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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Mackenzie said...

This used to be me. My daughter was violent starting at age 10. We couldn't control her, ahe would trash a room, have screaming fits so much blood vessels popped in her face. We had to call the police in her many times, hide all the knives in the house, had our other kids sleep in our bedroom and lock the door. Now at age 14 she is a completely different kid, polite, honor roll, doesn't throw fits anymore. Im not a prisioner in my own home. At one of our many appointments the doctor tested her hormone level and it was off, further testing revealed she had a diaease called hashimoto an auto immune disease. Within a week of being on her pill she was changed. Thw doctor said a lot of people with this disease are misdiagnoaed as bi-polar because of the outburst and mood swings. I would seriously advise you to see about getting himttested. I no longer fear my families safety. All from one little pill.

TruThat said...

Well let me say that this is one of the best stories I have read in the last fee days. I've tried to read every comment but it's a pretty big list. I wanted to say as a mother that you should NOT be ashamed of posting this on Facebook. What happened to those children is tragic! And I see you are only doing what everyone is asking. We are trying to come up with solutions that can make our world a better place. You sharing the importanace of mental health system matters. Eyes need to be opened. Something has to change.

To the people who felt that you are a bad mom for posting THEY are wrong. What if through all these blogs you find the help you wanted and crave so desperately. I pray for you and your son.

To the people that think you're doing something wrong because your child acts out...this is why the blog was posted to show people what it is to deal with and control someone that has mental illnesses. I'm not saying your perfect. No mother is. But the issue is NOT you.

Macey...your anger towards you're own family is obvious in your comment. But not Every child can use that same excuse...I believe this mother is trying to do what your parents failed to do which is try to understand why? What? It's more then just being mad at parents. Because if that was the case there wouldn't be a parent left in the world. My children react out of anger. But their reaction is less severe. Never a danger. That's the truth everyone is different, everyone reacts differently to meds, and hospitals, shrinks. With mental illness, along with the gamut of diagnosis, there are also endless possibilities for treatment the problem is finding what works for the individual. Some don't want help and will murder children some will reach out for group therapy, counseling,meds, friends, and family.

We need to open our eyes and see that we are responsible of taking care of these loved ones. That even though it's tiresome and scary that they depend on us. Never give up searching. Never quit asking our government to put more in place to help mentally ill people.

This mother isn't giving up, she isn't selfish. Shes confused and scared. And if you have ever experienced a moment of psychotic episodes with a friend or family member then you would understand. I have and I have thought that my life would even end at the hands of that loved one. That fear is real. The danger plan is a good idea to keep your other kids safe. And as much as I say we support these family members we also have to know that if there's a danger to others that we must have a better system to handle them. Or all our geniuses might end up in jail. The person who might discover the cure to cancer. Jail isn't the answer until every other avenue has been exhausted. But in the end if help was denied by the medical system or the patient the outcome will always be the same tragedy..or jail

Mellisa said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

yes, there is no room for a serious debate on mental health and medicine on top of medicine, on top of medicine is visibly making it all worse.
I can imagine your pain as a few hundred times worse than mine: I have an autistic daughter who grew older now but it was hard to have people screaming at me in public spaces when she would throw herself on the floor and start to scream.
I knew when to intervene or not and I would get those stares and comments filled of poison between teeth: "she is spoiled", "bad parent".
She is the younger of two other girls and came to change my life forever when I didn't want another child.
On another note, if you don't mind, don't mix a murderer like che guevara with babies or soccer, much less with anarchy. He was a bad man that once went in front of the UN general assembly and pledge to continue killing who opposed his revolution in Cuba. He was an Ahmadinejad in the 60s and the world will never know for sure how many people were murdered there.

Other than that, I wish you the best of luck with your guy who loves Harry Potter like my girls and his toys.
Happy holidays and a better new year for you and your family.

Valeria Washington

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
megz said...

I can identify with this mother, many similar experiences including taking my son to emergency when he threatened suicide as a teen, and having an officer watching over him until the doctor could see him, us..
Then my son went down the path of drugs and alcohol..leading to being admitted to a recovery facility.. I met another mother who's son had been into drugs, I asked how he was today? Her answer.."He's dead" My entire attitude changed at that moment, I was crushed by this woman's revelation, and at the same time realized my son was still alive, and I had hope...
Every day is a new beginning, not just for the 'sick', but for all.. the grace of God offers us hope in every day..love unending..
Today my adult son and I have the blessing of friendship and love...God is amazing!
A special lady shared with me this morning a story about Friday's horror... She said when she heard of the shootings in Newtown, at first she was upset...then she thought of Heaven, and how alive it must be with all those precious children running and playing, it must be truly beautiful...
May God bless and watch over every man, woman, and child in this world who has lost someone due to violence, indifference, negligence, or apathy....so many people in this world dying every day... Let us find a way to make our world a better place for all, begin at home, reach out to a neighbour, volunteer at your church, or at a mission, or food bank.... find a way to put a bit of 'U' back into community!
When we act more God-like, it pleases our Father, who only wants the best for all of His children!

Lea said...

I've suffered with severe depression most of my life. And have been physically ill for over 16 months now. Until these past few weeks the Drs. were just treating the illness symptoms and not finding a cause.
I went to a new doctor and have been diagnosed with Celiac's disease, and my body does not tolerate dyes that are in foods, drinks and makeup. I've been on a Gluten Free, and dye free diet for just a couple of weeks and not only am I physically feeling better, but my depression, anger, etc. have greatly improved in just that short period of time.
A few friends that have small children were have very bad behavioral problems with their toddlers and were told to take them off of all foods with Dyes and put them also on a Gluten free diet. Their Toddlers are now loving, sweet and caring little ones. Where before they were choking, biting, hitting other toddlers and screaming/yellings/crying all the time.
Don't know if this would help your son, but talking to his Dr. about trying these things might be a start.
Best Wishes!

Unknown said...

Mental illness is a key issue. But simultaneously, could we make it much more difficult to buy assault weapons? I mean, how difficult is to buy a hand grenade or cyanide? Why are they so difficult to purchase, and yet the assault weapons are so available??? There are many things that can be done to deter our violent American society.

craftjunkiesc said...

You tell your story with such dignity & grace. My heart goes out to you & your family. I have no answers for you. Just want you to know you all are in my prayers.

Kirsten said...

As someone who works in primary health care and counsels patients on similar situations, I want to tell you what a good job you are doing. I know it is hard to see your child like that and it can be even harder to do what needs to be done, whether that is teaching your other children how to protect themselves or having your son placed on a psychiatric hold.
I have an aunt that suffers from severe mental illness so I understand the personal aspects of mental illness also. It has been difficult to have our own family accept her diagnosis. It is difficult to provide care for her and keep her safe. We have had that conversation within our family that she may be better off in jail at times.
Thank you for sharing. The more people who share these stories, the more others will realize just how common it is and then we can start to develop real solutions.

Jacquie_md said...

You are brave mom to share this. I would like to help get this conversation, which I think is very, very important and poignant, to a larger audience. Would you please contact me at 301-503-4533 to discuss publishing this at Communities @Washington Times.com

Thank you. And my thoughts and prayers are for you and your son, as well as the other mom's who have responded "me to."

Jacquie

beckeroo said...

Thank you for writing this. As a younger sister to someone like your son, I know some of the struggle you are going through and will continue to go through. It never ends. I wish I could be more hopeful. I wish there were more supportive living facilities for people like him. I wish a lot of things...

Good luck to you and your family.

Nancy Knopp said...

Read your blog.... I think this could help, and I don't want to give you another thing that could just be maybe helpful, but I am helping kids with mood, add, adhd, and autism. The root issue could be in relation to food sensitivities. Please check out http://naet.com/Patients/media.aspx This is allergy elimination. This technique is reversing these symptoms and mood. Till then cut out sugar, gluten and dairy food preservatives, flavorings and colorings at least for 2 weeks and see if you notice a difference. When a child is highly sensitive, it is like a light switch and the chemicals go straight to the brain causing mood altering chemical reaction...ie toxic overload. I am speaking as a mother and a natural health practitioner. Recently I helped a child get off anxiety mood meds, and the doctor said it might be a lifetime issue. I personally had food allergies for 5 years, and it was the worst state for my mind in life. When I had gluten or sugar, there was feeling of anger and rage for no reason,, and before I got the sensitivities, I never had any of these issues. Anyways at least take a look into this...Food, chemical sensitivities, and toxic overload with heavy metals play a major role.

Svend la Rose said...

What we need is a conversation on authoritarianism and a consensus against the imposition of more restrictions on people, including children, than are narrowly necessary for their protection and provision. In this case, the right thing for you (the author) to do would be to help Michael (name changed) in suing the school to strike down the dress code under the 14th Amendment. Instead, you stood with the school against Michael, thereby betraying him. Who would not go crazy, being repeatedly betrayed like that?

Anonymous said...

I have a brother with very many issues, both psycological and not, and being scared is something myself and my entire family had to learn how to overcome. For you to put all your fears out there for everyone to read and take in, but also relate to I cannot thank you enough. I am left speechless, and crying after reading yout story. You are an amazing, amazing woman to take care of your son in the manner of which you do. Your patience and love is something this world should learn from.

Svend la Rose said...

What we need is a conversation on authoritarianism and a consensus against the imposition of more restrictions on people, including children, than are narrowly necessary for their protection and provision. In this case, the right thing for you (the author) to do would be to help Michael (name changed) in suing the school to strike down the dress code under the 14th Amendment. Instead, you stood with the school against Michael, thereby betraying him. Who would not go crazy, being repeatedly betrayed like that?

Anonymous said...

I am "Michael" Long and Adam Lanzer's mother. Like Michael, my son is 13 and the latest label is "bipolar". There have been many different labels and many different meds, four short-term psych hospitalizations and 12 months at a residential school. And he's still violent.

There for the grace of God goes anyone's child.

Unknown said...

you need to beat your child, and should have been doing so before it got to this point. Now I am not saying it like it sounds merely being funny about the fact that spanking a child is ok when they have done wrong, you dont need to leave marks and hurt them but simply taking away his electronics for calling you a bitch is tantamount to saying it is ok. Kids need discipline, I was spanked and I spank my child (when needed) and he is respectful and polite and knows his boundries.

Unknown said...

Thank you so much for talking about this. I have multiple family members and friends who deal with this. We pray daily for them and for doctors to be able to help them. I pray for parents to understand that this is not a knock on their parenting ability, but a real issue. It took me years to understand that my depression was not my fault, but my mind not working right. Thankfully I have a spouse and friends who understand and help me recognize the signs of it and help me to work through it. It is so easy for us to recognize those with physical disabilities but so hard to see those that don't. Stay strong and may God bless you with people who can help you and your son!

Rita Glynn Smith said...

Mental illness is something that affects the young and old. Suddenly at the age of 48, my father after a head injury, became violent, threatening, menacing --- was the owner of several firearms, samarai swords from WWII...and physical strength. Despite being arrested multiple times, nothing was done. He was Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. I grew up in a town that had Rockland State Hospital - for the criminally insane. When my father died I thought of it as divine intervention. He threatened to kill my mother and others many times. He kept my mother in a constant state of fear by saying "if you leave me, first I'll kill all the animals and then the children..." I know what it is to live in fear - terror - and not having any recourse. The one time I did tell a school guidance counselor, my mother was furious that I would let anyone know what was going on. The year my father died was 1971. From 1962 to 1971 were hell. There aren't any easy answers, and many that most don't want to hear. There were loads of signs and red flags. Society then did not even acknowledge such things as domestic violence or, victim rights, for that matter. I am sorry for your situation - but unless he is committed into an institution that permits him to have a reasonably fulfilling life without threatening society, we all must live in fear.

Unknown said...

Here is an idea: Please post a synopsis of all of the suggestions and information from all of the comments that offered help. Bloggers are trying to help, but apparently no one is listening. No one who needs help is reading down in the comments section. The reason I know this is because no one has emailed me to acquire the Alternative Medical Protocol that cures paranoid schizophrenia and other mental disease, in addition to osteo-arthritis. My email is anngcm1@gmail.com.

LGG said...

Dear Mam,
THANK YOU for your honesty and showing a human, strong and weak, side.

There is a solution- and it is within you- and within your son: inner peace.

I have seen and learned a lot throughout my life and I can say for sure that this is the solution to everything.

Easier said then done? No. Solution: Vipassana meditation. It's free, it's not a religion, no obligation, nothing- only breathing. And reaching inner peace.

As I said, it's free and "risk-free"- maybe give it a try? It's for kids as well and everywhere in the world: www.dhamma.org

Whatever you chose to do: my love is with you. Trust your heart.

Unknown said...

@Unknown posting at December 15, 2012 4:56 PM

I want to simply say thank you for writing that. It's coherent enough.

Feel free to just close those mental doors. But as you do, note how you _can_ close them. I hope this will make you less afraid of opening them.

It's a part of who you are. You deserve people who'd want to know you without judging or freaking out. I know that, sadly that isn't going to happen likely, since society is based on averages, and you do not fit in.

I hope at least you will learn to accept this and yourself. I imagine this will bring relaxation.

Don't give up hope. Best of luck in life.

LGG said...

Dear "Anarchist Soccer Mom",
THANK YOU for your honesty and showing a human, strong and weak, side.

There is a solution- and it is within you- and within your son: inner peace.

I have seen and learned a lot throughout my life (I'm not a preacher ;) )and I can say for sure that this is the solution to everything.

Easier said then done? No. Solution: Vipassana meditation. It's absolutely free (no, really- including food and lodging), it's not a religion, no obligation, nothing- only breathing. And finding your inner peace.

As I said, it's free and "risk-free"- maybe give it a try? It's for kids as well and everywhere in the world: www.dhamma.org
Many "illnesses" come from within. From inner peace comes outer peace- and love.

Whatever you chose to do: my love is with you. Trust your heart.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
~ Marty Alan Michelson, Ph.D. said...

Thanks.

Unknown said...

Hi Liza,

Your messages so important, so vital, and your child he is so special, more than you know. I am most certain that he is, what my child is......they are known as indigo children. Please look it up. I read auras. I read his. He is! Please feel free to contact me taylor.sierra@gmail.com
Bless you for sharing this
Sierra

Bob Aman said...

FWIW, I was Michael at the same age. At one point I tried to kill my brother by strangling him for some minor affront. My mom managed to get me off him and confined me to my room. I love archery and had a recurve bow in my room. My dad worked nights, but I heard my mom waking him up, so I knew my dad would be coming to talk to me. So I strung the bow, nocked an arrow, drew, and waited for him to enter. He promptly closed the door right after opening it.

That was the last day I ever lost my temper. I'm now 30 and it's been 15 years since I've been angry at anyone. Something about going so close to the brink made me realize how important it was for me to develop ironclad self-control. I can't say that Michael will be able to do the same, but there is hope.

Lauren S. said...

Liza, I can't put into words how touched I was after reading this. Thank you for your insights and for raising awareness about the true problem.

JenniSiri said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Ema Dewi said...

Thank you for writing this.

leslie said...

I am sure you get lots of comments and I can only hope and pray that you see mine. I also have a son, sounds a lot like yours....except he doesn't become violent. He does everything else you described though....I look at him, see his pent up rage and wonder what will happen in the future. I was looking for an e-mail address for you.....was unable to find one obviously. If you should find this, I would love to contact you and mine is Longsally1112@yahoo.com......I wish you well, lots of luck and peace.....

Nurse Joe said...

Thank you for your post. I have had mental issues in my family and have suffered with mental illness myself and wanted to share the one thing that helped me: Jesus Christ. Yeshua the Messiah to the believing Jews. Isa the great prophet to the Muslims.

Asking Jesus to come into my life and into my household is the only thing that ever helped me, and he can help you too.

I pray that you invite God into your life. I have found a peace and happiness unimaginable before.

I am currently using a study manual called Spiritual Origins of Mental Illness: What Every Christian Should Know by D. A. Drummer, Ph.D. You should be able to find it at your local Adventist Book Center(adventistbookcenter.com/storelocator).

(God sent me to the Seventh-day Adventist church after growing up a "Christmas and Easter Catholic". If you need a church home or would just like to study or pray with someone, you are officially invited to call your local Adventist church: adventistdirectory.org)

God bless you.

Nurse Joe, RN

HeallingAngel said...

This problem is a spiritual one. If you are interested, I can give you a Kabbalistic interpretation of your son's astrological birth/natal chart and see what the issue is. There are 2 things going on here. One your son is what is called a very high soul but due to karmic situations from past lives has come into this world with these issues. If we can see what is his correction to make in this lifetime, then you can see how to help him. Also, these people come into this world to teach the rest of us to be more sensitive and treat each other with more compassion and empathy. If you are interest, please contact me.

Terri of Durham, NC said...

For the people who are posting the more negative comments about the author's parenting skills, I hope that they face life with a mentally challenged child so they can share with the author how to "do it right."

Kaleb said...

Thank you very much for sharing your story. For opening yourself up to embarrassment and ridicule. For still loving your son enough to be involved in his care.

The stigma has to end. Saying "I'm bipolar" or "I'm schizophrenic" should be the same as saying "I have terminal cancer." Those of us with mental illness shouldn't be afraid of how people will react to our proclamation. However, with these changes that will hopefully happen, they should also not be afraid of admitting their disease. Not everyone with a disease should be locked in a hospital. But they should be able to get amazing treatment so that they can get out eventually.

Again, thank you for sharing.

Unknown said...

Hi Sky
Please look up indigo children. I can see Auras. If you think your son fits the indigo child description is be happy to read his aura over email pic, free of charge. Please feel free to contact me taylor.sierra@gmail.com
Best wishes
Sierra

Ann said...

Wait until your son is a 6 foot 300 lb man. Despite all the made for TV movies about how the Family conquers all etc I am afraid that most of our stories are quite a bit more complicated and without any predetermined happy ending. My son has Asperger's as it appears Adam Lanza did as well as mental illness. My main advice is to take the well being of yourself and your other children as a priority as well as worrying about the 'damaged' one. I had to declare many years ago that my son could never live at home again and seek a way for his care to continue even when I die someday. I could not leave the burden of this to his siblings. It can eat up your life if you let it. Best of luck.

mcgoolie-jaz said...

I am the mother of a mentally ill 31-yr old male. The above story could be our story, with minor adjustments. As an adolescent and a teen, the ONLY times he got any help were when he was in jail, and that help was minimal. For that past decade he has lived "under the radar", mostly homeless, sporadic income. Several times I found treatment centers that would take him, but he would not go. He only contacts me when he is desperate for money, 5-6 times a year. I have no answer on how to help him. He needs a miracle.

Chuck said...

I hope you and your son find peace. I raised three very healthy and intelligent sons and never had a single problem with them. I consider myself very lucky.

Eric said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Bruce Gionet said...

Thank you so much for sharing this. You are one courageous and, fortunately for us, articulate, woman. I have been writing about related issues for some time, please see my post:
http://tnktnk.blogspot.com/2012/12/the-wild-west-comes-east.html

love-my-babys27 said...

this is sad to say my family as well, my sons 8 and is sweet as can be until somthing sets him off then he trys to harm us and him self, we had him counseled once and they told us that our son is messed up and theres no help for him... thank u for sharing ur story

mom with experience said...

I read this blog this morning and could not stop thinking of you and your son. I had a son with anger issues not nearly as bad but have had friends with Autism & aspergers. I know and understand a small part of what you are going through. I am here to give you hope I hope you like to read and study because I guarantee a Dr wont tell you this stuff. With a simple change of diet I have seen miracles in my family and others.

Here are some things to google,
1. leaky gut syndrome, Here is just one article
http://www.myaspergerschild.com/2011/03/aspergers-and-leaky-gut-syndrome-lgs.html
2.Food Intoleances.
3. Candida yeast & parasites
4. The GAP Diet.
The list goes on but start with these. If your son has leaky gut syndrome food molecules get through the walls of the intestines. It can be like a drug to his brain, heroine, speed, alcohol etc.
think of the food he eats the most and craves. It is so typical for what you said sometimes he is so sweet and other time violent. It is a classic case. I am not a DR just a mom that knows from experience, I had leaky gut syndrome. Everyone body can and will react different. But I was not a happy person before. My Drs said I was depressed. My child was normal throwing tantrums. That answer was not good enough for me. DIET and what is in our body and how our bodies absord is everything. I had a friend that has a child diagnosed with Autism, would not speak opposite with Michael, intravert. They found out that Milk & eggs were causing his stomach problems. Within a month of being of those foods, he began to talk and communicate like never before. This was a year ago, he is in normal schools, and the psycologist said I think he was missed diagnosed I dont think he has Autism anymore. (yet he WAS a classic case) He has leaky gut he is not 100% normal but is getting better everyday.
There is HOPE research these things. You will be able to save your son. My goal in life is to share so we can save many. He is fixable do not give up!!!

FosterMom said...

I was a foster parent for teenage boys and yes, I do understand because I have lived in that fear and with those worries. I didn't have the opportunity to watch it develop over time, they got dropped in my lap in their teen years. Some were more hurt than others but all were angry and loving at the same time. You are correct -- the system is broken. Sometime in the 80's we decided a couple of things, 1) The Supreme Court decided that mental health institutions were cruel and take away the rights of the mentally ill to chose to be mentally ill. 2) Children 14 and over have a right to direct their own medical treatment which means that you cannot require a 14 year old to take his psychotropic drugs or to attend treatment. This means that if the 14 year old says to the doctor, "Don't talk to my parents about this." He leaglly cannot. We need a national dialouge on the status of mental health and the rights of the mentally ill -- particularly the young people who are increasingly being diagnoised with a variety of disorders for which they need help.

In the meantime, I will keep you and your family in my prayers! Your challenges will not be easy and I pray you get the help you deserve and you are correct -- prison -- juvenile or otherwise is not the place for mentally ille people just because we don't know what else to do with them!

God Bless you!

Morty72 said...

Thank you for sharing... which in itself is not an easy thing to do. I'm a father (yes, it's hell on us, too) whose son showed many of the same characteristics as Michael. I had to keep wiping tears from my eyes as I read your story. Some tears of joy, some harsh memories. It was hell watching my then 10-year old son being dragged into the hospital by 3 police officers... 2 couldn't handle him. I couldn't. I'm 6'4" and weighed 280. I've been called every name in the book. I'm a bad f'ing dad, I'm a fat f*ck, and so on. It's terrible watching your 12 year old in the back of a police car, turning around as they take him away again, and looking at you to save him. I could go on. I have been incredibly fortunate. His mother and I (I think I read somewhere nearly 75% of ADHD parents are divorced)got him in to counseling early. Because I work for a large school system, my insurance in good. His meds are affordable. Doctor bills are bearable. He is 15 now and a sophomore in high school. He has joined the dive team. He's talking about playing football again. He now sees a psychiatrist just once every 3 months. His grades still stink, but there's improvement. And yes, Math scores are out of this world... when he does the damn homework!!! He has a girlfriend. I don't pretend my circumstance is the same as yours, but I wanted to comment just to offer you hope. To tell you to keep fighting the good fight, and take time for yourself. It's imperative to keep your health, too. Good luck.

Cat said...

Wow - so sad to see that there are parents out there like you (commenting all over on this thread). Firstly, let me tell you two facts:
1. Dec 14th, 2012 a man goes to an elementary school in China with a knife, injures people but no deaths. Proof number one that gun control or the lack there of in America is the number 1 problem.
2. In 1996 there was a shooting in a primary school in Scotland, 16 children were killed including a teacher. The following year the UK banned the ownership of all privately owned handguns - there have been NO school shootings since.
I'm sorry you are scared of your son. I'm sorry he has violent tendencies and that the Mental health care system in the USA is lacking. But there will always be dangerous people in the World, and people with mental illness - especially people on the Autism spectrum - are far more likely to be victims of violence than to be the perpetrators of it. You are feeding an already unhealthy ignorance of what "all" mental illness is and looks like. With that you are blinding the World from the real issue - guns are the problem here. People who are capable of such monstrosity should not have such incredibly easy access to weapons of mass destruction - yes "mass" destruction. The guns used to kill those victims in Newtown were legally registered to Adam Lanza's mother. Yes, Adam Lanza was mentally ill - of course he was, that goes without saying, but that point is irrelevant as he would not have been able to commit such a heinous crime without the easy access to these guns. I can see you are likely removing any comments that don't support your post - I have a feeling my comment will be removed in less than a day if that's the case.

Unknown said...

God bless you for speaking up. I agree there must be talk and action for mental health issues that are facing us. I hope you find the help you and your family seek without resorting to jail for a child who needs help, not jail.

Unknown said...

Your post is beautiful and heartfelt. I created a petition urging our politicians to reevaluate our mental health system in the wake of this tragedy. Please read and sign if you agree. Also, you can share on your facebook or twitter pages to increase the reach. Thank you!

http://signon.org/sign/president-obama-please-17

Unknown said...

Thank you so much for your open and honest post. I created a petition to encourage our politicians to reevaluate our mental health system in the wake of these tragedies. Please read and sign if you agree, and feel free to share on your twitter or facebook pages!

http://signon.org/sign/president-obama-please-17

Job said...

The bit about Ronald Reagan pioneering deinstitutionalization to save money is utter bilge.

Deinstitutionalization began in the late 1950s with the introduction of the first generation of effective psychiatric drugs.

Deinstitutionalization continued in the 1960s and 1970s, fueled by demands by the ACLU and its allies to liberate the oppressed mentally ill.

I've no doubt that there was deinstitutionalization in CA, as there was in the rest of the country. And legislators were doubtless happy to save money. But the real driving factor was the idea that the mentally ill should be treated in the least possible restrictive environment and the consequences be damned. This is the problem.

justathought5 said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

It fills me with sorrow to hear that you live with such dread. As an integrative mental health professional, I am here to support you in knowing that options are available outside of conventional psychiatry, which has so clearly not served Michael or your family. The problem is that testing and treatment is available that does not have the side effects of pharmaceuticals, which could actually be making Michael's problems worse. I encourage you, and all parents in your situation, to seek the support of a Functional Medicine specialist. Some places to go are: (1) http://alternativementalhealth.org (join the support group listserve and see the link for finding a practitioner) (2) http://www.functionalmedicine.org/ (3) http://www.inimh.org/

Paul George Berevoescu said...

I'd have to side with the kid. Although I wasn't AS intelligent as him, I was in the 135-145 IQ range at that time in my life, and I did have anger outbursts almost as bad, and I almost killed my parents a few times.

People like me despise authority, and what you're forgetting is that we would rather DIE than bow down to the will of others. In fact, we despise society's rules so much, that if the option for nuclear holocaust existed, we would pick that, and roaming alone like in Mad Max, in search for food, over being bossed around. And prison is hell for people like us.

Eric said...

I am in no way a medical or mental health professional. However, I wanted offer my input. If your post wasn't a cry for help, I don't know what is.
I cannot imagine what a mother goes through in a situation like this. I was somewhat like Michael at his age and had experiences like his while growing up. You certainly have to take things seriously whenever a 13-year old uses language such as that. I can't even begin to think what sort of emotions can occur when a child starts behaving in a very threatening manner.

However, your child is likely a very gifted and unique individual. Plenty of psychiatric research has gone into kids of incredible needs such as yours. They do not think or process information like normal folks do, they require constant stimulation and challenges to incubate their vast intelligence. As one poster here has already said, the mental noise that accompanies such intelligence can be considerable and this may be the source of your child's problems.

I grew up as a gifted child myself, and the "mental noise" and lack of connection with my peers was often the source of my anger. Gifted kids, at least in my experience, often struggle to find meaning in what they perceive to be an absurd world. I often became annoyed and bothered by seemingly mundane rules, such as the "blue pants" incident you describe.

Michael does need help and assistance, there is no doubt about that. However I HIGHLY ENCOURAGE you to cease and desist all forms of needless drugging of Michael until a real and accurate diagnosis can be applied and concurrently confirmed.

There is no doubt that some anti-psychotics work, but giving your kid a cocktail of drugs to hold him over and make him feel better for a short amount of time without any real long term medical purpose can be very damaging to Michael as many here have pointed out. Those drugs have a long term impact on his mental abilities and can destroy the ability for his mind to be utilize for greater purposes. In the 21st century, we need gifted thinkers such as Michael.

Throwing Michael into a mental hospital also needs to stop. Unless you can find a passionate and dedicated professional that understands Michael’s predicament , such a blanket solution will not work and will only alienate him.

STOP portraying to Micahel that he is the enemy of the family. As many on here have already pointed out, any mind, gifted or not, at that tender age would be emotionally and mentally devastated by such a regime. You need to portray to Michael that he is accepted for what he is, a troubled gifted kid, and that everyone in the family loves him. He just needs assistance for his outbursts and that his words hurt others.

Michael needs connection and love at this point. It would be very damaging to continue the current regiment you are describing. It would crush his soul and cause greater issues that will probably not be correctable in the future.

There is no doubt Michael needs professional assistance. I encourage you to seek out specialists who deal with gifted children and see if they can offer any sort of help or intervention. Perhaps Michael will do better if he deals with adults who can match his intelligence and perceptiveness.

Bipolar is a possibility, and in that case, drugs may be needed, but only use the ones that WORK and have no side effects that go in vain.

I hope the best for you and Michael. I certainly feel for both of you.

And I certainly hope you are not using this tragedy as a soap box. As many posters here have already done so, passing over your obviously gifted child as just a "madman" and identifying yourself as a motherly martyr that can't find answers is very dangerous right now. Society does not need such a idealistic yell, and neither does Michael, who is probably SCREAMING out for ANYONE in his head.

Proceed wisely. I wish both of you the best. If the situation improves, please post something about it.

I highly suggest you check into the following posts by the these authors

Macey
Dave Troy
Enterprize1

Unknown said...

Thank you so very much for sharing your story - families who have not experienced it may struggle to understand

Just a thought: have you tried much more time with animals?

ELLE said...

Thank you for this post and your honesty. Our government and healthcare system needs to take a long hard look at the heavy metal/mercury content in vaccines, dental amalgam fillings and environmental emissions and the link to autism/aspergers, auto-immune diseases and mental illness, especially in the light of what happened in CT. There's an absolute link. There's no doubt in my mind.

Robert said...

You write a post lamenting mass murder, but have a cartoon of yourself wearing a T-shirt that glorifies a mass murderer? Is this supposed to be ironic or something?

Robert said...

You write a post lamenting mass murder, but have a cartoon of yourself wearing a T-shirt that glorifies a mass murderer? Is this supposed to be ironic or something?

Quinn R said...

Well said. Whatever you do, don't ever let the cops Taser your kid. One of my best friends had a psychotic episode and the local cops tortured & killed him with 20+ Taser blasts just because he was confused and tried to walk away when they stopped him, and despite the fact that they were called to HELP him. Good luck..

abb said...

Thank you for this.

Ananamoose said...

I agree with bassopotumus. Unless you have a child with mental illness or suffer from it yourself, you have NO right to judge her. You also have NO IDEA how difficult it is to deal with it. You have to treat it differently than a normal child. It's not something you can just punish out of a child. It's something the child has to live with too. So all of you people who are judging this woman, you need to get off your high horses and go volunteer at an afterschool program where there are a bunch of disabled children just to see how it's not a quick fix and as simple of an issue as you make it out to be.

To the poster, I don't have children, but I am a person with a learning disability and I know how hard it is to be treated like you are a second class citizen just because your brain doesn't work like everyone else's. It's incredibly frustrating when you talk to some people about getting medication and they accuse you of using it as a crutch. Or they say things like "You should just apply yourself more" or "Just take away all of your distractions, you'll be fine!" Yeah. I am in total agreement that we should start treating mental illness with more respect and try to treat people instead of just locking them up like they are criminals.

My heart goes out to you and anyone else that's dealing with this stuff. It's really frustrating, especially when you have to deal with people who seem to think that there's no problem with your child and the problem is with you. It's not with you. You are not the problem and don't you ever think that! You are a wonderful mother who is actually trying to get her son help and bringing to light a serious problem in this country. I applaud you for that. Thank you so much and keep on fighting the good fight.

Quinn R said...

Well said. Whatever you do, don't ever let the cops Taser your kid. One of my best friends had a psychotic episode and the local cops tortured & killed him with 20+ Taser blasts just because he was confused and tried to walk away when they stopped him, and despite the fact that they were called to HELP him. Good luck..

Unknown said...

Shouldn't we cut all the wasteful spending in mental health programs and let the free market decide what happens to your son. While I feel for your plight you are a ignorant, selfish idiot who complains about government spending then bemoans the state of our mental healthcare. You, like most other idiot Republicans dn Libertarians want to cut all this spending unless it directly affects you. I feel for your son because his mother is actively voting against his needs every election. Grow a brain and maybe your son will get a properly funded treatment facility.

Unknown said...

My step-mother has a family member that is mentally ill. She said that her grandparents had to have him committed to a home for the mentally ill because he became a threat to himself and others around him. The home is funded by the state and they still allowed her family to get him and take him home for visits. She said that like Michael he was fine as long as nothing set him off. This may be a solution that you might have to consider, though I know it would be devastating as a mother. But you do have to consider the threat that he is posing to the other two children. The state paid for him to live in the home since they had to sign over their rights but they were still able to see them whenever they wanted. I would look into the homes around there as a possible resort. Look for one that would best suit your son and his needs to learn and social needs.

Unknown said...

This is a very well described life of how many people feel about they only way on how their children can get help.

As a person who has worked in the legal system for 7 years as a mental health counselor I would see girls from the ages of 12 through 19 every day get admitted for Depression, Bipolar disorder or Schizoaffective disorder often, and who received charges for pushing their parents.

At first, it was so hard to understand why these children were arrested so young, but understandable when their retaliation would be taken out on their therapist for the feelings they had with their mood swings. Often the children would yell obscenities daily or push therapists, I even saw many hit the adults who worked in the facility, and when their rage took over they didn't care who they hurt at the time.

As a professional, I would have your child checked for the bipolar disorder and schizoaffective disorder, because with both disorders their moods swing, and are violent, and often the child cheeks the medication so it cannot work because they feel fine. Also many doctors do not want to give a mental health diagnosis to a child, when they need it more than ever to help them live a normal productive life.

I pray for you and your children and hope your son gets better.

Trip said...

I work with those who are mentally challenged. Recently, we have had to send one to a crisis center multiple times for self injurious behavior and threats of violence towards staff. This person is clearly not grounded in reality, hence why they are at my facility. The problem is that they a higher level of care and there is simply none to be had at the moment. they are too much for my facility and places where she could get help are too crowded as it is. I am saddened by this because there are times they are wonderful and then one little event happens and it is like a switch gets flipped and they just escalate beyond control. You are definitely right about jail being used to warehouse the mentally ill. Hell, we are warehousing this person until a bed opens up at a more appropriate facility. Until then the police are going to get really sick of us because we have had to call them far to frequently. The other thing is that as much as we try to help, it can be a long,long,LONG road to a true treatment solution, but it can happen. Keep at it because this world really does need people like you to advocate for people like Michael and draw attention to this sort of thing as this tragedy will not be the last.

Unknown said...

When I was a kid I had a friend. He was brilliant, sensitive, and then could turn around and suddenly do the cruelest things without any apparent change.

30 years later I still think about him and wonder exactly what was wrong, and what happened to him. I don't want to find him, but I do hope he found a place of stability and that it wasn't incarcerated.

He was a very special person... with a very special problem.

Anonymous said...

This is what people need to hear, the story of the parents who try to do everything in their power to help their children who are mentally ill. The system is so messed up. Thank you for sharing your story.

Elise said...

Thank you for writing this. This is also my son. This article brought me to tears as I has similar thoughts with my 14 year old. I homeschool him now and while he is more calm and the rages are less frequent they still happen. We work with therapists and have not yet called the police but I know now I need to have the safety plan. While we own no guns (nor ever will) we do have knives and I will have a lock up plan for those as well.

Andy said...

The problem is not “mental illness”, the problem is an intolerant, pressure-cooker society. The problem is that people who are different are subjected to intolerable demands.

The problem is that America is an authoritarian culture which thinks that everyone has to conform to an idiotic range of arbitrary rules and power-relations. This is intolerable for people with a strong sense of social justice, for people with unusual sensory needs, and for people whose brains work differently.

If he's autistic, then he is probably dealing with overwhelming sensory input. Simple, everyday situations can be extremely painful, and physical “restraint” and suchlike are likely close to torture for him. He manages stress to some degree, through coping strategies such as video games. You interfere with these coping strategies by turning them into “privileges” to be taken away when he most needs them. He most likely has a strong need for concrete justice which you and his school regularly violate (for instance, he takes free speech absolutely literally). So basically, you have a situation where a vulnerable person is subjected to intolerable levels of stress, and forms of sensory pain amounting to assault. When he gets angry at this treatment, you punish him by taking away his coping mechanisms. When this predictably makes him hate you, you call the state to cause him even more suffering. Then you wonder why he hates you.

He has every right to be offended at the denial of his human rights at school, through means such as regulation of dress. If he has psychological problems and is known to be touchy, then doing something as intolerant as not letting him on the bus because of his jeans color is absurdly insensitive and draconian. Ditto with your own insistence that he not swear.

Unknown said...

You've had a zillion armchair diagnoses already, so my apologies for adding one more. I'm adding because it matches the random 'no cause' lockups and rage over inconsequential items. My son (and two of my daughters) were diagnosed with fructose malabsorption. It causes gut fermentation that blocks tryptophan. Blocking tryptophan causes neurotransmitter imbalance, because it is needed for serotonin creation. Also for clotting (serotonin there) and for melatonin. My son and daughter would have intense rages, screaming kicking hitting thrashing over *nothing*, rigid locked up emotional response, insistence on being right, inability to let go of an inconsequential trigger. Because it accumulates over three days (in terms of symptoms not showing), it is very hard to see any pattern. BUT, it is also easy to baseline by removing offenders (FODMAPs, which are long chain sugars and polyols like xylitol and sorbitol, which are naturally found in many foods), and you can see a difference in 4 days. So you can rule it out rapidly, also. A low-FODMAP diet helps.

Only half of people with FM have any GI symptoms (constipation or looser stools, nausea, bloating, gas), the other half have only behavioral issues (rage, anxiety, depression, often entirely random, with sometimes longer bouts of good behavior in between).

Andy said...

He has every right to insult you – it's called free speech. If we aren't allowed to insult each other, then you'd better not express your opinions either, because I find them insulting. But in any case, you can't expect to enforce a battery of petty regulations against someone who has difficulty obeying even the most important ones. It's like running into a burning building and complaining about the air-conditioning.

Your attitude of taking revenge for his self-assertion by stealing his video games and suchlike will seem to him, necessarily, as an act of war against him. He doubtless sees what you're doing as completely unfair and extremely controlling. Because you respond in an authoritarian way, you preclude the possibility for dialogue, which in turn precludes understanding the problem. You are imposing your own ideology on him, at the expense of his real needs, and this is making him more and more frustrated, which in turn makes him more violent. You would feel the same if you were the one who was subjected to fascistic oppression.

Why are you failing to reality-check your absurd beliefs and actions? You know your authoritarian approach makes him angry. But you keep it up, as if you don't care. Then you act surprised that he hates you and wants revenge. You come on the Internet and complain that he's violent. Of course he's violent, when you corner him like this. Even the most placid animals will use violence when they're cornered.

And when it goes too far, instead of recognising your faults, you go further, with your threats and recourse to the police and the asylum system. Of course, you are making him angrier. So don't come out with this, “nobody wants...”. You have obviously decided that you would rather your son be jailed for life than accept that he will swear or wear his preferred clothes. You don't even seem to see that you've made this choice, that you've started a war with your son that leads to the outcomes you claim not to “want”.

PS: You are not an anarchist. An anarchist does not believe in state institutions telling people what to wear. An anarchist does not believe in running to the police. An anarchist does not believe in censoring free speech because it's insulting. An anarchist does not believe in the use of material objects to blackmail children into conformity. Every true anarchist will side with your son.

Mr. Volodori said...

As some point, as a loving parent, shouldn't you possess the right to have your son/daughter peacefully put to sleep for the sake of Everyone, and for the Love of God? It's almost too painful to imagine the combined heartache that resonates from the 1 in a million that simply need to be reborn instead of suffer through their glitch.

Unknown said...

Sorry I have to say that what happened on Friday seems to be an horrific situation that encompasses two big issues. Mental health and gun control - no sense putting in an extraordinary level of love, care and effort and successfully guiding all your children safely though your ill sons episodes only to have them go to school and be blown away by someone else having a bad day - that happended to have free access to a legally acquired arsenal of automatic weapons! While you were running around your house removing everything sharp and carrying them on you at all times. Adam's mother was growing her collection of assault rifles and taking her socially awkward son with a condition that made empathy difficult out for target practice!

Zoner said...

"Johnathan Czajkowski has left a new comment on the post "Thinking the Unthinkable":

TO ANARCHIST SOCCER MOM: PLEASE READ!!!

VIDEO GAMES ACTIVATE REWARD REGIONS OF BRAIN IN MEN MORE THAN WOMEN, STANFORD STUDY FINDS"

You're wrong and an idiot. May remember that extraordinary acts of violence have existed for thousands of years, video games, for about 40.

Anonymous said...

Mine is about number 1701, so you may not see this, but as a school counselor, I thank you. I thank you because people - even school administrators - don't understand your world, and you probably feel so inundated with criticism, but your struggle and pain are real. I've seen so many children like yours. I've known so many parents who share your struggle, and because the world turns away, so many just quietly struggle and hurt and endure such meaningless blame. So I thank you, I admire your courage, and I hope you can understand the BASIC human love that flows from my heart for your, your baby (who once was just a happy little chubby-cheeked child -I am sure) and your family who struggles to cope. I don't have an answer, but I do have empathy - it's worthless maybe, but it's yours to provide any comfort it may. I send the greatest hope for peace and answers, and I send my love - for it is through one another that we receive the love of God.

Jonathan said...

I suggest giving him unconditional love. Let him wear the pants. Ask him "then what?" after he threatens to kill you.

misha said...

Here are some web pages your son may be interested in: http://cut-the-knot.org/ http://www.artofproblemsolving.com/
http://www.chess.com/ http://chessbase.com/ http://www.chessgames.com/
Try to get him into math competitions, get him in touch with other super-smart kids, try to teach him how to write music, it may help.

Unknown said...

Back in my day if I told my mom no and called her a name, she beat the shit out of me and when dad came home he did too.
My guess is your too progressive to use 'corporal' punishment so you let him run over you and let his siblings live in fear. This is your fault not his.

coriluigs coriheberer said...

i know a student like this who benefitted from a trained dog. this dog was trained to know when an outburst was going to happen and he stepped in and calmed the child down. the mother was at her wits end until the dog came into their lives. http://4pawsforability.org/ is where they got their dog. it was a lot of money, but the community pulled together and did fund raising events to help the family. like you, the mother was scared for her life and the lives of her other children. after hearing her story, i am a true believer that these dogs are angels. please look into it so your son has an opportunity to thrive.

Unknown said...

My heart goes out to you, Michael, and all your family. We have to do a better job, we have to give you the resources you need. Thank you for the honesty of your story.

LaurenH said...

You are showing your son complete disrespect with this post. Just like he shows you. Wonder where he gets it. May I ask two very important questions? 1. Are you still married to his father or was there a recent divorce or death? And 2. Do you and your children belong to a church in your community?

Thank you.

MerkySky said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
EscapeToOz said...

Please Read: Have you ever had a SPECT scan for him? If you haven't, check out the work of Daniel Amen, MD (he has written several books). I have no affiliation with the Doctor, I just find his work inspiring and fascinating. Brain scans can reveal in some cases there is physical brain damage that the family was unaware of, after years of diagnosis of personality disorders.

For example: A ten year old boy with emotional problems tried to kill himself. Many doctors supposed early onset depression, bipolar, etc, etc. The SPECT scan revealed it was actually temporal lobe damage. Proper treatment was therefor possible. All of the depression meds in the world wouldn't have helped because they were treating the symptoms and not the cause.

I really hope you find the help you are looking for. I studied psych and I NEVER heard of a SPECT scan or any host of the new methods and research available in Uni. Do not assume the doctors you are seeing are the experts, keep searching. Don't give up, don't take their words for it.

Best wishes,

Monica

Andy said...

So Nichole Herron violently abuses her children, until they get big enough to fight back, and then they beat her up instead.

No doubt she thinks this is terrifying. People like her are always more sanguine about violence when they're the ones dishing it out.

PS: in her day, the world was nearly destroyed in nuclear armageddon because everyone was so violent.

Chad Estes said...

Thank you so much for sharing your story with us. It is so helpful for understanding and I have learned a great deal because of it. I was happy to share it with other friends hoping it would make a difference for them too.

LaurenH said...

You are showing your son complete disrespect. Just like he shows you. Wonder where he gets it?

Amy said...

Thank you, thank you so much for spreading awareness on Mental Illness. I got chills just reading this. As a nurse, it really hit close to my heart. Know that there are so many out there praying and thinking of you and your family. Thank you for being a strong woman and example to those around the country/world. It will get better (we can all hope).

-Amy
http://www.amymarissa.blogspot.com

Jenn said...

Thank you for sharing your story, Liza. My heart goes out to you and your son and your entire family as you bravely manage your son's illness. You are incredibly brave and strong and you are right, so much needs to be done for the public to have a better understanding of mental illness and how we can help as a society. I am livid at the media for ignoring the fact that the gunman was sick and if he would have gotten the help he needed, this tragedy would have had a good chance of never happening. Thank you for getting the conversations started.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for sharing our stories.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for sharing our stories.

Anonymous said...

Sorry but this story sounds made up. I am not saying there aren't children like this but I smell agenda.

coriluigs coriheberer said...

the person i spoke of in my last post is on the website i mentioned. her son's name is tyler and would not sleep. go to the service dogs tab and click on autism...scroll down to read the story. i truly hope you at least look into this wonderful program. if you contact me, i can put you in touch with this person. i KNOW she will talk to you about 4paws.

Unknown said...

Thank you for your courage to speak out. Yes we need attention to mental health and recognize it as a disease, even though it's different from the other diseases, because mental illness interacts with others and affects their lives as well. Some mentally ill persons are not violent and these media sensations, though grave and desevere our compassion and attention, give all mental illness a bad rap. God bless you and us and yes, let us please uphold medical research and recognize mental illness as a bonafide disease. Let us support research, have compassion--though difficult to comprehend--and encourage those afflicted, to seek help.--Gloria Schramm

Michael said...

In a case where the mental disease is not yet completely formed and where it is doubtful whether it really results from a bodily affection or if it is not rather the effects of bad education evil habits corrupted morals a neglected mind superstition or ignorance the truth will be readily discovered by acting as follows The patient is to be addressed in a tone of friendly exhortation while motives of consolation serious remonstrances and solid arguments are to be urged on the occasion if the disorder of the mind does not proceed from a bodily disease it will readily yield to such means but if the contrary is the case the malady rapidly grows worse the hypocondriac becomes still more grave downcast and inconsolable the maniac more wicked and outrageous and the idiot more imbecile.*

But as we have just witnessed there are likewise a few mental diseases that do not owe their origin to a bodily disease and which have been produced solely by moral affections such as continued grief anger injured feelings and fear in particular In the course of time these latter have an influence over the health of the body and often compromise it in a high degree CCXXIII It is merely in mental diseases thus engendered kept up by the disposition itself that moral remedies are to be relied on and that only while they still recent and have not yet made any great inroad upon the physical state of the organism In case it is possible that treating the patient with a of confidence bestowing on him friendly exhortations and sensible advice and sometimes practising him a deception that is disguised with art will soon the health of the mind and then with the aid a suitable regimen the body also may be brought to its normal condition.

*It seems as though the mind were sensible of the truth of these representations and acted upon the body as if it would restore the lost harmony but that the latter re acts by means of a disease upon the organs of the mind and disposition and augments the derangement which already exists by throwing back on them its own peculiar sufferings.

-Organon of the Medical Art by Dr. Samuel Hahnemann

Exposarazzi said...

The guns in the Lanza home should have been put away in a locked area where this mental case son could not access them, if indeed she felt the need to have them in the home at all.

Unknown said...

I know exactly what is wrong with your son. I am also Adam Lanza's mother. My son is 17 years old and although these boys who commited these horrible murders are all different there is a common thread. I have been dealing with this same environment for over 12 years. I can help you, I can help you save your son before its too late. HCM wysiwia@gmail.com

JKWestling said...

Please don't listen to the judgmental vitriol out there. Thank you so much for sharing your story. I completely understand and my heart breaks for you and your beautiful boy.

Ahlia said...

Those choosing to harshly judge this mother reaching out for help and for discourse on mental illness are certainly not helping either mother or child and conveniently forgetting that she has younger children that she is responsible to protect from harm. She also has a responsibility to protect herself from harm so that she can continue to take care of "all" of her children. If that means one of her kids has to be separated from the family until he can get some professional help then that is her best option at this point in time.

MacD said...

I hear you. I feel your pain. Been there. Done that. We are on our own. No one gives a sh*t about us or our square-peg-in-round-hole kids. They will pretend to or they will blame us. If you can't fit in with the herd, you are invisible or at best, marginalized. I've learned to accept it.

cmc1220 said...
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CaMaven said...

Maybe he just despairs in having an "Anarchist Soccer Mom."

cmc1220 said...

My thoughts are with you. I want to commend you on your parenting. I know first hand what it is like to live with and love someone with explosive outbursts, that are sometimes very dangerous. I was drawn to your article, not only because I agree with your perspective, but also because you mention that Michael has not yet been diagnosed. Perhaps the information I am about to share with you will be helpful, perhaps repetitive, but I still want to share in case it can bring some peace to you, your family, and most of all Michael.

My younger sister Ellie (name changed) was diagnosed with Tourette Spectrum disorder about one year after I was diagnosed with Tourette's. She was always an extremely intelligent girl (could read at the age of 3) and, like Michael, scored very high on her IQ tests. Ellie also had rage and explosive behavior issues that would just come out of no where; she once beat my mom with a cookie tin (drew blood) just because she didn't want to do her homework. Ellie, would often name call my mother and father; names like, "fat bitch" and "she-man" where probably the most hurtful. Now as an adult, she is a loving mother, and reflects often on her childhood and is truly remorseful for treating my mother that way. She has few memories because she has suppressed them I suppose. However, she does remember the pain she caused. She has expressed that she is grateful that I had been diagnosed with Tourette's, because if I hadn't Tourette Spectrum disorder would have never even been considered for her diagnosis, as she has no physical tics. In fact many people with Tourette's Spectrum do not have physical tics, it is mostly an anger and rage disorder.

I guess what I am trying to say is that you are not alone. I also wanted to pose the possibility that it could be Tourette's spectrum disorder, and if you feel like it could be this disorder I encourage you to pursue it.

Namaste.

Unknown said...

The Mother sounds like the mentally Ill one, trying to force her agenda onto an independent and unwilling teenager and then blogging for the whole world to see. The mother is obviously mentally disturbed and wants to be seen as the VICTIM, when in fact she is the Victimiser. I feel deeply sorry for the son that he has such a rigid, inflexible mother who projects her own sickness onto her son. he doesn't have much chance with a abusive control freak like that for a Mother.

jrgs906 said...

Maybe the lack of a father figure in his life has lead him to these actions??? He's obviously acting out because he wants attention. You need to cater to his needs and stimulate him approprately (ex. challenging math problems to keep him occupied). How did he learn this profanity??? Probably from tv or directly from the parents. It's sad really, but everyone wants to medicate without figuring out the outlying problem. Parents don't want to blame themselves, but it's partly their fault. jrgs906@gmail.com

jay d said...

I agree with the boy, that he has a right to wear whatever color pants he wants to, and that this is supposed to be a free country. This minor issue reminds me of the book "A Wrinkle in Time." Forced conformity to social standards is very painful and destructive to creative and independent thinkers. The biggest problem he has is that he is quite powerless. He wants to have "rights" and "power" to decide things in his own life, and he wants it immediately. It needs to be explained to him that this is not something that can be developed immediately, and that if he has too much power too early, it will destroy him just as certainly as having no power (or feeling he has not power) is destructive to him. He needs to understand this in depth. If he cannot come to understand it, there is real danger of losing the boy and of him losing his mind. It is worth trying to save him, in fact it's the most important thing anyone can do, to try to save someone this way.

Unknown said...

Thank you for writing this. You are not alone. My brother was just like this... & one of the most difficult revelations my mother had to come to was that love could not save him. Because there is very little help for children with these issues, my parents had to make some very difficult decisions and went through hell to fight against the system, for the good of all their children.
It will get better. Things, have a way of working themselves out. Especially for good people. It's going to be really hard. Keep fighting.
Much love to you

Crista said...

Thank you for posting this. We need more open conversations about the lack of knowledgeable mental health professionals on such issues. We know very little and there are so many who are going astray because we turn our backs on them. Thank you for understanding, as best as possible, your son and loving him all over again everyday, despite the growing threat. Thank you for being compassionate and brave and making it more widely known just how much help on these issues we all need. Our society needs a swift kick in the pants and needs to destigmatize mental health issues. When we can walk into a gun store without question, but our names are in the rumor mill if we walk into a counselor's office, we have a serious problem.

hush said...

Thank you so much for sharing your story. Many hugs and blessings to you. I'm sorry there are haters, when what you could use is some caring support. Hang in there!

bentoncha2 said...

As an LCSW, I understand your frustration as well as your fear. I moved to NC about 8-9 years ago. My first job here was as a therapist at a children's crisis unit. A unit that closed 6 month's after it opened...thanks to "Managed Care" I have had 4-5 jobs in Mental Health since. I really don't understand how an LCSW 8 hours away, who doesn't know the child I am working with, tell me how many visits this child will be granted. It really is frustrating as it seems that after 7-8 visits to a therapist, the child is cured! Seriously? I went in to teaching after this, Special Education. Of course, funding is being cut in education as well. I am moving back to my home state and think I will return to mental health...for as long as it's there. I really feel at times I should just seek another profession. My cousin was schizophrenic and our family also dealt with the frustration of seeking treatment for him. He too spent a great deal of time in jail. He finally hung himself on the grounds of the state "mental hospital." Do your best to stay strong. I know you feel you are in this fight alone.....

Unknown said...

I have lived your life...so many parallels, I could have written your post. When my son was 14 we finally got a correct diagnosis (Aspergers) and APPROPRIATE help. We were lucky....most aren't. Most of our educators and mental health professions don't understand it. Our son went from almost being kicked out of school to an model honor roll student. We had gone through all the diagnosis dictionary as well ... ADHD, Oppositional Defiance,Bipolar...did not help. Truly understanding Aspergers made ALL the difference. They see the world very differently. I learned how to where he was and show him a way out of the thinking he was trapped in. He learned he wasn't alone and he had someone to help translate this world to him.

Miss Maine Academic Program said...

Powerful words and blog and so true. My heart goes out to you. It seems we are all at fault for not treating the diseases and continually sticking bandaids on various symptoms, literally. You are a strong, amazing women. You are not only protecting your family you are giving your son the care he needs.

Britt Savage said...

Bless you! Thank you for sharing this insightful view into the mind of a parent of a child with mental illness. America needs to do more for the mentally ill. If this massacre doesn't prove that, I don't know what will.

Joelle Marie said...

"Hi. I'm a person with mental illness. I think it's most important that I identify with this right now as those who have known me most of their lives understand that I'm not a threat, not some faceless evil waiting to pounce upon the world. I represent the vast majority of those with mental illness- people who are just trying to live their lives, not destroy others'."

beemommy said...

This is for "Eden" who posted on your fb page "I could be Adam Lanza's mom" ....You obviously have never been in the shoes of this woman. Lock them up? YOU get charged with child abuse/endangerment. Medicate them....oh, if only it were that simple. My son was on three anti-psychotic meds and still managed to punch me in the face to the point that I had to have xrays, kick me in the face and attempt to strangle me with the seatbelt in the car. He was twelve. We spent nine years trying to get him help and tried many, many therapies. I cannot begin to estimate the tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of dollars spent on therapy and/or lost wages as I had to take a considerable leave of absence.) I did finally turn to CPS and was one of the few lucky ones....we weren't charged with RAPR (Refusing to Accept Parental Responsibility) and they did not threaten to take away our neurotypical daughter (because foster placements for kids that are "normal" are easy to find...kids like my son, not so much). Let them kill themselves? Wow, did you even think while you typed? Again, as parents, we could be charged with a crime not to mention, oh I don't know....having our child DEAD!? How insensitive you are. As far as the stats...yes, mental illness is an equal opportunity illness but anyone who does any reading would know that the manifestations are very different between the genders (that and that little bitty thing called male pride that in many cases will not allow the individual to seek help). The only thing I agree with from your post is that Adam's mom should NEVER have had guns of any kind in the home, period, end of story.

Angela Wesley Hardin said...

Hi there and thanks for sharing your story. It's an important one, and well told. If you bother to sift through the comment avalanche ... I'd like to suggest that you look into something for your son that might sound useless or snake-oil-esque: neurofeedback. The book _A Symphony in the Brain_ describes the sociomedical background of this modality fully. A boy whose behavior resembles your son's was a major catalyst, via his parents, in making neurofeedback more widely available. My personal stake in recommending this is small; I have PTSD and despite extreme skepticism am doing neurofeedback sessions at the encouragement of my spouse. Unlike other not-so-helpful treatments (psychiatric drugs, EMDR, talk therapy), which I had more faith in initially, it actually makes a huge difference. It is giving myself back to me and the people who love me and need me.

Anonymous said...
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changeMHLawsinKY said...

I TOO AM ADAM LANZA's MOTHER.

I have a similar article spewing in my brain that needs to come out! But currently I'm dealing with too much stress in my own family.

Prior to agreeing to give our son medications (at 4 & 5) -- we sought out every available alternative treatment for allergies and food sensitivities known! We tried every behavior modification any specialist could think of. We tried prayer and and believing that God's love would help our son change his behaviors. Nothing worked.

Without psychotropic medications, our son would have never been able to attend school -- period. Time and time again, we were ridiculed by family members, from church members and our peers!

Yet, as an adult, our son 'has the right' to refuse the very options that would allow him to function in society!! The very resources and laws in place to support him as a child aren't there for him as an adult! Why? Because of his civil rights. It is absurd!

And as far at the hundreds of comments from readers who believe that "GOD" is the answer and 'if' we just prayed more our sons would be rid of their demons ... well, over the years. "men/women" of God of several faiths ... turned their backs and avoided us and our son, condemned us for bringing him into their 'Churches', and more times than not didn't want our son in the same Sunday classes or private Christian Schools ... with their own children. My son was always acutely aware of his differences and the pain of being bullied by his peers ... in the community, at school and at church!

For all of you who condemned this author for not taking her son to church or turning her son over to God ... 'walk a mile in her shoes first', before you attack.

Bless all the Mothers like Lisa!

Bless all of those victims families suffering tonight ~ across the US.

And, yes ... God Bless Lisa Long!

Mother of a 25-year old son, a gifted genius who is trapped in the carousel of insanity! Blogger/founder of "Change Mental Health Laws in KY"

burnyouwithspaghetti-0hs said...

I understand your frustration...my younger brother was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia when he was 17, and luckily, my parents had him declared a ward of the state and started receiving benefits and the rest of his life (he passed 2 years ago at the age of 50) lived in state run homes filled with those just like him. He was very intelligent, and with the cuts in mental illness funding across the US, no one speaks up as you have about the one thing that could keep many disasters from happening, both at home and public. My prayers to you and your son.

The Ridlon's said...

Thank you for sharing your difficult story. Your son is not alone and what I am truly grateful for is the fact that you know that he is a beautiful child that is broken. He is fortunate to have you for his mom. We, as a society, are ill-prepared for the adult Michael. I see many on the street that cannot be institutionalized nor can they treated successfully. These are our forgotten society. We focus on people who can do something for themselves, but choose not to. We avoid the people who cannot do something for themselves and cannot choose to do more due to their own mental illness. I believe it is a societal taboo yet to be addressed. God bless you and Michael and his siblings.

Unknown said...

I can tell you from my own experience with something like your situation that it was an adult who had the problem and not the child.

My son exhibited most if not all of the behaviors you describe and the attempts at a resolution were the roughly the same. I've visited my son in a psych ward and been called to the emergency room on numerous occasions. The one common thread in all my son's behaviors was that he was either in the care of his mother or recently in the care of his mother. Once he was in my care again his behavior normalized after a short time and there were no relapses until he was again with his mother.

My ex-wife is a dry drunk who has been on anti depressants in excess of 20 years. She started a legal battle with me over my son and tried to exclude me from his care. Long story short, after a legal battle lasting a year, I have primary custody of my son with the blessing of the court, a guardian ad litem, and many mental health professionals. My son has been stable and is excelling in life since contact with his mother has become very limited.

I'm not sure if this relates to your situation but I suggest you get the entire family into therapy immediately with a good therapist. It is possible there is something in your house that is causing these behaviors.

Anonymous said...
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Kim said...

Thank you for your courage in sharing your story. It so needs to be heard and I'm thankful to be seeing it on Facebook, msn, etc. I can only hope and pray that it helps lead to significant changes in the mental health system. They are so very needed. Thank you.

Jonno321 said...

@just4janet
You wanted to know where you could find more information. The site www.eqi.org is very large, probably the largest resource on the internet for emotional intelligence.

an excerpt from http://www.eqi.org/invalid.htm

>>Invalidation is to reject, ignore, mock, tease, judge, or diminish someone's feelings. It is an attempt to control how they feel and for how long they feel it.

Constant invalidation may be one of the most significant reasons a person with high innate emotional intelligence suffers from unmet emotional needs later in life.(1) A sensitive child who is repeatedly invalidated becomes confused and begins to distrust his own emotions. He fails to develop confidence in and healthy use of his emotional brain-- one of nature's most basic survival tools. To adapt to this unhealthy and dysfunctional environment, the working relationship between his thoughts and feelings becomes twisted. His emotional responses, emotional management, and emotional development will likely be seriously, and perhaps permanently, impaired. The emotional processes which worked for him as a child may begin to work against him as an adult. In fact, one definition of the so-called "borderline personality disorder" is "the normal response of a sensitive person to an invalidating environment" (2)

Psychiatrist R.D. Laing said that when we invalidate people or deny their perceptions and personal experiences, we make mental invalids of them. He found that when one's feelings are denied a person can be made to feel crazy even they are perfectly mentally healthy. (Reference)

Recent research by Thomas R. Lynch, Ph.D. of Duke University supports the idea that invalidation leads to mental health problems. He writes "...a history of emotion invalidation (i.e., a history of childhood psychological abuse and parental punishment, minimization, and distress in response to negative emotion) was significantly associated with emotion inhibition (i.e., ambivalence over emotional expression, thought suppression, and avoidant stress responses). Further, emotion inhibition significantly predicted psychological distress, including depression and anxiety symptoms.) (Reference)

Invalidation goes beyond mere rejection by implying not only that our feelings are disapproved of, but that we are fundamentally abnormal. This implies that there is something wrong with us because we aren't like everyone else; we are strange; we are different; we are weird.

None of this feels good, and all of it damages us. The more different from the mass norm a person is, for example, more intelligent or more sensitive, the more he is likely to be invalidated. When we are invalidated by having our feelings repudiated, we are attacked at the deepest level possible, since our feelings are the innermost expression of our individual identities.

Psychological invalidation is one of the most lethal forms of emotional abuse. It kills confidence, creativity and individuality.

Telling a person she shouldn't feel the way she does feel is akin to telling water it shouldn't be wet, grass it shouldn't be green, or rocks they shouldn't be hard. Each person's feelings are real. Whether we like or understand someone's feelings, they are still real. Rejecting feelings is rejecting reality; it is to fight nature and may be called a crime against nature, "psychological murder", or "soul murder." Considering that trying to fight feelings, rather than accept them, is trying to fight all of nature, you can see why it is so frustrating, draining and futile.

burnyouwithspaghetti-0hs said...

No one person knows of the pain caused by a mentally ill child. My brother was diagnosed while he was 17, and it caused our family such anxiety and sadness through his whole life. May he rest in peace...my heart goes out to you and your son, and I pray he gets the help he needs. Pretty brave of you to post this!

Benn Gleck said...

So, as a mother of multiple children with Bipolar disorder, I was really feeling your blog. That is, until I read that you are a Ronald Reagan loving conservative.

Ronald Reagan is the start of our problems with mental health in this country. HE was the one who shut down programs, and dumped mentally ill people in the street, making prisons the only place they could get treatment.

When you rail against big government, but then beg government to step in and help you with your child's mental illness, I just can't fathom your cognitive dissonance. You may not agree with what Reagan did now, but you agreed when it happened, and that made YOU part of the problem.

Anonymous said...

may I also suggest that behavioral therapy would teach the behavioral skills that the child needs to cope with these feelings. Mental health is not necessarily the solution, and even the social worker's only solution was to put him in jail. That seems ridiculous. I have seen time and time again that behavioral therapy will recover these children, as well as teach the parents how to be better parents for their child's needs. There doesn't need to be more medication, as that just masks the problem, and the national discipline system (jails) are certainly not the solution either. With tighter gun control laws, our society as a whole would be safer, but I believe we each have a responsibility to raise 'sane' children, using all the resources necessary to do so.

Scott said...

For the record, I want to say that I actually am reminded of my own childhood very much when you talk about your son. At around the same age, I exhibited much of the same behavior as your son. While I was also recommended for a program for gifted students, and tested with a fairly high IQ, I also frequently had temper tantrums, threatened to kill myself, and acted out harshly to my own mom in ways that I would be ashamed of now if I had to relive those moments.

Perhaps your case is very different. I am no psychologist or doctor of any kind. I'm a 22 year old engineering student at a good school, currently who is very, very content with his life. But I would like to perhaps offer some perspective because as awful as it sounds, I can completely put myself in your son's shoes.

After threatening to kill myself and another kid in school when I was 12, I was taken to a psychiatrist, evaluated, diagnosed with ADHD by one, with behavioral issues by another. I was given two different types of antidepressants. Both had no effect, besides me occasionally wetting the bed as a side effect of one of the drugs, and that REALLY didn't help things at all.

And yet here I am, performing well in college, living on my own, very happy with my life. By the time I got to 8th grade, I had developed quite well, I managed to find a great group of friends, and I've never threatened my mother, friends, or anyone since I was that age.

You know what the solution was? My mom was compassionate enough to let me live my own damn life, and not subject me to more psychiatrists, more drugs, the school's counselors. I believe when it comes to young children, older people really just don't get what it's like. Kids, especially smart ones, are angered by an entirely different things than most adults. Even now I wouldn't be able to relate to what angers your son, likely. But smart children respond very well when you treat them as you would an adult with high intelligence. This would NOT include threatening back to them that you'll send them to a mental hospital. If you act like you're afraid of your son, this only instills your entire family with fear. And even smart kids are kids. They love a bit of drama here and there. You're only giving your son negative fuel to the fire when you treat him as a mental case. Treat him as your own son. I guarantee you he will not grow up to be a serial killer if you stop convincing yourself he already is one.

Unknown said...

Have you tried a gluten free diet? My son was exactly like that when he was younger, everyday he would pull my hair, bite me, punch and kick me. He was diagnosed with autism when he was 3 and a half. After we put him on the gluten free diet he was no longer agressive (just argues when he gets upset now) He is now 12 years old and they now say it's aspergers. He is a genius at maths and science and is a very loving boy but if he ever accidently eats something with gluten in it, watch out.

SandyCoach said...

Now, I know this may sound like I'm not taking what you've written seriously, but this is totally sincere. I have recently read articles that parents have written about children with behavior patterns like your son's that came on suddenly. When they finally got to the bottom of it, maybe several years after the behavior started, it was attributed to a strep infection that lodged in the brain. It is treatable, but must be diagnosed properly first. Don't let your doctors say no to testing him for it. Google "PANDAS." My heart goes out to you and your family. Good luck.

Molly in Maryland said...

My heart goes out to all of you dealing with ill children.

Please, please consider exploring bacterial infections like PANDAS, Lyme, Babesia, Bartonella, etc..., either transmitted in-utero or picked up through an insect bite.

These bacterial infections are hard to diagnose since our blood tests are not very sophisticated, so they often go overlooked by the average doctor. But such infections can cause wildly aggressive behavior in children and adults, and such behavior can be cyclical, explaining such inconsistent episodes.

To look for a doctor in your area, go to ilads.org (they are based in Bethesda, MD), to find what is called a Lyme-literate doctor who can make the clinical diagnosis. The treatment is typically strong antibiotics or anti-malaria drugs to kill the infection in the blood, brain - wherever the bacteria has traveled.

It is worth exploring. Regardless of whether your kids are predisposed to mental illness or have suffered a trauma that might explain the anger or rage, a bacterial infection can absolutely be at play, aggravating the situation. And no amount of anti-depressants or anti-psychotics will rid the body of the bacteria.

I have seen what such bacteria can do to people, and the rage it can cause (in animals, too), and how those symptoms or behavior are eradicated after successful treatment of the bacterial infection.

I hope you will consider exploring this.

You're in my thoughts and prayers,

Molly in Maryland

painful truth said...

To those who call you a bad mother clearly have no idea what they are talking about! I see this behavior almost everyday at work and have the same fears! Mentally ill chiildren and adults too frequently get a slap on the wrist and get sent home! The legal system as well as the mental health system are over taxed and the dangerous are not held accoubtable. I wish some could be monitered like people on house arrest but that would be considered unconstitutional. Yes they have rights but shouldn't the rights of millions who dceserve to be safe at school or movie theaters. Etc matter more? This world needs to address the mentally ill starting with those who start assualting and threatening in elementary schoos! Yes it starts then and usually continues to worsen. May God bless those with breaking hearts and guide our leaders!

tlh said...
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Celia Harrison said...

Thank you for your courage to write this post. People don't understand the hell parents go through with a troubled child. You did nothing wrong, your son did nothing wrong. Eventually you will have to have him leave your home unless a miraculous drug is found for safety. There should be a place he can go where he can be fairly happy and the public can be protected and wait for a treatment to be found, but instead he will probably end up in a prison where huge numbers of mentally ill are housed. In reading the negative comments keep in mind, most people are not very well educated and know nothing about mental health. There are parents who put locks on their bedroom doors at night and beg for help for decades.

Unknown said...

Thank you so much for writing this. It's so important for people who have kids who fit in the 'bell curve' to understand how difficult it is to parent these children. Luckily for me, my son has just turned 7 and I have been able to find the right solution for his behaviours in time to make serious changes and actually help him. I write a blog about our journey at kathrynlowe.wordpress.com
It took a lot of study for me to work out what he needed and I found that with a LOT of Emotion Coaching and Circle Of Security Parenting, we made a huge difference to his life. I had to start homeschooling him though as general society doesn't understand the way you need to work with these kids. It involves a serious amount of kindness and patience and it's tough on the parents. Some people have commented about just letting the kid do what he wants. You can't do this with these kids. You have to have a really close balance of kindness but strength. You have to stand your ground until they understand that they can't behave that way. The trick is to sympathise with the fact that they want to wear different pants. Explain that yeah it sucks that they don't have the choice right now, and that you understand how mad that makes them. Then you have to explain how unfortunately while they are a kid they have to follow certain rules like that. Anyway, that's why we homeschool, to avoid those kinds of arguments and focus on more important difficulties!
Good luck and thank you for writing this post!

Annie said...

have you heard if wraparound services? I work with children with these issues exactly, almost all of my kids on my caseload (12 currently) have self harm bxrs, and many have homicidal threats/ideation/etc. your description of your son sounds exactly like the kids we work with. we get the kids after leaving psychiatric residential treatment facilities (PRTFs) and our job is to surround the family with services and support and link to any services needed or required. it has been proven decrease readmissions into hospitals and the childrens' treatment works much better. I am in Georgia but maybe the have a similar program to this. it used to be called CBAY and it was a national program. please look into it, it might really help your child. like I said, Michael is the exact kind if child we serve, the things you described are exactly what our program seves.

http://www.chriskids.org/strong-community/choices-program/community-based-alternatives-for-youth-cbay-

Aquarian_ideals said...

giMy son is so similar it is scary. We had one hospitalization and one arrest in a matter or months. There is nowhere here to get help, all the hospitals are hours away, so we had to do the jail route. It wasn't appropriate for him but he was 16 and had punched me in the face, cut himself multiple times and threw a knife at us. It was our only recourse. The only light at the end of the tunnel was he is now on the right cocktail of medication, so we are able to look forward instead of walking on egg shells. I hope you find peace in your family if only for awhile. Mental health needs to be improved, it is so easy for them to fall through the cracks.

Unknown said...

I deeply feel for your child and what you are going through as a Mother . I do however have a problem with your diagnosis or "names being thrown out there" like Autism, ADD ect. I have a son on the Autism Spectrum, and in order for me to get a diagnosis of that we had to pay out of pocket for a neuropsychologist, along with occupational therapist and speech pathologist to do so. Not one counselor or teacher in our school or Dr's would ever throw out those names and because of liability. I feel your blog has done a disservice to those of us dealing with Autism spectrum and other disorders and what the public may now feel towards these children. That they are all on the breaking point to do this sort of thing. Please get your child evaluated by professionals before you throw out diagnosis on your blog before mentioning what "counselors" have thrown out there. You can not lump in our children with what you are going through.

tlh said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
small town in the city said...

I have absolutely no experience in this area, other than having a few students in my classroom over the years who are similar to "Michael." However, I have *heard* of a few cases where behavioral issues were helped by consuming a plant-based diet. I have only recently gone plant-based myself, and I have no stakes in it whatsoever, so I'm just making the suggestion in case it might help. If you've tried everything else, and it seems like you have, why not? There are excellent resources on the internet for making the change. My one warning would be that you can eat just as much plant-based junk as you can traditional junk, so make sure you're supplying nourishing, whole foods if you try it.

God bless.

radii said...

My step-sister went through this for years with her oldest adopted daughter (her second adopted daughter wound up being threatened with scissors and was eventually sexually abused by the older daughter)

... give your son up and place him in professional care as soon as possible ... start the process today

~Deborah~ said...

This is my life as well :( Others will never understand until they walk in our shoes.

Simple Human said...

here's a link that may also provide additional help (we need all the natural remedies we can get, especially those which "can't hurt"!)

http://undergroundhealthreporter.com/how-to-treat-depression-could-bacteria-help#ixzz2FG8zK0El

Anonymous said...

Dear ASM,

Having recently grown up being a brother of a child who is similar to your 13 year old son, I'd like to think that I have some sort of perspective and understanding of what you and your family goes through.

I can honestly say that I grew up appreciating what my parents went through in making sure all the kids were taken care of. As hard as it was (and is) when it came to handling my brother, my parents never gave up on him. Converted me into believing that my brother could grow beyond his limitations and unique personality traits. 10 years later, the dust finally settled and that's exactly what happened. The danger is mostly over but there are still some challenges ahead.

Long story short, I just wanted to say that you are an incredibly brave and strong woman. There is a light at the end of the tunnel. Your kids (and I'm sincerely hoping this will include Michael) will come to truly appreciate what you've done in time. Please don't listen to the naysayers on the internet. I wish you all the best to you and your family.

DoeZ said...

It's sad that anyone who doesn't understand and hasn't been through it leaps to the erroneous conclusion that you must be a bad parent. Until more people are educated about mental illness and until everyone helps instead of criticizes, this will keep happening. The child is also a victim as we are failing to provide him with what he needs to become well. Thank you so much for having the courage and skill to write this heartfelt and honest account of what so many face.

ULAS J1120+0641 said...

I have news for you: the problem is not your son. The problem is you!

Did you honestly just wrote a text comparing YOUR own son to a sociopath capable of looking a child in the eye and shoot?

Do you know why no one has ever been able to diagnose your son's "special needs"? Because he doesn't have any! He's just highly intelligent and with the personality of a leader. And like everyone like him, he has some type of ADD and gets easily frustrated with all the morons around him trying to castrate him. Like you.

So he doesn't fit the mold of your other more submissive children? So he defies and questions your every move? Guess what? That's what EVERYONE History books are about did.

He doesn't take your word? So how about instead of telling that he has to wear trousers of a certain color because those are the rules, tell him that it's a stupid rule (because it is) and that he's right (because he is), but that he should pick his battles and give in in this situation, while having all the right to mock the sheep behind their back?

Stop treating him like he's beneath you, because he's above you.

But, congrats! I guess you got with this text what you wanted: the attention of a bunch of strangers, all admiring you and your courage and your spirit of sacrifice, all on the expense of your own child! I'm pretty sure this somehow qualifies as Munchausen by proxy...

L said...

reading your text made me realize how many people suffer for all kinds of reasons,even from a very young age,and how this manifests itself psychologically.i think you are right,admitting that you need help to cope with your kid,and maybe you have done mistakes trying to deal with his behavior. I was very sensitive as a kid,and unfortunate circumstances in my family gave me a stuttering issue to cope with for the rest of my life. My parents always wanted to "fix" me,thus making me feel extremely lonely. Maybe your son wants to communicate but he doesn't know how.don't treat him like an adult.he is a kid.he isn't your equal and please forgive me when i say that i don't believe that you are afraid of him. More like really tired and not knowing what else to do,really.i hope you will find answers,and guidance to feel better yourself and then help your son.

Anonymous said...

Just because a child is mentally ill, is not a reason that they can be violent towards others. The reports are infuriating that Adam was diagnosed with Asperger's, as that does not indicate anger or violence. I work with children (teenagers) with this diagnosis all the time. I have never been fearful, and I am only 5'3". I believe that our social services (OT, PT, speech, and social work) must better assess the needs of these children. We must not just talk to them about how to change behavior, and medicate them, but also teach the appropriate skills through behavioral therapy. A BCBA would be a wonderful resource for several weeks or months, to teach the parents and child what is expected, training the parents to follow through with the program at home and inform at school as well.
I have worked with so many of these difficult children, that on top of having a diagnosis are also spoiled at home, which makes them almost impossible to deal with in a school setting, unless they are taught the appropriate ways to act.

I feel great sympathy for any parents that have these supremely challenging children, but there are many opportunities out there for change. Find a behavioral therapy program, headed by a BCBA, and you are on your way to success.

Ana said...

Thank you for sharing your story.
It will help other people. Hope you find how to help Michael. I'll come back tomorrow to read it carefully.

Kelsey said...

Hey there soccer mom - thanks for sharing your story. We need this kind of openness in our society. I really appreciate it, and I'm really sorry that your road is so hard. Your story reminds me of a family I am very close to. They have a daughter who was being treated for mood disorders and started exhibiting similar symptoms to your Michael. Eventually, they took her to the Mayo clinic, where she was taken off all medication. They discovered that most, if not all, of her issues were related to the medications. That may well not be the case here, but I thought I'd say it just in case it helps. Good luck and God bless.

ULAS J1120+0641 said...

I have news for you: the problem is not your son. The problem is you!

Did you honestly just wrote a text comparing YOUR own son to a sociopath capable of looking a child in the eye and shoot?

Do you know why no one has ever been able to diagnose your son's "special needs"? Because he doesn't have any! He's just highly intelligent and with the personality of a leader. And like everyone like him, he has some type of ADD and gets easily frustrated with all the morons around him trying to castrate him. Like you.

So he doesn't fit the mold of your other more submissive children? So he defies and questions your every move? Guess what? That's what EVERYONE History books are about did.

He doesn't take your word? So how about instead of telling that he has to wear trousers of a certain color because those are the rules, tell him that it's a stupid rule (because it is) and that he's right (because he is), but that he should pick his battles and give in in this situation, while having all the right to mock the sheep behind their back?

Stop treating him like he's beneath you, because he's above you.

But, congrats! I guess you got with this text what you wanted: the attention of a bunch of strangers, all admiring you and your courage and your spirit of sacrifice, all on the expense of your own child! I'm pretty sure this somehow qualifies as Munchausen by proxy...

Anonymous said...

Your son can easily be helped (and you as well) at www.WrittenEscape.com - HFT has been around since 1987 and is so powerful in behavior changes that juvenile probation offices use it and it has stopped recidivism rates of juveniles for over 6 years so far. No medications and no talking about your past!

Regina said...

Amina1389,

I say this with all the love and compassion I can muster....

PLEASE stop having children.

Julie George said...

Your story was my story. My lovely, gentle boy became increasingly withdrawn throughout elementary school and middle school. After the death of my parent, and divorce from his father, he seemed to lose faith in a world that had a place for him. I spent three years on a knife's edge watching him carefully, taking him to counselors, and wondering if we would make it to the next day. I locked up the knives, corkscrew, vegetable peelers, and anything else I could think of. I took my ex-husband's guns back to him. I got up every day and tried again. He was taken away in handcuffs, locked into the children's ward at the local psychiatric emergency center, pumped full of lithium, and a list of things that I still cannot comprehend. He did things that still scare me and break my heart when I think about them. Through it all, I stayed right by him, watched him, prayed for him. I could not convince him there was a future. I did everything I could to keep him alive so that his brain could mature to the point where he could understand that he had a life worth living. Finally we found a psychiatrist who understood brain maturity and psychoactive drugs. Here is what he did: he put my son on anti-seizure medication - the emotional outbursts can be viewed as unstable brain signals similar to epilepsy; he gave him anti anxiety medicine to help him feel calmer about facing reality; and he gave him an environment in which he was accepted as a valuable human being. He finally became stable enough to graduate from a small private high school, and is pursuing a career in hand-crafts (glass blowing, ceramics), already achieving some recognition. He only takes very small doses of his medicines now. Please continue to seek help for your son. He is as trapped as you are. Find a doctor who can address his issues from a biochemical standpoint instead of purely an emotional/behavioral standpoint. I believe that the vast majority of behavioral and emotional problems in children and young people are due, in part, to an imbalance in their brain chemistry that may or may not resolve as they mature. The trick is to get them stabilized and to give them appropriate support so that they live long enough to want their own lives. My thoughts and prayers are with you.

Anonymous said...

You are my mother and father. Your son can be helped. I was your son. I was diagnosed with Autism/Asberger's/ODD/ and just about anything else. Your son can be helped. I would be calm one moment, and then burst into rage and bang my head in the wall to calm down. I was prescribed multiple stimulants, anti-depressants, and other mood-altering drugs, which paradoxically made me crazier, albeit quieter and calmer. This culminated in me attempting to take my own life at age 12. Thankfully my mother found me before I could. I had an undiagnosed inflammatory condition caused by an allergy. I and probably your son are genetically predisposed to this, but that does not mean we can't be treated. I am allergic to milk. My skin does not break out in hives, my throat doesn't shut, nor do I have GI issues; however, one sip of milk forces me to experience what your son is and what I used to go through.

http://allergies.about.com/od/foodallergies/a/autismallergy.htm

Pray and try as hard as you can, as I am sure you have. There will be an answer. Just please be like my parents and refuse to accept a diagnosis that you, as his mother, know to be wrong. Never give in, never give up. I promise he will get through this and will lead a normal life.

Maria said...

you may have already heard this... consider this from a mom of threee who spent 20 years in and out of all kinds hospitals. Consider bipolar disorder (rather than adhd)
of lamictal or tegetrol (mood stabilizers) along with the antipsychotic. (Antipsychotics are not good over a long period of time) Give the mood stabilizer (lamictal, tegretol and others) at LEAST three weeks to work. Then over time and with a very very good psychopharmocologist... add an antidepresant.
ADHD medication makes bipolar disorder worse, and he sounds manic.

Lainy said...

Critical care needs of young adults ages 12 - 32 is worth looking at. Something to help move special needs youth into jobskill training and higher education options. Housing and community support networks to help make the steps to independence and self care successful.

Amie said...

She is trying to get the help. . .The post she has written is to let us all know that the problems start long before the event that hits the news. Our juvenile facilities are the only place that are trying to treat these young men and then only after years of a family struggling to find help. Mental illness is not a choice and needs to be addressed the same as any other health problem. There is such a stygima around mental illness that if not changed will result in the same type of event every time. Thank you Michael's Mom for following through with your plan for the "next time" and thankfully the system had a bed. I pray that each family struggling with this issue may find support, love, and mental health services in their community. This issue is everyones.

Anonymous said...

You are my mother and father. Your son can be helped. I was your son. I was diagnosed with Autism/Asberger's/ODD/ and just about anything else. Your son can be helped. I would be calm one moment, and then burst into rage and bang my head in the wall to calm down. I was prescribed multiple stimulants, anti-depressants, and other mood-altering drugs, which paradoxically made me crazier, albeit quieter and calmer. This culminated in me attempting to take my own life at age 12. Thankfully my mother found me before I could. I had an undiagnosed inflammatory condition caused by an allergy. I and probably your son are genetically predisposed to this, but that does not mean we can't be treated. I am allergic to milk. My skin does not break out in hives, my throat doesn't shut, nor do I have GI issues; however, one sip of milk forces me to experience what your son is and what I used to go through.

http://allergies.about.com/od/foodallergies/a/autismallergy.htm

Pray and try as hard as you can, as I am sure you have. There will be an answer. Just please be like my parents and refuse to accept a diagnosis that you, as his mother, know to be wrong. Never give in, never give up. I promise he will get through this and will lead a normal life.

smudgey said...

Thank you for sharing your story. You are a brave and wonderful mother and your open, balanced and loving post gives me hope for humankind.
And you know this isn't as unusual as one would think. A lot of people struggling with mental health and as a society we are very slow to find adequate solutions. Stigma, fear & ignorance, etc. are barriers but, nonetheless, we have come a long way.
We must keep learning and sharing and working towards a better system that works with the reality - not some fear-based ignorance or outmoded ideas.

Thank you for working towards that.

Anonymous said...

I am the grandmother of a grandson who is now 27 but still exhibits violent aggressive behavior at times and it is directed at my daughter (his mother). He was diagnosed when he was a child as schizophrenic. He has been in residential care twice as a child but as soon as the insurance ran out they sent him back home. He still lives with my daughter and her husband in his own apt.area. He holds down a job at the high school as a parking attendant and drives a car..and seems to keep it together when doing his job and driving. The problem comes when he doesn't get his way...my daughter hid all the knives from him..He has been on really strong meds since age 6. He can be the sweetest grand-kid I have but can also change instantly into a raving, cussing scary person. His dad had mental problems too and is now in prison for murder. I sympathize with all those that have posted similar stories. We need to take mental illness seriously in this country. My daughter has gone through so much with him but has never given up on him..she handles him firmly during one of his fits..in the past they had to hold him down to keep him from hurting someone or himself but that seems to have slowed down a lot now. Most of the time he apologizes for his behavior and says he wishes he was normal..He had spinal menigitis when he was born..his head filled with water and they had to put a shunt in to take the pressure off his brain. They didn't think he would live but he did pull through. We love him with all our heart but I always have that fear in the back of my mind that one day I will get a call that bad things have happened. I pray to God that never happens. He is a Christian and goes to church every Sunday and feeds the homeless with his church on Sun afternoons.
I will continue to love him and pray for him. :)

Weeeeeeeeeeeee said...

You should be thrown in jail. Nothing creates more criminals for society that loser single moms like that rob children of their fathers: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y5OdQGbVNa4

Char said...

I was forwarded this link to your blog. After reading it...I fell to the floor and cried and cried. This is my life. Right now. Exactly as you have written. I thought I was alone in this. I haven;t heard from other parents who are living the same life. My child is a 13yr old girl who I took to the hospital Friday night...because she planned to kill myself & my other 4 children while we slept, then kill herself.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for writing this.

Amanda said...

I hope to God your son never reads this.

Regina said...

Victoria Champion and A_Psyche_Aide both make VERY good suggestions in their posts.

I'd like to add this advice to SoccerMom:

I know you are exhausted. But please make the time to do this. It can save the lives of your son, your other children, you, and future victims of your son's potential future violence.

Get a notebook. Start writing down in detail every single thing he eats and at what time. Also write down his behavioral outbursts in detail. You WILL see a pattern emerge....one you can control. You can change things.

Macey's comments are worth some thought, too.

Blessings to all.

Beana said...

My heart goes out to mom's like yourself and others. I do think that the treatment for these kids is being treated all wrong. It's being treated medically and it's a spiritual issue. It's nothing more than demonic activity and needs to be delt with on a spiritual level. I have first hand witnessed, this type of demonic activity and have seen them freed. I encourage everyone who has these issues to get in touch with the one and only true God.

dren said...

I am one of the thousands of children that have grown up with a mental illness. Your story really touched me because it reminds me of the confusion and loneliness that I felt growing up with violent tendencies forever running through my mind. My illness brought only pain to myself, but I always had thought that everyone was supposed to feel that way. I feel that your child hasn't realized that it is not a healthy way to feel about oneself's and others well-being. It was a very lonely and strange world for me while I grew up and it's taken a very long time to realize that I can be a beautiful and accomplished individual. With the right treatment and counseling, your son has such a good chance, there is literally a light at the end of tunnel, which will make him that more beautiful of a human being. I wish that maybe my disease could have been diagnosed at an earlier age and I reflect on all my public warning signs that I wish I had picked up on sooner. Stay vigilant with treatment and medication, it has saved my life.

Unknown said...

Wonderfully said! We too have struggled with a son with mental illnes and there is no real help. My heart goes out to you!!!!

lisamaesc said...

Thank you for sharing your story as I'm sure it's hard to.

Isabella Fox Fountain said...

If Macey's comment made you think, then think again. Without labeling the child in question, let it be said that sociopathic children do not respond to love, compassion, patience and understanding...but do learn quickly how to make use of these qualities in others for manipulative purposes. BPD is not sociopathy. I applaud this mother who has the courage to speak out about her child's issues which obviously have nothing to with poor parenting.

concerned mom said...

HI Liza, thank you for this heartfelt, honest accounting of your life with "Micheal". I lived those days over and over again for many years with my son - also very high IQ, and the laundry list of possible diagnosis. Finally, when he was 14 ,they mentioned the Autism spectrum - high functioning. My retrospective scope about his angst - is asperger's, super high IQ, divorce and mixed messages from his Dad, and the limited resources of a single working mom. Sound Familiar?? the counseling, the meds, - did not work. I lost my job, moved my daughter out for safety - and prayed and worked hard, to finally get my son put into a long term psych hospitalization where we could finally stop the spiralling and give him the structure, I could not provide, and to help end the fear for myself and my daughter (who had our own PTSD at this time).
I share- as all is REALLY GOOD NOW. My son turned 16 this year, he is off all meds for over 2 years, I have read a lot about Asperger's and communicate differently...I moved for a good job, he got a fresh start - and my daughter got some peace in our old home, where she stayed to finish high school. She is doing well as a freshman in college. My son, is doing well. I have surrounded him with other male role models - and worked with him, on what he can and cannot call me, or threaten me with. I have renewed faith , he will be ok. But when I hear of Adam Lanza - I am there with you....and reading for the clues - what makes us different? First - I pray your home does not have guns, but I can tell from your writing - it does not. 2nd - our sons are screaming for help and Adam internalized it all. By screaming so loud, we try and try and try again - and get them to a place of love and hopefully understanding. I hope you soon are there with Michael.
everyone's advice - re: meds and therapy and diet - screw it - you know your son - follow your gut of where to take him.
If you ever want to reach out - off line, I would love to chat. I want to find a way to reach out to parents in situations like ours - the loneliness and judgment by others is brutal, the experiences with medical community, family, friends, policemen, counselors, social workers - became surreal...I can fill a book - and call it "angels and assholes- our kids are loveable too" - one day - I want to help in all ways I can - as we as a family are really healing
I pray for you too soon, to have days of continued peace. Deborah

Simple Human said...

ops, I never finished my posting from before so I've lost my long piece of advice...

But I wanted to suggest "Hang on to your kids", an enlightening book (as are all by dr. Gabor Mate). It WILL help you.

My son did pull out a knife, but I just walked over and scolded him (I'm saying that not say I'm better, but that my son has very similar traits to yours but not as bad).

He's also extremely smart, as most like kids are. He just sometimes flies off his handle. He did that a lot when he was going to public school, then we moved him to a public but alternative school, focusing on social development, and all his nervous ticks, off the handle reactions, object throwing, etc. disappeared in a few months.

You need to have trust in your kid more than you trust the doctors. If he's as smart as you describe, communication channels are open...
ears are listening even when you think they're not.

I recognize in my son many of my same tendencies. I am a non-violent person by all means. Yet, when "forced" into an unpleasant corner, I react violently. Of course I've learned to contain myself - meditation HELPS A LOT to know oneself, where the thoughts arise, why we feel certain ways etc. - but the urge is there.

I know that one of the points the book I suggest makes is that the approach of "affection withdrawal" is the worse possible approach, and so is the "reward/punishment" (basically the same thing - you don't do this, I will not love you or be with you).

It creates tremendous pressure, which the most sensitive kids cannot handle. I certainly was brought up that way and I am still paying the price of looking for "unconditional acceptance" from everyone.

I can't advise you of course specifically, but trust me that the book I've suggested WILL help you. How much, I think is really up to you.

All kids want is to orient themselves towards their caretakers. When the caretaker is absent (we can't help that!), or suspicious arises that is not truly loving after repeated testing (see withdrawal of affection syndrome...) kids reorient themselves towards other caretakers, often their peers (good luck with that) who offer the unconditional support kids so badly need.

We live in a violent society. We need to learn the courage to be non-violent, and it's MUCH more difficult than succumbing to the automatic reactions dictated by our aggravation.

Regina said...

Also....I notice a VERY disturbing trend in the comments.

Many write in that they see used to be like this boy and now have children (plural!) being diagnosed with similar disorders.

PLEASE....I'm begging the world....we need to educate people that unless/until a root cause is identified that is curable in a specific instance, such individuals should be counseled that it would e wise to NOT reproduce.

Liz said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
PrayingforYou said...

I understand what you are going through. I too have a daughter who is mentally ill. It started when she was 13. Don't give up. Push to get him in a mental hospital were they can get him on meds. that will help. DO everything you can to get him help. Don't be polite and take no for an answer. Hope things will get better for you and your son.

For Today's Troubled Females said...

Look into Diamond Ranch Academy (DRA). I had several serious, serious problems. I went to DRA for an entire year and came out a different person. I was about to drop out of high school and now I am applying to graduate school. I would highly recommend this for your son and this is coming from someone who has been there. Feel free to contact me. I'm also going into child psychology. I realize how serious these kind of situations are.

Liz said...

I'm confused. Your blog entries say your four children are Livy, Eric, Kirk & Brandon. But this blog post talks of Michael who isn't mentioned in your other posts.

Did you decide to rename him for the purposes of this subject? It's just kind of strange that you'd talk about your kids by name and then suddenly change Eric to Michael.

Karli @ The Simple Suitcase said...

This is my brother. He is my brother. My brother is like that too. No middle ground just extremes. Threatening to kill himself regularly and getting "set off" at the little things. To him they are all big things. No matter what, I love my brother. I believe that through all the turmoil in his head, that his heart is good. He is almost thirty and still can't be fully independent. His paper trail stopped when he turned 18, so for years he hasn't been getting the help he needs. If you find a way to help your son, please help me find a way to help my brother.

marythemom said...

My adopted children had a traumatic childhood (full of abuse and neglect) and are diagnosed with several mental illnesses in addition to the issues caused by the trauma. They came to live with us at age 11 and 13. Yes, I quickly began to treat them differently than my biokids, not because I love them less or think they're bad kids (I myself have an attachment disorder and am bipolar so I "get" mental illness), but because they NEED more structure and support than a child who can easily comply with society's norms. I did not make my children this way. I love them and will do what I can to help them, but I cannot allow them to continue this way. It is my job to protect ALL of my family and society as a whole.

My kids (one of whom is also diagnosed with emerging BPD), choose to see this as me/us treating them badly. The reality is I'm doing everything within my power to prepare them and help them and the rest of the family live safely in the real world. My son decided to stop taking his meds and move out because my husband told him to wash a load of dishes or lose his iPod for a day (perfectly reasonable consequence in my mind). Within a few months he was addicted to drugs, homeless, stealing, and in jail for a first degree felony.

Our mental health system is broken. We could find NO way to help our seriously mentally ill son when he turned 18 (and it was definitely having serious problems before 18 as well). We're going to try for legal guardianship of our almost 18yo daughter, even though we can't afford it, because she NEEDS to continue to have our support.

I'm sorry that your family kicked you out, we never want to do this with our children, but we will if it's the only way we can get them the services they need.

LoveHealthLife said...

Heart goes out to you, praying for you and your family...

Are you hooked up with NAMI? www.nami.org, hopefully there is a support group near you that you are already attending. It's been a lifeline for me.

Also, recently found www.spdfoundation.net with resources for people/families with sensory processing disorder, may be part of your son's problem.

Will be praying for you.

Melissa said...

My heart aches for your family. I would like to offer hope. I am living proof that food can cause and cure mental illness. My parents first put me on psych meds when I was seven years old. I've been on anti-psychotics, anti-depressants, anti-anxiety, mood-stabilizers, sleeping meds, the list is endless. I eventually got the diagnosis of bi-polar. I have suffered with severe paranoia and severe obsessive compulsive disorder, in addition to the normal severe depression and mania that go along with bipolar disorder. I was also diagnosed with ADHD.
I tried going gluten free for my physical health, but it wasn't enough. I was still sick. I was also still mentally ill. Then I tried the Specific Carbohydrate Diet. I wasn't doing it to get off my psych meds. I thought I was stuck being mentally ill for life. (I was over 30 by the time I discovered this diet.) However, my brain chemistry balanced itself, and I am now completely medication free. It's wonderful.
I offer this as hope. If one thing doesn't work, try something else - but DON'T give up. The Specific Carbohydrate Diet is not easy, but it's worth it. I'm better physically and mentally. I hope you find the help your son needs as well.
Another diet that has success with mental illness is the Gerson Therapy, which is often used to treat cancer.
Good luck.

Marie and Jeff Harrison said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Gregory said...

So where is the childs father through all of this?

Unknown said...

Thank you for writing this. Things have been better (for no reason I can understand) since April but before that our oldest daughter was very very much like your Michael.

Megan said...

This is incredibly beautiful and brave of you to post (as well as the other commenters dealing with the same troubles). Thank you for writing, and sharing. I really hope that these stories will capture the attention of lawmakers and address the issue of how we treat mentally ill children in this nation.

Jessica Havican said...

Thank you for seeing it this way. It has been very hard for me to hear everyone talk about not only gun control but that this guy was pure evil and thoughtless. I know in my heart he was NOT in his right mind when he committed this act. One of my brothers suffers from paranoid schizophrenia so I know first hand just how serious mental illnesses are. And let me tell you, he was having psychotic episodes and hospitalized 6-7 times in one year and did they do much to help him? Absolutely not! He would only be held in for about 2-5 days but never long enough to fix the problem. You'd think after being hospitalized so many times that more would be done for his care. But because he was over 18 he had to commit himself to psychiatric care. Well something happened that involved someone else that in turn involved the law and a judge ordered him to be in a facility. He's been there for about 7 months now and has gone from being completely isolated without making eye contact to finally (this past month) socializing a little and looking someone in the eye (for a few moments). That's 6 months of treatment so what does that tell you? And why for the love of God does it take a crime to occur to get someone the help they need?!

Tish said...

I have a son with Asperger's syndrome. Primary Children's Residential Treatment Center (it might actually be called Wasatch Canyons now) saved my son's life. He spent 2 1/2 months there, and came out a different child, and by that, I mean in a really good way. It was a miracle!!! Even two years later, he is doing so well. I hope you will check into it. It is in Salt Lake City, UT. I see a future for my son now, that doesn't include prison. I hope you will see this.

Robert Cymbala said...

To the Parents: I'm a 47-year-old white male living in California who has been dealing with these issues since at least kindergarten. I was a loner; I was smart; I killed two small, fury animals when I was a teenager as a way of "getting back" at my parents, something I repressed until I recently got help. I would like to offer affordable help to your child. I am not a professional, I merely have experience and smarts. I am practically a professional mountaineer, since Nature has been my escape for 3 decades. I can guide your child on backpacking trips in the Sierra Nevada, Los Padres National Forest, or Angeles N.F. north of Los Angeles, and I will accept whatever you can pay. It is great therapy, I have found. Please write and we can discuss. Warmly, Robert, irobert2 at the mail system by Google.

Madden21 said...

I just read your article on FB after a friend posted it. I want to tell you that I am Adam Lanza's sister. I don't know what it's like to be the parent of a mentally ill child, but I certainly know what it's like to grow up with a sibling who suffers from an illness. I know the fear, the pain, the judgement, and most of all I know I know the lack of help out there. As a mother myself I understand that love for your child no matter what they do. I only hope that you continue to stay strong not only for Michael, but for your two other children. Tonight my prayer is that our government opens its eyes and decides to help people who suffer from a mental illness.

Judy Avrin said...

Thank you for having the courage to share your story. Until discussions of mental illness come out in the open & until adequate resources and treatment options are made available,families and society will continue to pay the price. Sending many hugs. Judy Avrin / Someday Melissa

Melissa Barnum said...

You just wrote our story also. We don't know what to do. Nobody will help.

Suz said...

Lisa,
I cannot thank you enough for your courage and strength as a mother. I can't even begin to imagine what you are going through but just know that you are a hero to your son, your family and the rest of us. You are brave beyond words and I pray so very much that there are more mothers like you out there. Thank you for being brave enough to ask for help.

Wise Mann said...

You are not Adam Lanza’s mom. You are not an alcoholic, do not own an arsenal of weapons nor do you take your son target shooing, blame your child’s condition on the school system, or rigidly push your troubled son to succeed.

You are not Klebold’s or Harris’ mother. You have not dismissed your son’s behavior as mere teen angst.

You are not James Holmes’ mother. By all accounts, Holmes is schizophrenic. That illness typically does not become symptomatic until the early twenties. For the same reason, you are not Jared Loughtner’s mother, unless you allow your son to live in your home untreated once he reaches the age of majority and is displaying clear symptoms of mental illness with possible violent acting out.

You are not Seung-Hui Cho’s mother. Seung-Hui rarely spoke as a child in South Korea and withdrew even more after the family came to the United States. Although he never acted out violently before moving away from home for college, his family nonetheless had obtained psychiatric help. Upon learning of their son’s rampage and the many violent writings left behind, the parents were stunned beyond belief. You, on the other hand, are well aware of your son’s violent psyche. .
IN an odd way, you have it much worse. You know of your son’s problems and his dangerous propensities and have apparently made every effort to obtain help, but to no avail. The problem is not your son’s mental illness, but instead, is a society that that puts the greedy desires of the wealthy over the needs of the people.

My parents were as left wing as they come. My mother was a psychiatric social worker and my father taught social welfare. Ironically, it was the mainstream social work profession that bought in to the charlatan pimps for the wealthy who claimed, and continue to claim, that mental institutions are the “last dinosaurs” of modern society. My parents, who fought their entire lives for social justice, strongly disagreed with the mainstream thought that modern mental health institutions are oppressive and outdated (although in early days of institutional mental health, there were certainly many oppressive mental hospitals and much of the treatment was draconian.)

Simply put, there is a very small percentage of society that poses a serious danger to themselves and others if allowed to reside outside the confines of a locked mental health facility as a long-term or life-time inpatients. Many mentally ill persons end up in prison precisely because those facilities no longer exist.

The movement to close mental health facilities began over thirty years during the Reagan administration and continues today. Sadly, it’s going to take dozens and dozens of more incidents like Columbine and Sandy Hook before a public debate about reversing that trend receives proper attention, and even then, the changes of rebuilding an adequate and sufficient mental health infrastructure are as remote as the chances that a majority of Americans will take collective and concerted action to take back their country from the hegemony of the wealthy.

For what it’s worth here is my advice:

1) Continue to love your son.
2) Continue to protect yourself, your family, and society as best as you can.
3) Put up a good fight. A losing cause can still be noble.
4) Resign yourself to the fact that there is a possibility your son will end up dead or in prison. If that tragedy unfolds, you will be able to find solace and comfort in knowing you did your best.

Unknown said...

If you read this story, you will quickly realize that it is an irresponsibly titled story by a woman who is saying that she relates to the mother's of mass murderers because she is having problems with her son that appear to be mental illness related. As the father of an autistic child, it is in my opinion criminally negligent that the media continues to throw the words "autism" and "autism spectrum" and "aspergers" into any story that involves a child behaving badly. I naturally know a lot of families with children who really are on the autism spectrum or have other developmental disabilities, and all crap stories like this do are single our children out for bullying and make them the target of hate and fear. It's BS and it needs to stop.

Dan Morgan said...

I remember reading a story just like this years ago. The child would go completely ballistic at times. After quite a bit of research and watching the child, they found out he was allergic to ORANGES. They finally put 2 and 2 together and realized he was only doing this after he had eaten an orange.
I believe there are natural ways to evaluate and correct these things. Simple hormone imbalances or allergies. Think about the crap they are putting in our food and water not to mention spraying in our air.
Just sayin'. I hope it helps you.

Unknown said...

I had a very difficult time with my daughter in High School. I will tell you she is a lovely young woman today. Acting out was a response to bad feelings, and kids have too much pressure today. Things started to get better right after she graduated,and she had more control over her life. One thing that helped was using the strategies I read in the book, "Walking on egg Shells "I read every book I could on parenting terns but love, patience, staying calm no matter what they throw at you and waiting it out until they mature is all you really need.

Unknown said...

I'm really about what you're going through during this time. This article though has really inspired me to take what action I can.

I started a petition at whitehouse.gov because of this article, requesting that legislation be presented before Congress that waives medical costs for parents of children with personality disorders.

https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/urge-congress-waive-medical-costs-parents-children-personality-disorders/G4np9y3H

I know it's only a band-aid, but I figured it was worth a shot.

Dara Lynn said...

Wow. Thank you SO much for your candid...sharing and giving us such a look into your life. Wow. I wish I could give you a hug! There were a few things you said that made one thing pop into MY head as I obsess on reading about brain development and I don't want you to think I think I know anything about YOUR LIFE...but I just have to mention that what stuck out to me was that it sounds like your son craves some control/autonomy in his life as you said he blew up and got angry and threatening when you were telling him what to do and punishing (controlling) him. (I only dare to be so bold as to mention that since you live in a life-threatening situation). Please, don't take me offensively. I wish you the BEST!!!!!

stillfighting56 said...

A few months ago, I lay awake in my bed. Wearing a robe and my hair soaking wet from the shower. My 5 month old baby, lies crying on the ground in the living room. My 3 year old is begging for juice through my bedroom door. The sounds are loud, but muffled by the thoughts racing in my head. My heart is beating faster and faster and I am at that moment, that moment where there is only two things that could possibly happen, death or a helping hand. My choice was slipping from the tips of my fingers. I made the call that would save my life and possibly the life of my children. God knows why the doctor answered at that time of night. The doctor talked me down from the emotional ledge I was leaning over. My name is Tiffany and I suffer from mental illness. I have two beautiful children that I adore, I am about to get my bachelor degree, my husband is about to enter law school and we both have a great life ahead of us. This, sadly, at that moment on that night, was not enough to save me. The answered phone call was the only thing between me and my death. This doctor was available to me because of the services provided by my college, because I take at least 6 credits a semester. I have had 27 jobs in my short life of 28 years. None of which had sufficient mental health coverage, especially since I was to sick to hold any jobs longer than a few months. Another women in my position at that moment on that night would have died and possibly taken others with her. This is the reality. Like you feel the pain of Ms. Lanza, I feel the pain of Adam Lanza. I am that child who has no control, living in complete fear and insanity. I am the mother who takes her child's life. I am the wife who puts a bullet through her heart in her kitchen. I am all those hopeless souls with no where to turn. I am mentally ill but unlike those I just mentioned and thousands of others, I was lucky enough to get an answer, not a busy tone.

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