed. See Feingold Diet (www.feingold.org).

r said...

A dear friend of mine has a son who is autistic, and is sometimes violent. There have been numerous stories of the police being called and/or paramedics after he's put his hand or head through a window. Life seems to be a fairly constant struggle for that family. That's the only window I have into what life must be like for you. I wish I had some wisdom to offer, but I haven't walked in your shoes, and have no idea what I would do in your situation. I can only imagine how helpless you must feel sometimes in the face of this. I'm not spiritual in the Judeo/Christian sense, but I do believe in prayer, and my prayer is that you, your family and anyone that has this sort of thing to deal with will find some peace.

ktteaches said...

I think you are brave for posting this. I think what you have done is to shed light on a very serious problem in a very matter of fact manner. Do not listen to anyone who says you were wrong to post your story. We grow Through change, we cannot change unless we are honest. I wish I could give you a solution to your problem. Smarter more educated people will read your blog, and give you better insight. All I can say is continue being brave, being pro-active and know that there are so many people pulling for you and your son.

Amy said...

I've lived this. This is my sister. She is the 3rd of 5 children (I'm the 1st). Growing up with her was scary, exhausting, life-altering. The threats of violence to herself & us... your story is my childhood. She broke up our parents marriage. She is now 27. She is married to a man she met at narcotics anonymous (she opted to self-medicate after she turned 18 & decided she was not sick). She has 2 children by this man who were recently taken away by the state (which is probably the best thing to have happened to them).

Yes, this desperately needs to be addressed. Her treatments nearly bankrupted my parents. The state refused to help with costs of the $500/day treatment center until my parents were on welfare. We were lucky to have had benefits throughout, but hit our limits every single year. And now, as an adult, she cannot hold a job longer than 9 months. She is on welfare. Her husband is on disability.

Mental illness is real. And we need to address it head-on. Now.

Anonymous said...

My family had been in a similar situation regarding my brother and he did end up in jail because eventually he did do something against the law and he has been in and out of the system ever since. He is my older brother and I remember a time when I overheard my father talking to my grandmother about what to do, it seems he had sought help but none was truly given and he was running out of options. Unfortunately, my father was never able to truly accept that my brother had something seriously wrong mentally. Thank you for being brave enough to share your story and I pray that by doing so and with the events of the past with spark the much needed change this country needs in the mental health system. You and your family are in my thoughts.

Unknown said...

Put him on the GAPS diet.

http://www.gapsdiet.com/

And take him off the meds. This will likely reduce, or completely eliminate, this behavior in him.

Rgm said...

I applaud you. I work with these types of children. The scary thing is, I work at a child care center, just a regular one. We take all the kids that get thrown out of other centers and schools.

Not only do we have kids with every letter on the planet behind their name( ADD, ADHD, ODD, OCD, etc.) we deal with all sorts of emotional, social, and behavioral problems. Not to mention drug affected infants, fetal alcohol syndrome,I could go on.

I have had my fingers broken, cuts, scrapes, bruises, bloody noses, all from dealing with these kids. ( up to 18 years old.)

I have called the police to come take away an 8 year old. This kind of stuff haunts me, but to keep myself, the other kids in my care, AND THEMSELVES safe, you gotta do what you gotta do.

Don't let these people get you down, you have to do what's best for all of you.

I wish you and Michael all the best.

Alice said...

I too am blown away by Macey and others suggesting that this is the parent's fault. Yes, maybe she could have done this or that differently. I too have an explosive child and beat myself up daily as to whether I could have handled something differently. Every night, I go to bed resolving to do this or that differently or to try harder. The reality is though that the soccer mom and I are in it alone. If our society would invest is helping people who are mentally ill, we might be able to parent these explosive, angry children more effectively. As it is, we are left to our own devices and simply do the best we can. Kudos to the soccer mom for doing the best that she can.

flower rising said...

Hey there Soccor Mom... Have you ever treated for Lyme Disease or Bartonella. Both of those microbes along with several others can cause a whole lot of mental health issues including rage. Thank you for sharing your story. I hope you and your family find some answers that bring you all peace.

Ozmum said...

Not all mentally ill people are violent - in fact, relatively speaking, only a very small proportion of those with mental illness are. So let's not divert the attention away from the stupidity of allowing access to guns to the masses by implying that mental illness is at the root of these tragedies - and risk worsening the stigma and fear people attach to those who are ill. If access to guns were restricted then those who are impulsive, intoxicated or angry (not necessarily mentally ill) might not have the opportunities to inflict harm on a grand scale. In countries where more stringent gun control exists the numbers harmed by gun crime are reduced. Whilst I feel for any family who is trying to live with a loved one who is mentally ill and who has been violent - please don't try to mitigate what's happened in America by saying the mentally ill are the risk factor here. The laws that allow so many people to arm themselves are what has created the situation where people who shouldn't have guns can get them.

Unknown said...

Thank you for bringing attention to the real issue at hand here.

Reading your post, I couldn't help but see some of myself in your child. I'm over 40 now, living a relatively normal well adjusted life. Thinking back about how I was raised and why I didn't go completely off the tracks, there were two major influences that made the difference. One being a father who was strict, but also compassionate. The other, equally important, was being heavily involved in sports. Being part of a team, more strong male authority figures, and most of all, a structured and relatively safe physical outlet for my "extra energy" and anger. To this day, I still need physical activity to keep everything in check.

I hope you're able to find the answer for your son. Hopefully it doesn't involve being labeled, drugged, and locked up. He's obviously bright, and full of potential.

Alice said...

Also, all these suggestions to put him on this diet or try this behavioral plan, WAKE UP!! Michael is 13 years old. Do you think she has not tried every avenue under the sun before she was reduced to driving her child to the hospital? I know we have tried EVERYTHING. Diets, different medications, different behavioral therapies, this strategy and that. What we need is human support.

Cindy said...

Thank you for your post. You were so brave to write it. I have a very smart, troubled son. I am a single mom who needs help. I find people like to offer all kinds of unsolicited advice but have no real solutions. I am going to read the commentary and see if there's anyone with useful suggestions.

Heidi said...

Please remove all of the video games from your children. Please. Years ago, shootings like this, kids shooting up schools, never happened. Or it was extraordinarily rare. Now, they happen with an alarming regularity. Think about it... these kids live for those video games. Most of them are extraordinarily violent, horrifically so. The inordinate amount of time spent in that environment with kids whose brains are still forming, adding in mental illness, and you have a toxic, deadly mix. If you parents are unaware of the content of those games, take a few minutes to watch your kid playing them. Unspeakable violence and frighteningly realistic. If it does not frighten you, then something is very wrong. Think about the impressions these games are having on young, impressionable minds then add in the mental illness. These games need to be outlawed.

Samhain1961 said...

Have you contacted Pfeiffer? Read the book Ricki by Rickie Flach Hartman and her dad Dr. Fredrick Flach?
http://books.google.com/books/about/Rickie.html?id=14Q3AQAAIAAJ

Jessi said...

Thank you for your bravery. It takes courage to put yourself out there in the way you did. I believe many people will be touched by your experience and thoughts. I know I was.

Keilich Keilich said...

Anarchist Soccer Mom - you are a wise and lovely woman, and a wonderful mother. I celebrate you and offer you my unqualified respect. Blessing on you and yours. Namestae.

Prof. Heart, Executive Avatar in Charge said...

wow. powerful stuff. this may sound trite, but have you tried a chinese 'medical' doctor- an herbal master? pharmaceuticals will never help & they're using our kids as lab rats. a master herbalist cured me after 20 yrs of western failure. combine it with acupuncture. it took 2 yrs, but i'm living a quality life now. never thought it was possible. its like a miracle

Anonymous said...

i can see why both macey and liz are projecting their own experiences into this blog post.

but missy is right; the response is very consistent with borderline personality disorder. "throwing her own diagnosis back in her face" is the reminder of a very difficult reality.

AnnaPorter said...

Thank you so much for your honest sharing. When Columbine happened we were dealing with our teenaged son who has undiagnosed and misunderstood mental illness as well. While he was never quite as violent as Michael sounds we were never quite sure if he might someday go "over the line." While I grieved for the people killed that day I also grieved for the parents of the shooters and the legacy that they would have to live with. But I don't remember anyone else talking about that.

This is the real conversation we need to be having in this country--what are we going to do about mental illness?

taochild said...

Thank you for sharing this. It needed to be heard! That said though, there are many who simply give into the fear and do not even try to seek help. You made the tough choice and there is at least a chance you son will get the help he needs. Others turn a blind eye, or are too afraid to actually do something ... partly because they don't know what to do maybe. We have to teach people aslo to recognize when help is needed, and to be willing to actually seek it to. Sadly, a lot must be changed in our country before we get it right.

flower rising said...

Hi Soccer Mom. I tried to post earlier, but I was not signed in so if this is a repeat message I apologize. Have you ever treated your son for Lyme or Bartonella infections? They and several other microbes often cause mental health issues including rage and psychosis. So many people with various mental health diagnoses are able to reverse their mental health status by treating these microbes. I hope you and your family are able to find answers that bring you all peace. Thank you for sharing your story. Blessings.

Kate said...

Thank you so much for sharing this. THIS is what we need to be talking about!

I hope you are getting the ongoing support you need.

I would love to share your story with our readers on elephant journal. Please let me know if you would allow that, or if you would like to write for us on the subject.

Yours,
Kate

Kate@elephantjournal.com

Krystal said...

Thank you so much for sharing this.

Toulouse said...

I'm so sorry for everyone going through this. I wish I can help in any way. I am bi-polar and luckily for me medication and therapy enabled me to manage it. I'm so grateful Obama is in office, I believe he will begin to make some headway in gun control and the way we handle mental illness. I had brain surgery from an aneurysm & studied he brain. I believe one day we will be able to do MRI's to see some forms of mental illness. It would be a dream if every baby can get one and be able to help treat any disorder at the very start.

Alicia said...

Thank you for posting this. I am a mother of 2 boys and my youngest (5) was diagnosed with ADHD about 6 months ago although I noticed signs from a very young age. As a parent we all think of having this beautiful, perfect little baby come into our lives but when your child doesn't turn out "perfect" where is our manual to tell us what to do?!? I finally gave into giving my son medication a few months ago because he is delayed on his learning milestones (can't count past 5 or say ABC's) and it has made a drastic difference. I know have a child who can stay on one task for more than 30 seconds and now capable of learning some of what he needs to know. It's extremely hard to watch since his brother is 12 mos older than him and excelling at everything in school and at a 3rd grade math level in 1st grade. I still cannot for the life of me get him potty trained. My son has violent outbursts frequently over the smallest of things. It’s as if the rage takes him over and I look into his eyes and no longer see my baby boy in there. I end up in tears as I watch my child try to hit me and hurt himself. I ran downstairs to him once and had to stop him punching his headboard. His knuckles were bloodied and swollen. He has no fear and sees no boundaries for his wild behavior and has ended up with a broken arm and several incidents needing stitches. It's impossible to take him in public sometimes so it leaves me dropping everything and just walking out of the store to go home. It affects every aspect of my life. We finally found a psychologist he can open up to and he sees her frequently along with behavioral modification classes sometimes once a week. I do everything I can to help him. I am exhausted and soon I will be getting new insurance that no longer covers much for therapy and almost nothing for behavioral mod. classes. I have always said that there needs to be something like weekend seminars for parents of children with mental health problems. I am desperate to learn anything to help him. He is 5 yrs old now and it is this bad. How bad is it going to get when he is a teenager and bigger and stronger than me? I love my son unconditionally but what am I going to do when I cannot pay the medical bills anymore?

Closer to Lucy said...

This is a conversation that is long overdue. The parental finger pointing does nothing to get to the root of the real problem. Our society has swept mental illness under the rug for far too long because it's easier to lay blame on those of us that tried unsuccessfully to reach our children and get them the help they need. Until policy is changed and the public fully educated the blame game will continue, as will the bloodshed.
Like many posters I also love a child with mental illness and while he is not to the degree that Micheal is the struggle for support and cries for help have gone unanswered. I cannot say that I've been in your shoes but I have certainly stood on similar ground.
Stand by your convictions and do not let the system beat you down. Micheal will not get the help he deserves without your voice.
Thank you for starting the conversation....it certainly looks as though there are a lot of listeners.

Jacqui Hawkins said...

Thank you for sharing your story. I, too, have a child with mental illness and I know how difficult access to care is (and he's an adult).

Unknown said...

Thank you immensely for this article. This is an issue that certainly needs to be addressed.

(I wanted to point out a possible mistake. If by Jason Holmes you were referring to the Aurora shooting suspect, his name is actually James Holmes.)

Emily JC Belanger said...

The story you wrote about your 13-year-old could have been written by me when my son was 13. It could still have been written by me today, and he is now 16. He threatened to throw himself out of the car just the other day. I, too, do not see any good options. I never used to be religious, but I pray for him. I pray for you. I pray for us all.

JCBriard said...

Your child might be psychopathic. No doctor will give you this diagnosis, because they are legally barred from giving it to children. However, there are some screening tests that can detect psychopathic traits in problem children.

see this link: http://www.hare.org/scales/pclyv.html

Sirpa Kaajakari said...

Please check out Gut and Psychology Syndrome if you haven't yet. There is no harm in trying it as a last resort maybe? From experience I know it is powerful in treating mental illness. http://www.gutandpsychologysyndrome.com/

sabaean said...

You've got an indigo kid. While it appears to be like a mental illness and if unrecognized, will become one. The description given of his behavior and brain-power is typical of an indigo child. He's a savant in waiting. Look to the life of Mozart as a model. Find other Indigo kids' parents, it will help.

JCBriard said...

Your child might be psychopathic. No doctor will give you this diagnosis, because they are legally barred from giving it to children. However, there are some screening tests that can detect psychopathic traits in problem children.

see this link: http://www.hare.org/scales/pclyv.html

kathleen pooler said...

Thank you for a profoundly honest and important post. My heart goes out to you. We love our children but sometimes their behaviors are way beyond our control. I have endured loving and living with a substance-abuse son since he was 12 so I can relate to your terror of unpredictable behavior and spotty, ineffective treatment plans. He is now 37 and though he still struggles, he has undergone treatment and seems to be finding his way. I couldn't agree with you more that we need to put the focus on adequate and accessible treatment for those in need. Guns don't kill unless they get in the wrong hands.It's a multifaceted problem. Your words are resonating all over cyberspace and I will share this to. Your story is so important. Sending along prayers that you will have strength for your battle and that your son will get the treatment he needs so he can use all his God given talents in positive ways. Blessings to you and your family, Kathy Pooler http://krpooler.com

Kimberly's Mixed Media Art said...

Have you ever spoken to a place in Utah called "Second Nature" or a place in Redlands CA called "Benchmark". One is a wilderness program (Utah) and the other is a program that helps kids with difficult issues. Both of these places offer psychiatric care as well as help young people handle their emotions and deal with people and family. They both are away programs. So the rest of the family can recover as well. I'm not sure it's a match but it is certainly worth checking out for you and him. I'm sorry you are experiencing such a difficult situation. But there is hope outside of the prison suggestion.

Jacqui Hawkins said...

Thank you for sharing. The lack of appropriate treatment for individuals with mental illness is scary. I hope your story helps to change some of that.

Unknown said...

Naturapathi/Homeopathy, GFCFYF diet, Fresh Coconut and Cold Pressed Coconut Oil, Hemp Protein, Hemp Oil, Vit B12, Folic Acid, Niacin, Sandlewood smell (wearing Sandlewood powder and/or drinking) etc., and focus on a musical instrument (i.e. violin, organ, guitar), and having a Dog (i.e. a Labrador or a Golden Retriever), breathing and meditation may help this child come out of the situation. Please go and see a qualified Naturapath. This child could be the next Einstein ---- Go and see a qualified Naturapath ---- However, please do not consider this as any form of medical advise!!! - Also past life regression therapy - look into it.

cadamy said...

Thank you so much for this gracious and breathtakingly honest post. I share your concerns. My 10-year-old was institutionalized for the second time last month, after being strapped to a gurney and carried off in an ambulance, accompanied by three police officers. My husband and I are both educated, compassionate people. I've done everything I know to do for my children, but I finally put my daughter on the waiting list for a specialized unit for Reactive Attachment Disorder. There are only 4 beds, and it's the only program in the metro area in which we live. So we wait, hope that someone graduates from the program, and then I'll admit my daughter for 6 to 18 months of inpatient care, in hopes that it will be her last stint. I feel your pain and again thank you for writing about your son. Peace to all of you.

Rebekah said...

I posted earlier. I am a LMSW.

Please minimize the hurtful comments made by people like Tom, they do not represent the majority and are not useful to any real dialog in healing. This is complex and layered. You are NOT alone and it is NOT your fault.

Have you looked at diet (sugar, gluten, dairy, soy, etc?) Has he been tested? We now understand better the link between the gastro/intestinal, nervous and immune system. It is very possible your son can be treated and manage his outbursts.

The underlying medical issues are now being better understood and found to be the same in allergies, asthma, adhd and autism spectrum disorders. Please read http://www.amazon.com/Healing-New-Childhood-Epidemics-Groundbreaking/dp/0345494512/ref=cm_srch_tsr_rtr

Also, read
http://www.amazon.com/Cutting-Edge-Therapies-Autism-2010-2011-Siri/dp/1616080256/ref=cm_lmf_tit_7

Also find support and love at nami.org

With love and compassion for everyone struggling to live with biomedical behavioral challenges.

Anonymous said...

I am the mother of a 6-year-old Aspie. He's kind, and sweet, and loving... and prone to outbursts, extreme self-deprication, self-isolation and general misunderstanding of emotional response. I've always had good insurance, but I've watched our availibility of care diminish before my eyes since his diagnosis 3 years ago. What used to be a $20 copay is now a $115 co-insurance. The meds that used to be $35 are now $100 per month. They classify Autism Spectrum as a "personality" issue and lump it in with mental health. My son is entitled to 4 free counseling sessions with a therapist... as if that will help. Everything else is out of pocket now. I pay it, because as I'm sure you understand... he's worth every cent, and I will do everything in my power. But your post is spot on. It's time we get the help we need!!

Adrienne said...

What a powerful story. I am so glad you shared it. Mental Health treatment is vital. Prayers for you and your family.

The Diva said...

My youngest child was like that, he struggled with mental illness most of his life. We all struggled with him. Sadly the only way to get any real help was as the court system showed us was through the D.O.C. because it's pockets are deeper(not my words, the words of a judge). Sadly we lost Baby in 2010 to suicide. His meds were not working right again, it happens as a child grows that meds have to be adjusted. My heart goes out to you, I know how difficult it can be to get help and how so many refuse to even try to understand.

Unknown said...

I ABSOLUTELY agree with everything you are saying about the call to action for throwing the full force of our nation's resources into bettering interventions regarding mental illness. And my heart goes out to you for the seat mental illness has at your family's table. It's incomprehensible, the stress, fear, and grief you experience daily because of it. IN ADDITION, no matter how good our nation's ability to address mental illness - or not - allowing for avenues to put assault weapons in the hands of ANY civilians, mentally stable or not, that can pump rounds not meant even to exit human flesh, rather to destroy it, at a rate of 5 bullets per second and faster into 6-year olds and 60-year olds alike, must ABSOLUTELY be part of the conversation. It's not a matter of blaming this terror on inadequate interventions for mental illness vs. unreasonable access by civilians to law enforcement and military weapons. A problem can't be solved w/out dealing with all of its variables.

Marah said...

Your story is heart wrenching. PLEASE look into Brain State Technologies. It is similar to neuro feedback but far more effective. My daughter was severely depressed and anxious, she trained with the technology - the results were night and day. I am not trying to "spam" you - I am just want you to know there IS real hope. His brain can be changed for the better without meds, without therapy and without invasive techniques. You are both in my prayers - Marah B. in PA

Richard Vetstein said...

Thank you for sharing this powerful story. G-d bless you and your son.

Other Mother said...

Your article spoke to me in a way that no other could. I have a son like Michael. I have been through the attacks, the police calls, the mental hospitals, the terror. I have wrestled him and been bitten, spit upon, hair ripped out.

Keep fighting to get him the mental health treatment he needs. Do not listen to those who say to get him into the criminal "justice" system.

My son is 22 and we are in a time of peace, now. I don't know your son's situation or yours, but I do know that we got to the other side. There is hope. Keep fighting. You aren't alone.

Autumn said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
eileen said...

Thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for being brave enough to share your story. It should not be so difficult to get appropriate treatment for our children, regardless of the diagnosis. My heart goes out to you and your family. I know your pain.

Anonymous said...

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. THANK YOU!

I'm probably the 500th person to tell you thank you for sharing your story. As a child welfare social worker and a mother, I have seen what you are experiencing... and I have struggled with the road blocks. I have watched as the facilities that protected these individuals from themselves, and allowed them to live in an environment which took care of their needs have been shut down.

I grew up just a stones throw from the actual "coo-coos nest" from One Flew Over The Coo-coos Nest.... growing up one block from the former "Assylum" lane, re-named "Center" street (little known that "Center" stood for Psychiatric Treatment Center.

The buildings remain, but they are empty. The hundreds of residents were put out in the community into group homes, many of them sent to prison without committing a single crime.

I worked with these men in their group homes and they wanted to go back "home".... to the assylum, to their family where others who has behaviors like theirs lived....where people understood them, and where they knew they couldn't hurt others.

As a parent of a child with special needs (aspergers) I also experience the parental side of having NO help. Of having NO support. Of getting those dirty looks for the behavior of my son, who sometimes goes through fits of rage because of his Aspergers.

My heart goes out to you, the mother who had the courage to share her ordeal.... and who is at a crossroads. People often don't realize that we don't in fact have SUPER POWERS. We need support, help, and most of all understanding.

http://www.so-calledgeek.com

BunmiL said...

I sympathize with you because of the difficult situation you are in but I am not Adam Lanza's mom and neither are you.

You would not take your mentally-ill child to a gun range regularly and keep unlocked guns in your home.

The fact that 43 out of 63 mass murders are committed by white men does not indicate a mental health issue. Would we be drawing these same conclusions if these men were minorities from the inner city? No. We'd say they were violent. Why is it that when white middle class young men do this we sympathize with their "tortured souls"?

I believe this post was written out of fear that one day you will find yourself in this situation. With proper care and doing things like NOT having unlocked guns in your home, I doubt that. Yes, we do need mental health reform in this country but this doesn't mean that every white suburban shooter gets an instant pass.

Blessings to you and yours.

LunaTechChick said...

Thank you. Have added your blog to my "blogs I'm following" on my blog page. xx

Unknown said...

I don't know if you've already researched the similarities between your son and those associated with Jani...at the Jani Foundation. Thank you for sharing such a personal story with us.

Unknown said...

Please I beg all Americans to look into the effect of anti depressant/psychotic medicines... We have been lied to and made hostage.. The very medicines we believe are suppose to help our children are infact responsible for their violent behaviour... I have seen it too often around me to Start seeing a pattern of violence induced with these meds... The poor children don't even know why they are acting the way they are acting.... I beg all of you to educate yourself on violent crimes and effect of psychotic medicines ...let's pretect our children and question pharmaceutical companies which are destroying our future generations

The Airegin Experience said...

Thank you so much for taking time to give this insight. Wishing you all the strengthh you woudld be needing for the relapse stages but most of all, hoping that your son will receive the RIGHT help without having to make a "criminal" out of him. All the best from Berlin!

Unknown said...

Hi my name is Laura I raise my great nieces and Joy has been in and out of acute and residenal psych units 18 times in the past 5 1/2/ years. Joy has FAS, FAD,ODD,ADHD, and schizophrenia and when she gets mad she gets the strenght of 40 men she can lift her bed that is 80lbs and me on top of it at 165lbs i sat on it to stop her from banging it on the floor and she kept right on going. Mental illness needs to be delt with very seriously

Unknown said...

This is the exact same thing I went through when I was little. I was the exact same way. Eventually my mother couldn't control me and she was forced to put out of the house. I wasn't allowed to live at home because she feared for the lives of her and my sister. I admit, if I was her I would have done the same thing. It was especially hard for her not having a man around to help control me, my father died years ago and there was really nothing holding me back besides law enforcement. I was in juvenile detention all the time and I was incredibly violent. As a young adult it just got worse and was in and out of county jail repeatedly. From personal experience as the violent uncontrollable kid, there's nothing you can say that will make him better. The only thing really took effect on me was being 18 years old and living on the streets, no home and no food. Stealing whatever I needed to survive. It was living like that made me want to try to gain control of mind. It took me years to realize that I even had a problem. That was the main thing, I had no clue that what I was doing wasn't normal. No one took the time of day to help. Without the want or desire to change, the child will stay the same. You must make him aware that this isn't normal because most likely he has no clue. He must become ashamed of what he is doing, but also know that there is a way out. I've gained great control of my mind and emotions, but I still have a ways to go, I'm still easily angered but do not have extreme violent outbursts anymore. It may not seem like much but it is a milestone in my life and something I'm very proud of. I tell my story as a warning and as a reminder, to keep trying. Don't give up on that boy.

TORAN rai said...

This Kid needs a Tony Soprano treatment. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d4-7UtvvHjk

Belle Starr said...

Thank you for this writing. I'm stunned by some of the judgmental posts, can only assume it comes out of the writers' deep fears. To be in the presence of a person (child or adult) who has "left the room" is to understand the mystery of the workings of the Central Nervous System. It is very much like speaking to a person who is speaking and thinking in the language of another planet. And when the disassociation is intermittent an cyclical - and when it is one's child or parent - it is heart-breaking. I could guess at a couple diagnoses, but that isn't really the point of your piece. Something is going on with children in America, especially boy children. I've written about gambling addiction - especially slot machine addiction which occurs on screens somewhat like video games. Researchers have found that the area of the brain that goes into overdrive with cocaine is the same area that lights up in an addicted gambler. I find myself wondering about the impact of "electronics", as you wrote, on developing male brains. Whatever is occurring, we are facing more dark tragedies. Thank you for shining some light on the reality of this situation.

Dennis said...

I grieve for the victims and families of sandy Hook. Down the road, the greater issues need to be addressed. While there are issues of gun laws which need to be discussed , there are greater issues of mental health services and support which need to be looked at. Especially in kids. Psychiatry and psychology, both medical specialties, are limited in services, unless you have cash. The school systems although well intentioned and necessary, cannot offer what is fully needed. Uninsured and poor families have very limited options. And remember some families have their own internal pathology that is not being dealt with.

As a physician it makes me sad and angry that patients can have multiple bypass surgeries, continue to smoke and abuse their bodies, and yet Insurance will pay for repeat stress tests, angiograms and interventions. Dialysis for a 90 year old? Continuing chemotherapy and radiation therapy for someone who has 3 to 4 months of life left?

Yet mental health issues are limited with the number of visits, frequently worthless generic medications and excuses for why appropriate services cannot be initiated or continued. Mental health professionals are limited in their care. The stigma of mental health issues: depression, anxiety, bipolar, etc etc. Children should not have to live in unseen pain. People should not have to go about their lives in quiet desperation.

Nora said...

I'm wondering what sorts of resources would help? Is it that there aren't programs available to help your son? This story reminded me of this documentary: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ME2wmFunCjU

still ok in fb said...

I am retired but I worked in a hospital for criminally insane individuals who had committed a crime had been in a prison or in a hospital. I am sympathetic with their rights to be free but recently I had a heart attack and no one in that hospital was going to let me leave even though I was convinced after the medication went to work that nothing was wrong with me. they had to put me in a helicopter and fly me to the hospital where the surgeon was located. I had had a "widow maker".
I have seen mentally ill people take months to get their medication adjusted to a working dose and or combination that allowed them to function at a level acceptable to a free persons routine and even hold a job or do some kind of work or school. a rare individual couldn't function on any combination but that was usually the result of tonguing their meds or doing everything to not cooperate. I don't think the staff at my ER was cruel for making me stay they saved my life.

robin said...

My heart hurts for you. I have a son with a brain injury and developmental challenge who has at times become so full of anger that my wife was at times concerned for her safety.

There is a place in Thomaston, Georgia that may be able to help. I would be happy to share that with you privately.

robin.rayne@gmail.com

may God fill you and your son with His love and protection.

JessicasMexico said...

You are by example, an extraordinary mother and parent. To recognize the need rather than belabor the action....to understand what is in the best interest of your child and other children and where our society fails our ill. I am so overwhelmed and moved by your courage to call out the truths by your own experience and recognize we have a much bigger issue than that of GUN CONTROL. I am humbled to have read this, Thank you.

Unknown said...

I understand how you feel. I hear you. I'm almost completely alone as a parent of a person with mental illness. My son, 22, has yet to be a danger to us physically but makes some of the most bizarre and poor decisions I've ever heard of. He can exhibit seemingly 'normal' behavior for days and even weeks and then can produce a reaction that is catastrophic at best.
The worst part is that no one understands. No one tries to for long because when they begin to get close they discover how difficult he is and then they back away. My in-laws think he should be physically punished or incarcerated. He's spent time in jail and even though he's 6'6" he was bullied and abused and came out much worse for wear.
My son is considered 'Category 3' disability, we've danced around autism, ADHD and mental retardation for years and still no diagnosis. He's shown to have an IQ of 74 to 78 and is capable of almost no form of personal health and wellness. He sits on the edge of society and tries to fit in. It breaks my heart every day and I worry about his future.
He doesn't want to live at home but can't survive on his own. We're long out of resources and at a loss for where to go.
A support group for parents of mentally challenged children would help.

Leslie said...

Dear ASM,
Trust your gut and don't let the attacks of people here make you question yourself. I have been in your shoes. Your words ring true...it is clear that you are doing the best you can...and that is all anyone can ask of you.

Unknown said...

This post and all the comments have been a breath of fresh air in this world filled with pat answers and black/white analyses.

Priscila Princigalli said...

Opposite to those who are blaming Liza solely on the fact of being a terrible parent, I side on the fact that Michael may after all be a mentally ill kid who needs to get treatment.

It's hard enough being a parent but it's 100 times tougher being the parent of a mentally ill child.

One must not confuse a spoiled brat with a mentally ill child, there's a very very fine line.

There's still no solution for children who suffer this kind mental disorders but if we don't raise our voice and put our act together there never will be.

Mary Hummel said...

I to am from a family with mental illness, my mother has has 3 mental breakdowns(that she was put in the hospital for) once she was treated with electroshock,(scary that it is still allowed!!) all of my brothers and sisters total of 6 of us altogether, have some sort of problems be it panic attacks, depression, fits of rage.. and now we are seeing it in our kids, my nephew was just recently admitted because of a manic state. So be it from environmental things or our genes or even a combination of both I don't know. I do know every one try's to sweep it under a rug and when things ore good and "normal" pretend the bad days, weeks, months never happened.. But they did and they will again. Thank you for speaking out.

Barbara said...

Thank you for this story of yours I appreciate it immensely especially since I suffer from severe depression... You have written this so perfectly... Mental illness of all the different types is serious. And it is so sad:(

Griselda Mussett said...

Thank you for sharing this. I can only imagine what it must be like for you. I saw a really interesting thing on FB today - about the medication handed out for children or people who are depressed or angry... you may have already seen it, but the link is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFbs8s3VI6M&feature=player_embedded
My troubles are not in your league but I found a way out of my own difficulties with JuicePlus+ which I now talk about as my main business - it sounds simple but fruits and vegetables are miraculous in their effects. Forgive me if I am being too forward. I thought your posting here was very brave and helpful.

AwareNewJersey said...

I feel your pain, I feel your fear. I'm so sorry for you, for your son, for your family. I'm a single mom, raised, fortunately, a healthy son to manhood. I can't imagine what you must go through just to cope I would like to suggest to you, and I have no way of knowing what effect it might have, that, when Michael begins to be in trouble, that you try to get him to focus on his body, where his hands are, how his legs feel, what his feet feel like inside his shoes. It's about bringing his attention to the present and getting him inside his body and sensations. It might calm him. You're a brave woman.

Another Mom

AwareNewJersey said...

I feel your pain, I feel your fear. I'm so sorry for you, for your son, for your family. I'm a single mom, raised, fortunately, a healthy son to manhood. I can't imagine what you must go through just to cope I would like to suggest to you, and I have no way of knowing what effect it might have, that, when Michael begins to be in trouble, that you try to get him to focus on his body, where his hands are, how his legs feel, what his feet feel like inside his shoes. It's about bringing his attention to the present and getting him inside his body and sensations. It might calm him. You're a brave woman.

Another Mom

AwareNewJersey said...

I feel your pain, I feel your fear. I'm so sorry for you, for your son, for your family. I'm a single mom, raised, fortunately, a healthy son to manhood. I can't imagine what you must go through just to cope I would like to suggest to you, and I have no way of knowing what effect it might have, that, when Michael begins to be in trouble, that you try to get him to focus on his body, where his hands are, how his legs feel, what his feet feel like inside his shoes. It's about bringing his attention to the present and getting him inside his body and sensations. It might calm him. You're a brave woman.

Another Mom

Celia said...

You have my utter sympathy, empathy and sorrow. It was very brave of you to write this harrowing piece.
Please go to www.ssristories.com and view the 4,800 cases of drug induced violence, murder, mass murder, arson...including 66 cases (list ends in 2010) linking SSRIs to school shootings.

You must (rather, I mean, I respectfully suggest) you find a facility that can safely wean your son off all medications, and put him on a serious detox, including a radically changed diet that will send the nutrients, fatty acids etc to his brain that he needs.

There is one person who CAN help you, and will.

Email Gary Null (gary@garynull.com) and say Celia Farber sent you and it's urgent. He only takes life or death cases. Gary has assisted in resolving many acute, severe cases of psychosis and mental illness by tackling psychological blocks, altering belief system, and radically altering diet and nutrition. He is tough and very effective.

You can get your son back.

Pikate said...

Dear Anarchist Soccer Mom,
I am an older sibling to a sister who was like this as a teenager. Many of the words your son says and his actions are very similar or identical. She was hospitalized 2 times that I can remember (she was 12 and 13) and was on everything but Lithium. No one knew what to do, but my mother kept fighting. Special schools, classes, therapy, and medication. She is diagnosed with Asperger's, ADHD, Oppositional Defiant disorder, and Bipolar disorder. It was hard for many, many years. There were holes in the walls, broken doors, bite and dig marks. Now, 16 years later, this seem to have sorted themselves out and she got help. Thank you NAMI and the North Shore ARC.

She is now 29, a manager of a Bath and Body works, lives on her own, pays her bills, has friends, and a life. She still explodes, but has learned to deal with it and knows what triggers her. Please don't ever stop fighting. He needs you even thought he says he hates your guts.

southerngirl1990 said...

First of all, to the mother, hang in there and thank you for sharing your story. To the Macey person, my sister has borderline personality disorder so i know what it is and i know how manipulative people can be with that. Everyone in my family has tried to help my sister, we all love her but she doesn't want help. No one told her she was crazy or bad but she just keeps getting worse and worse because it's a mental illness and yes like this mother on this blog it got to the point where she had to be taken to the mental hospital a couple of times. She even got us kicked off fort stewart, GA becuase of her wild behavior. She is 24 now and it still acting out. She had medicine to take but she thinks once it starts to kick in and she calms down that she doesn't need it anymore. You don't know what this family must have gone through. Sometimes it gets to the point that the mother described. It is because of my sister's personality disorder that i am in college studying psychology/criminal justice and criminology. All my life, i've lived in my sister's shadow and so i've seen and profiled her behavior. My maternal grandma always gave haylee what ever she wanted, she was her favorite, still is but a few months ago her and my sister lived together and up until then she demonized my mama and put my grandma up on a pedastal but once it was just her and my grandma and her behavior once again was spiriling out of control she turned on my grandma.Now my grandma lives in OK while she is still in S.C. Mental illness is something that needs to be taken seriously and the family can try everything to get people help but until the person with the illness sees and wants to change and get help it may not work. I will pray for this mother and her family and hope everything works out. Blaming this mother is wrong and shameful and i pity all these people that are. Yes, some people with problems grow up fine like one person said about edgar allen poe but a lot of the time they end up like the mother said the school shooters and mass murderers. BTK and John Wayne Gacy were married and seemed normal but we all know what horrible things they did. Appearances can be deceiving. To the mother on this blog, good luck and i know how frightening it must be. I will keep your family in my prayers and i truely hope everything works out in the end.

cindy said...

You have just written the single most important piece of journalism that has come out of this sad event. Thank you.

cjohnson said...

SAVE YOUR OTHER CHILDREN. i grew up in a home just like yours-my sister was extremely violent- it took at least 5 police officers and ambulance people to wrestle her out of the house and into the ambulance, usually every other weekend, when i was age 12-18 (when i left). DO NOT MAKE YOUR GOOD CHILDREN SUFFER. let them live with neighbors. Let them live with relatives. God forgive me, let them go into foster care, rather than continue to subject them to their violent sibling. i am 45, and am only now starting to get over the rage at my mother, the ruined childhood and teenage years, the social isolation and shame, the fear, the lack of trust in ANYONE. and that is with YEARS and YEARS of therapy. do not make every memory of their childhood tainted with memories of their own misery- i have NO good memories of Christmas, holidays, birthday parties, NOTHING. all the energy in the family was sucked up by the monster child, and the leftover children (i always felt invisible) are faced with a lifetime of being ignored. PLEASE SAVE THEM NOW. get them out of that house. or get rid of the monster. Yeah, i know you feel guilty. but you are sacrificing your own happiness, and your children's past, present and future happiness for a monster that cannot give back any happiness. sacrificing THREE LIVES for the sake of one (that can't be saved) is unforgivable.

M said...

There is so much of this that I feel in my heart, and I want to thank you for writing it. I have several family members with severe mental health issues and we have gotten to the point where we were glad when they broke the law (thankfully, small stuff like shoplifting) because it meant they could finally get help.

I'm sorry that other commenters are berating you for the way you live your life, but you are doing the right thing to protect yourself, your family, and Michael. It's hard to have to weed through the drugs and find that right one, especially at that age, but as he gets older and his body chemistry changes I hope that he grows in to the person he can be. Never let him lose sight of the things he loves, those will be the things that help him climb out of the hole.

cindy said...

You've just written the single most important piece of journalism that has come out of this sad event. Thank you.

Susie M. said...

Thank you for writing about this. I believe our inability to get meaningful help for our children is partially to blame for some of these mass murders.
To the outside world, my 14-yo son was normal. At home, he was angry, violent, and severely depressed (father passed away 5 years ago). I could not leave my daughter alone with him. No one believed things were really that bad. I tried everything. I also knew in my heart that he had the potential to be a "Columbine" kid.
Thankfully, after 4 years, I finally found someone who believed me. My son is now in a residential treatment facility where he is addressing his grief, anger, and depression. It is wonderful to see the life back in his eyes and to be able to share again.
Unfortunately, insurance does not cover the cost of this type of facility. They only have crisis coverage when someone is a danger to themselves or others. It will cost over $140,000 for one year of treatment. I am one of the fortunate ones - I have life insurance money, although I would sell everything I own to see my son the way he is now. Yet, there are so many children who need this type of treatment, but whose parents cannot afford these types of costs. These are the lost children in our society.

Hustrollet said...

It saddens me to say that this is the first time I've read my life written by others, but it's true. I've got a kid just like yours, the sweetest boy ever as long as his wishes ande desires are put first, a nightmare if not, and no commond trigger for his rage other than him having to obey rules set by others...... As he's expected to eventually be both taller and stronger than me, I've started taking self defence lessons so I'll be able to defend myself, and hes only twelve.....I recognize all your feelings as I feel them too, and I too fear for my son's future. Thank you for putting my, and probably many others reality in print! And although I know this comment offers no help I just wanted you to know that you're not alone. Hugs from Norway

Unknown said...

michiel is in a world where he is told about imaginary sky gods as though they're real and those same irrational adults are dictating what color pants he has to wear. he allready knows he is smarter than these people. the diagnostics of MH seem like an attempt to classify certain behavior and promote pharma. I think the problems may be authoritarian rigid delusional adults' anxity rubbing off. Over due library books let him pay the fine. having to prove I'm not a robot makes me angry

Dami Anna said...

Please check out this book. It may be helpful to you. I work with children and found this helpful with a couple of them. It is not a magic cure. It requires work and talks about dealing with setbacks that you may encounter. I hope it will be useful with your son.
http://www.amazon.com/Explosive-Child-Understanding-Frustrated-Chronically/dp/0061906190

Hushicho said...

It seems like your son is not all that different from most of his age, he's just not internalising his inner dialogue. It's just not all that uncommon for that age, especially for someone who is gifted...he's most likely bored to death by school and probably frustrated by a school with clearly a strict dress code, which in choosing you've done him no favours and certainly haven't helped by picking fights about such insignificant matters.

To be honest, I feel this is a combination of bad parenting and bad schooling that doesn't strive to understand the student, but eagerly punishes him for any time he dares to defy or answer back. Oftentimes these young people simply don't know they have any alternative than their lashing out...and oftentimes they don't have any alternative. They're usually treated as if they're objects or possessions.

I'm not saying you're a bad parent, period. But I don't think you have taken the time or effort to understand your child, and I think you're approaching it in the typically improper way that so many Americans do: throw medication at it, threaten the child for not conforming, and never address the possibility that maybe, just maybe, you're as much as part of the problem, and the schools are as well.

For people like your son, a restrictive dress code can be as infuriating and stifling as any other form of censorship. And a fight over that? Please. If you're thinking he's insane because you had an argument with a teenager, which you started, and he called you a stupid bitch, then maybe you should take a few steps back and talk to some people who have actually dealt with teenagers before.

When I was growing up, I was highly gifted and my parents often found it difficult to relate. My mother and I had some really intense arguments sometimes, but neither of us ever physically hurt the other. Does that mean it was a good situation? No. Does it mean either of us was insane and needed to be locked away because we 'couldn't handle it'? No, that's not true either.

This just seems like such a situation where a parent isn't prepared to deal with a child more intelligent and wise than his years, who doesn't want to be constrained and suppressed, and who simply isn't willing to suppress himself. As usual, society pushes it on everyone. No wonder he's furious. And the whole threatening suicide? It's in any popular media, and again, it's nothing new for teenagers.

It seems that, more than this poor kid needs to be shut away in mental hospitals and treated like a criminally insane person (which he is not), this blogger mother needs to go to a class and learn a few things about how to raise a teenager.

Unknown said...

You're a good mother, something's you will never be able to fix, but you can make sure you take care of yourself. Put the oxygen mask first on yourself (instruction for airplane passengers during emergencies) then your child. You can't solve his problem, but you can make sure he's in an institution that treats him respectfully and keeps him safe and others safe from him. You have a duty to the rest of your family. Get the relief/support for him,oversee the institution regularly, then get your mental health back so you may be there for the rest of your family.

Aubrey said...

Thank you, thank you, thank you for such a well written article that captures the heartache, challenges, helplessness and beauty of loving a child with mental illness. Your son is blessed to have a mother like you.

Sarah of Sleepy Eye said...

Jesus mercy! I know this situation personally. We adopted a high needs child at age 12 and he had an alphabet soup of diagnoses. We were totally unprepared to parent him and I think the county was just grateful to have him off their foster care roles. He had made progress in inpatient treatment but was by no means totally stable. Multiple police calls, psych visits, in patient psych hospital visits and juvenile detention visits slowly brought progress. He's on his own now, but lives in poverty trying to pay down bad debt and child support. He is emotionally stable now but it has been so incredibly agonizing - it almost destroyed our marriage.

These young males need intensive intervention. They won't just 'get better'. The cost to the public will be massive exponentially if we don't invest 'up front' in early intervention. Judgement upon parents must end - I tend to see it as environmental/genetically caused = pollutants/genetic mutations affecting social/emotional development.

Let us band together to work for positive mental health and medical interventions to prevent these tragedies.

Jesus mercy!

Ms. Tina said...

My now 17 year old exhibited many of these same behaviors. He scared us on a regular basis and was hospitalized at 12 years when his psychiatrist believed his comments were suicidal. However, he was discharged after a couple days saying he was depressed and suffering from anxiety along with his Aspergers and ADHD. And he recommended an immediate change in meds. It took several weeks, but the new meds definitely made a positive change. His school changed also, with the new one emphasizing positive behaviors and rewards. Like one poster mentioned as a possible aid, he developed a renewed enjoyment of music in 8th grade when he was allowed to join band at his new school.
It wasn't all him though... We as parents (and family -he's the oldest of five kids) had to make changes as well. We learned what his triggers were most frequently. We put into place calming actions and strong rewards for showing control in situations that previously would set him off. Gradually we were able to increase expectations on his behaviors but he taught us too how he views our inflexible world and wanted things that we were able to provide by getting him into a smaller high school (average class size is fifteen students or less) where he could thrive. My son, too, is very bright, but when faced with all the demands around him, he would outburst or shut down. It hasn't been easy, but through years of therapy and strong school support for him via a diagnosis of an emotional disorder, we have turned the corner. He now is able to control his anger impulses and is a much happier person who has set a goal for himself of college and beyond. Lots of things may help your son and family life, but what I hear from your story is that you want what is best for your child and family - which is attainable. Don't give up trying. If you son has bi-polar or Aspergers there is hope. And if he's depressed, there is still hope. Depression in teens often shows as anger according to one of my son's doctors. Thanks for sharing your story with us - I would love to see mental illnesses become more front and center. Find the source and we can make real changes in our world!

Aubrey said...

Thank you, thank you, thank you for such a well written article that captures the heartache, challenges, helplessness and beauty of loving a child with mental illness. Your son is blessed to have a mother like you.

Frank said...

Let me guess- he started off on Ritalin or a drug similar to that, it made him crazy, and they worked him up to stronger stuff. Kids should not take any mind altering drugs because their brains are still developing. I am a disabled vet with PTSD and the VA had me on every type of drug. Every one of them did the same thing- took away my filter, forcing me to say and do things that my conscience would normally tell me not to. It wasn't until I stopped taking them that I started to feel better. The problem with these drugs is when you're coming off of them, you feel and act even worse. People take that as a sign that the drugs were working, and so the cycle repeats itself. Also doctors are so quick to prescribe them because they drug company's pay them to. I have 2 boys and yes there hyper but kids are, I just couldn't trust a drug that changes the brains chemicals when there brains are always changing anyways. Its different when your an adult because your brains done growing and you know how your going to act and feel. I am not coming down on you im just simply stating how i feel about it only you can make the choice. Im sure i will get retaliation for my post everyone is entitled to there opinion. I just don't think these company's know enough about the brain to say this chemical can fix the problem, we are still learning new things about the brain all the time and until they understand it all the way I say they can keep there pills.

Nora said...

I wanted to clarify that I wasn't in any way suggesting that your child has been abused. My point was only to illustrate that with the right resources, children with severe mental health problems can be helped.

CherryBearsandBars said...

By telling Macey that she has BPD and that this is a reason to dismiss her comment is just plain ignorant and wrong. People almost always develop this disorder because they are abused and because one of the symptoms for this disorder is manipulation their voices are often silenced and their feelings and actions are always blamed on the disorder. Almost everyone with BPD have been tortured and many are the victims of sexual, physical and mental abuse by their caregivers. Maybe Macey has developed this rage because when she tried to tell everyone around her that she was being teased they simply blamed it on her and told her she was lying. What could ever possibly make a person feel worse than being blamed for someone abusing them and / or being called a liar when they report that they are being abused? Sufferers of BPD are not all sociopathic and evil people and it increases their rage when we dismiss them and their feelings. I have a very close friend and she has been told numerous times that she has this condition and very few clinicians have taken her feelings seriously thus increasing her rage. We don't know the mom here and she is most likely trying to protect her son in the best way she knows how to. While she is doing that she naturally and unfortunately makes her other family members scared of their sibling which hurts him more and makes him act out more. When a child is forced into a special classroom that is meant to help him it can also hurt him in more ways than you know unless you have been close to someone who was in a special setting. The mom may not have much of a choice and this child may very well need a special setting or even a residential school and those settings will only be the lesser of 2 evils because they will most likely make him feel like he has failed and that no one cares about him. She has to protect the other children and she most likely has no choice but to teach them how to deal with their brother. The parents of some children with the issues the mom talks about here have done nothing wrong and in fact they have done everything in their power to help their child. There are other cases where Munchausen By Proxy may cause bpd and aggressive behaviors like the behaviors this mom talks about here. The child is not here to defend himself and while I do have a feeling that this mom is absolutely telling the truth and absolutely doing her best we must always acknowledge that there may be something else going on here. To attack the mother, to tell her that she is not doing a good job and to assume on the flip side that she is not at fault are all wild guesses from us. We do not live in her home and we can do our best to help, but we should never diagnose or assume anything. Assumption is the mother of all screw ups and using your own personal experiences to assume that they relate to what is going on here is unfair because again we do not know what goes on in this home since we are not there.

Unknown said...

I don't mean to come off as harsh or insensitive, but have you considered your son is just spoiled and hasn't grown up with discipline? It sounds like he is throwing a fit, like lots of children do. He sounds emotionally immature. I admit that the threats of violence are scary and I'm assuming that his father is not around?

I'm 30 years-old and if I had ever called my mom a stupid bitch when I was 13, she would have knocked the hell out of me or slapped me across my face. She never beat me, and I can count on one hand the times that I received a spanking (never severe) but even now as a grown man, I respect my mom.

I should point out that I'm not some gun-toting redneck conservative, or someone who thinks you need to go around beating your children, but I do think your son needs his ass whooped when he treats you like this or has one of his fits.

This is just my humble opinion based only on your single blog post, I'm obviously not an expert and don't know the extent of your son's problems.

EcoJillP said...

I got as far as the introduction to this blog and now need to leave a comment. THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!! Thank you for posting, thank you to everyone else supporting the post. I keep thinking I am alone with these thoughts of trying to turn away the national discussion from gun control to mental health issues. There are so many that need to be addressed! Those who advocate for action need to be heard! How can we be heard when we are drowned out amid the gun control talk? I'm so glad to see so many posts here. THANK YOU!!!

Hydragon said...

You mean like this?:

http://www.sociology.org/content/vol003.004/thomas.html

Unknown said...

I praise your strength to do what you do and to stick by your word. I don't know that I could be that strong if it were my child.

I pray for you and your son.

I have worked in the field for 10 years and have been going to school for psychology and mental illness (currently in my Master's program), I fully understand your frustration with the "system". I have first hand seen clinicians and even police officers tell parents that you have to call the police and charge the child with an offense not once, but THREE times in order for something to be done! For a "paper trail" to be started and for a child to get the care that they need! It is horrendous. It is awful for the child. It is painful for the parents. It is sickening that they want to lock up anyone who has a mental illness rather than help.

I pray there is a solution for all and I pray that things get easier for you and your family.

ElleVancouver said...

Wow, can't believe all the judgemental comments on here! How can you people, without knowing this woman, tell her she is a bad mother? How the hell do you know? I know parents that had VERY poor parental skills and let their children run rough shod over them. This does NOT sound like that situation, let's suppose this IS true, just suppose...what then? THAT is her point, she wants help for her son how about we look at that? Wow, you Americans won't look at your insane gun (or lack there of) laws and now mental illness is taboo too? I feel for this mother.

Diane Mouskourie said...

Another, probably preventable and horrific act by someone who surely needed help long before.
It seems only family and friends of those who have a mental illness can truly empathize with your situation. Yes. It is high time people wake up to the fact it is not guns that kill, rather the people who hold them. Laws are nothing without enforcement, which usually comes too late.
Mental illness should be treated as any other physical illness without penalizing the patient.

visualplant said...

You can talk about mental illness all day long, but there will forever be a percentage of mentally ill kids and when they have easy access to firearms, we are all in danger.

Unknown said...

My heart goes out to you! My oldest son just called me and told me I had to read this. I could of wrote it myself! My youngest just turned 14 and he could be your son's twin (as well as my 21 year old son). My son has been in and out of hospitals and on every med there is. I would love to talk sometime. Thank you for writting this!

Catherine said...

I so appreciate your post and the frankness with which you describe your struggles with your son. I don't have a son like yours, but I did have a mother who was bipolar and paranoid schizophrenic even before I was born. My 4 brothers and I suffered terribly at her hands. I remember waking up one night as a teen with her laying next to my bed. Used to odd behavior by this time, I went back to sleep and when I awoke in the morning, I found a knife laying next to my bed. Soon after I added a lock to my bedroom door. We were regularly the recipients of physical and emotional abuse and our father coped by closing up or by being absent. Two of my brothers wound up committing suicide as adults and one is barely functional. Our extended families lived in denial and have been of no support throughout the years. The "system" didn't help either. When my mom died, to my shame I said, "It's finally over." I thought so at the time, but the truth is that it's never over because the damage done is long term and affects one on a daily basis. I support your contention that we really need to address mental health issues, but I would add, not only for children, but for adults who have the care of children. God bless you!

Unknown said...

At first I heard abt this tragic news in USA I thought to myself, really politicians in America should take some responsibility and do sth abt these guns in there. I am from Iran and believe me, my heart goes on to you and your son and all those mothers who have lost their children. It was so nice to know that you r brave enough to do sth like this even though it is heart breaking and God knows what you r going thorough with a problem like this.and I salute you for your brave decision making. I just hope not to hear again abt a tragic matter like this and wish health and happiness for you and son and all American families from bottom of my heart. God bless you all.

SecretBatcave said...

Have you spoken to green chimneys in brewster, NY?

I worked for the Summer Camp there a few years ago, and was impressed by the order and respect they managed to instill in the children.

Gayle said...

My heart breaks for you and your son. The entire nation needs to come together to understand these situations and the health services community needs to find a way to address the situation. I continue to hold you and your son in my heart!

Amy H. Jones said...

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Unknown said...

I am you. Day in and day out. I understand you completely. On the 28th of last month my 16 year old Autistic son went into meltdown,I mean total meltdown. I was terrified. My baby slung me all over our living room, I couldn't get my footing to even try to stop him.Understand he is only 138 pounds and I am 245 pounds. I was being choked by my shirt. I was screaming. My 19 year old high function Autistic heard me and came down and that is what stopped his brother.Then he is sorry. I have found over the years living with 2 Autistics that they can't stop once they start.Scared YES I am but like you I will endure whatever I have to they are mine. One is now stable and the younger,well I have finally gotten him referred to an Autistic specialty group in one of the best Childrens hospitals in the states. So I pray this will help my 16 year old (4 year old child)

Hushicho said...

Also, commenters, please stop trying to assume what anyone's motivations were in anything -- you don't, especially the recent shootings, which this has little if anything to do with.

Did any of you actually read the article? So many of these posts are terrifying, with people so willing to believe that anything that doesn't go along with them and their ideas must be 'mental illness'. Good going!

Yes, some of those posting and being less than supportive to the mother here went through these things as children and young adults. Maybe they haven't experienced parenthood, but that doesn't make their perspective any less valid.

You people are revolting.

Erin said...

I am heartbroken for you and other families going through the same thing. When my son was small Red #40 additive made him very aggressive and I was afraid of what he would turn into. Luckily for both of us, my mother found a book on food allergies and through elimination we found the problem. He is now a 6'5" 300 pound football player, I shudder to think what could have been.

Recently I came across a book by Dr. Natasha Campbell McBride (gapsdiet.com) called Gut and Psychology Syndrome that explains how food additives and allergies can cause the behavior you describe. I don't know if it would help you and your son but I do think it would be worth looking into. I wish I had known about it 20 years ago.

If you want to try it I would happily buy it for you. You can msg me on twitter @blusie - God bless you, you are such a brave woman.

Shani said...

Thank you, thank you, thank you, this is my life too.

Unknown said...

There are two things that I see missing from your story: one is giving your child a sense of place in the world that clearly overwhelms him by giving him recourse to a higher power (God, the Force, whatever you want to call it) and two is instilling in him a larger sense of personal responsibility. Knowing that he is ill is one thing, knowing that despite his illness he has a personal responsibility to take ownership of his actions and their outcomes and must personally deal with the emotional aftermath is crucial. This is not instilling guilt, this is creating a person who understands that blaming outside influences or factors he cannot control for his actions is unacceptable and frankly this is the only way he will develop the self control he needs to deal with his illness. There are many many people in this world who struggle with mental illness. The ones who are successful in their struggle are the ones who know that they cannot scapegoat their illness to excuse actions. I feel for you, because I can't help but wonder if it is too late. You teach a child from a very young age "I can tell you what is good and acceptable behaviour. It is up to you to do it, I cannot be with you every moment to force you to do it." Without this lesson, and without it being deeply ingrained, there is a very good chance that once a person with any sort of impulse control issues is big enough and strong enough and has access to weapons... chances are he or she will hurt someone.

jgamble said...

Here's a white house petition that everyone might be interested in.

https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/build-federally-funded-mental-healthcare-system-united-states-offers-treatment-education-and/kb63nFrz

<*ANGEL*> said...

Hi, I came across your posting when a friend posted the link on facebook. It must be pretty difficult on you to have a son who exhibits such behavior. You are a wonderful mother and I know you must have done your very best for all your children even though it is not easy. I do feel for you as I am a mother of a 7 year old little boy myself. I am not sure how much you believe in the holistic workshops but I wonder though if you have tried a Family Constellation workshop for your son? I have attended a few of such workshops and found that many people with mental issues may find the root of their issue related to something that may have happened in the family history as we tend to pass down not just DNA but also emotions and unfinished business onto the next generations. I was just thinking it might be helpful for your son too. If you are interested to find out more, you can google for "Systemic Constellation" or you can email me at verityy@yahoo.com and perhaps i can share more with you.. or link you up to my workshop facilitator.

Michael said...

It's important to realize that everyone has a capacity for mental illness. Every time you label someone crazy or a troubled soul, you risk pretending that they are completely different and so alienating them. People are not inhuman. A chemical "imbalance" is a short hop from normal for all of us.

Unknown said...

I know people are going to think I am crazy but have your tried taking gluten out of your childs diet? I have a daughter who is gluten sensitive and on and off gluten is astounding, like two diffrent kids. Her older sister says it's like I have two sisters, a sweet one and a crazy one.I know that it's not a complete answer to the mental health issue but something very simple and I can attest to the diffrence it can make.

Sabrina B said...

I feel for you and wish I could help. Your story moved me to tears and I can understand your frustration based on what you wrote not based on experience.I agree that those with mental illness need help and something needs to be done to make help available.

Mama Too said...

Thank you for sharing this. I am at a similar point in my home. I pray that the hateful, ignorant mean people that have posted do not deter you from sharing more in the future. If your post helps but one person then it is all worth it. Thank you.

phornix said...

Absolutely spot on! I hope you get the help you need for your son and I hope you post opens some eyes

Unknown said...

blogmom: You made a statement in your post - "Your son should be able to get into residential treatment without having committed a crime." I really need to understand what you've learned along those lines. Struggling through these issues with an adult family member, and our experience is the exact opposite. Unless, of course, you have $6k or more to spend per month out of your own pocket. If you know of a route that we have not discovered, PLEASE share...

Dolorosa said...

My brother, many years ago, was diagnosed mentally ill and he is on medication that helps him to cope. It is very difficult, I know, but you must seek help and there are support groups as well.
http://www.nami.org/template.cfm?section=your_local_nami

Accountname6876544 said...

If you are in this situation, you need to have your child diagnosed with Autism. In california this will make you elidgable for Applied Behavior Therapy. It is a science not psychology. You need to do it as soon as possible

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