Friday, February 14, 2014

The Grace of Mental Illness

I just started my morning with yet another meeting at my daughter's school.  Nope, it's not the ideal way to start a day for sure.  MY daughter's a great kid, really, and she is kind of a hot mess all at the same time.  She has sort of created this tornado around her in order to distract from the chaos at home.  It's all academic struggles, knock wood, nothing too terrible BUT knowing that she has an i.q. that matches her brothers, it is nothing but frustrating to watch her sabotage herself.  She's good at it too, manipulating and lying to everyone, including herself, in order to keep that tornado spinning wildly all around so she does not have to deal with our home, which is endearingly have renamed "Crazytown".

I have realized something in the last month, as a parent, I tried everything to make sure my kids would turn out "right".  Yes, I know, stop laughing.  Seriously, We did almost no t.v., still rarely turn on the tube.  I fed my kids all organic and they didn't have refined sugar until they had reached 9 and 7 years old.  They appropriately hated fast food and the most they ever got from a McDonalds was their apples.  We had no video games until they were 8 and 10 and even then it was only those active games where you have to stand in front of the magic eye bar thing and move around in order to play. We worked with naturopaths, homeopaths, doctors, specialists, spiritual advisors and the whole gang of well intended healers.  I really feel like I gave it a good go.

Every once in awhile I get someone who asks me if I've heard of a theory that kids have more of "these" problems because of the fat in fast food, or the hormones int he milk, or the toxins in the air, or the television shows, or the video games, or the pharmaceuticals, or the whatever is the blame de jour. Hey, I'm happy to find blame...lay it out there.  We are all looking for reasons, right?

Here's the thing, man, I mastered autism.  I studied, went to seminars, saw specialists speak, asked the hard questions.  I did the same for ADD.  I was and did totally take the blame for the autism and ADD. Sure, whatever, blame me as long as I can control EVERYTHING to make it better.  Blame me as long as I can make a plan for hope, the future, etc.  I became MASTER MOM of AUTISM and ADD.

and then...


Ya take your hand full of dice and roll them on the crap table of hormones.  It's all over, baby! It's OUT oF YOUR CONTROL.  They start to become their OWN people and hormones just shred all of your "right" and "good" plan.  Hormones LAUGH at your parenting.

I was telling the school psychologist after the meeting as she discussed her daughter, just entering adolescence and the plight of other parents struggling with their unique and challenging kiddos that I used to have such a different take on it all, feeling responsible, the need to control, check off y list of causes and cures and so on but now, the grace of mental illness is that I stopped.  After the third mental hospital visit, I just stopped.  It just got too fricken BIG for me to try to take responsibility for anymore.

The first hospital visit was all about shock and awe.  The second was the first suicide attempt with it's own chock and horror and the horrifying betrayal that your kids head can undo all of your efforts to keep them alive in a blink of an eye.  By the third hospital visit...something just cracked, fell away.  It's not giving up on my kid, it's giving up on shouldering all the blame.  It's where I started to laugh, let go and get my priorities straight.  It wasn't about ME at all, it was about my kid and their journey and figuring out whatever I could do to guide, not control.  I started to see myself more like a pinball machine and the kid is the ball...my job is to keep him from sinking but let him roll on his own and find his path.  That's it, that is the grace of severe mental illness.

If I can spread the love at all today, may it be to allow other parents to release the fear, the control, the white knuckle grip on blame.  There is always an excuse if your chose to use it, and there is always blame if you chose to place it but there is grace in letting it go and allowing yourself to just deal with what you have.  At least, it is my grace. I have become more direct, honest, present and proud of our really ugly, bumpy, bruised, battered journey.  Maybe my bruises are heart shaped, like a valentine.



Thursday, February 13, 2014

The First Time

As things have calmed down, all things relative, I have had some time to reflect, although I'd say it is more like flash backs.  Maybe the last 10 months have been like a bad acid trip and now, in order for my brain to process it all I have these weird moments where I space out and sort of re-live, go over, re-feel how some parts of the journey happened.  Maybe it all happened so fast and I had no time to really process a lot of it, now my brain is trying to go back and work through some of the essential parts in order to heal.  Maybe that's what acid flashbacks are, the brain trying to heal...I don't know, I've never done acid and am pretty sure it is not worth trying at this point in order to get a good comparison.  My life is trippy enough.

One part that I flash to and get lost in is the day after Mother's Day this last year.  For months my son had been getting more and more belligerent, irrational, explosive and intense.  I had spent most of Mother's Day in tears where he would cycle from screaming at me to crying and begging forgiveness and then back to screaming at me.  He could not get a rational, straight thought in his head nor keep a conversation going.  His thoughts were erratic and his behavior unpredictable.  He had not slept for 7 weeks despite trying a multitude of sleep medicines.  At one point, during the evening hours of Mother's Day he was begging for me to help him  and I told him I had heard that if we took him to the E.R. that they would have to get him psychiatric help since we could not get a psychiatric appointment any sooner then months away.  He agreed, in tears, got in the car.  We drove to the freeway entrance and both started crying.  I told him that if he could just get himself to bed then first thing in the morning I would get him to the pediatrician and the therapist and someone could help us.  He agreed and went to bed, both of us exhausted.

The next day we went to the pediatrician who could do no more to help us then had already been done, gave us a number to call for a psych referral which we already had an appointment months away that could not be moved up or expedited.  We went to the therapist for an emergency appointment.  I sat out in my car while he went in to his session.  The two of them were not in there for more then ten minutes before they came out together and walked over to my car.  I had a sinking feeling....sort of the opposite feeling of thinking you might win the lottery today.  The therapist told me that he feels it is imperative that my son go immediately to the ER, he was unstable and not sure he could keep himself safe.

To say that my heart sank would be a gross understatement.  I've been through a lot wit this kid, autistic rage tantrums, lots of broken property, doctors, specialists, diagnosis, school battles and so on but there is no way to describe how awful it feels to process in your head that a mental health professional feels that your child is unsafe to take home with you.  He asked me to agree to take my son immediately to the ER.  I did.

What I flash back to is how I do not remember breathing after that agreement.  If I did breathe, I would have cried and I needed to be strong to get my son help, to empower his honesty and courage to ask for help.  I needed to process and hold my family together even though it felt like a scud missile just hit my heart and home and family.  We drove to the local ER in sort of a surreal state of quiet.  He was afraid to go but afraid not to go.  I told him how proud I was of his courage to be honest and get help.  He whispered, "I'm scared, Mom."  I reached my hand over to his hand and in a very rare moment of our lives, he allowed me to break through his autistic tactile defensive wall and we held on to each other for a few minutes, hand in hand, grasping for hope, grasping for strength in each other as I tried with all my soul to let him know that I was not going to let go of him.

This was the first of six mental health hospitalizations,.  This one did not involve an actual suicide attempt like the others did.  This was the first and last time that I cried as soon as he was strapped on to the gurney and rolled away by the EMT's to be taken to the psych hospital and the release of him being out of sight created a burst of tears from deep in my gut.  The shock, the horror, the fear, the confusion, the pain of the process, the exhaustion that vomited out of my body when he was out of my range.

I will never let go and I will hold on to him and to hope.  I will work every muscle I have in my heart and soul to help him because I am his mother, I am his advocate, his warrior, his guide and teacher.  I am so sorry for any other mothers who have walked a parallel path, and I've known a few who have followed me in to the same ER for their first times.  I tell them the view from the frequent flyer seat now, how to find the more comfortable chair, who to ask for a warm blanket, where to find the coffee or juice and how to navigate the time and waiting between the process landmarks.  I am now a frequent flyer and seasoned Mom of the autistic/bipolar world but I remember that reach, that grip, that invocaton of the first time. Like a flash back, I remember that first time.