Holding wings.
Hope you have a good weekend everybody!
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Photo Credit: Paula Lozar
Holding wings.
Hope you have a good weekend everybody!
The world has lost a Mother of Perpetual Determination (MOPED), a fierce advocate for people with serious mental illness (SMI), and a mother who lost her son, Farron, through neglect in prison. SMI is often criminalized and, in 2007, Farron was suffering SMI which resulted in his tragic, avoidable death.
As Farron's mom above all else, Mary's love and pain were channelled into successfully advocating for SMI in Alabama and nationally. Mary was truly one of the best. My experiences with Mary came well after I had witnessed her greatness and had grown a deep respect for her work.
One day, out of the blue, Mary sent me a message. She said she saw a lot of herself in me, perhaps with more grace, as she witnessed me taking on the anti-psychiatry people. Huge compliments came from this great woman and she grew my confidence enough for me to join in the national fight for decriminalization of and better treatment for people with SMI.
I will forever work in honor of you, Mary. I, as you, will never give up, will never give in, and will always use my mama emotions to motivate my advocacy. You are now reunited with Farron which is all that eases my pain. I miss you beautiful warrior mama. Rest easy now.
Mary Barksdale's family has requested donations be made to Parents for Care, in memory of this beautiful spirit.
See Mary Barksdale's posts on this blog:
Losing Farron - October 26, 2016
My Holiday Story - November 22, 2017
Mary's boys: Will, Farron and Phillip
The school shooter in Florida has now met the standard for commitment to receive psychiatric treatment in the USA: Do harm to oneself or to another.
Why are we surprised this shooting has happened? Why are we surprised these horrible events continue to happen? He cried out for help and was a "problem" student since middle school. He wasn't allowed to carry a backpack to school before he was suspended.
After Sandy Hook, congress commissioned a report to find out what happened. They found that commitment laws need to be changed, that treating people with mental health issues actually prevents tragedies like this. Treated mentally ill people are harmless. In fact, they're more often victims then perpetrators. Those who don't get treatment are society's biggest dangers.
Many parents with kids who have mental health issues cannot get help for their children. They have to wait until their children try to hurt themselves or someone else to get help. Many sit in ERs waiting for beds to open. Many will be turned away, sent home, no meds, no treatment. Those who are admitted usually don't spend more than four days as inpatients because insurance companies won't pay for more days. Once a child reaches 18, HIPPA laws lock parents out as caregivers and the system makes it even harder to get help.
I know I've been an annoyance with mental health requests — please sign this petition, please call your congressman. Maybe now you understand you f*#king need to get involved and do something.
I think and pray about this everyday but I advocate, too. How about joining me? Now.
Photo credit: Duq/flickr
2-15-18
Dede,
Thank you for writing me. I'm dealing with some spiritual issues. It's easier to just give up than it is to fight. I've got myself in trouble and now I have to face the music. Honestly, I don't like the song. But that's life.
My life is a wreck. It's not going to be easy to keep it together. Isolation just accelerates my mental/spiritual illness. I don't believe in mental illness. Well, in my case, I know my problem is a spiritual problem. I'm in isolation because I hit a psych tech. Who does that?
I'm learning about myself. It's painful. I wasn't let out of my cell today. I could complain all day but it's not going to change anything. I'm just trying to be strong.
So what happened to Patrick? I appreciate your reaching out to me. I know my mom is fighting her butt off for me. She told me your son died. I'm sorry to hear that. So what does your blog do?
I believe I have a mental illness. I'm scared I won't get help. I'm afraid I'm going to die. I don't know what to say. I can't concentrate. I regret hitting that psych tech. I need help. I feel like I'm dying. I need to be positive.
I hope you're well. Good luck with your blog and book. I'm thankful to be alive still. I want to live. Nice meeting you. Thank you for your prayers.
Travis
Travis can receive cards and letters. No books. Thank you so much.
Since this post, Travis, due to health reasons, has been moved. His current mailing address is the following:
Mens Colony
Travis Christian
cdc#bb8099
Mental Health Crisis Bed
PO BOX 8103
Colony Dr.
San Luis Obispo, California
93409
Letter from Travis 2-15-2018
Just as I began to wonder if my blog and our stories are making a difference, I received this message from New Zealand:
"My beloved son, Ben, has severe paranoid schizophrenia. He's 22. I live in New Zealand where there are no facilities to help him except medication. He's made to have monthly injections as he has no insight into his illness at all. He also has terrible drug and alcohol abuse and I'm his only support as no one wants him around. I found this site last night when I was feeling so hopeless and I read all night - every story - and cried my broken heart out. I just wanted to thank all of you because I really, really needed you and you are what helps in the dark times."
Thank you, everyone, for speaking out and sharing your stories on Sooner Than Tomorrow. Thank you to all of you who read our stories and pass them on.
Photo credit: Jen Collins/Flickr
I took my youngest son, Mitchell, to the hospital last night for paranoia and visual hallucinations. Upon my return home, my oldest son showed me a gun his brother purchased a week ago. No one had told me about the gun before.
I am livid. Shaking. Waiting for the police to take this weapon of destruction away. The gun was not reported stolen, but it could be. The police say there are gun owners who don't write down serial numbers so, when it's taken into evidence, they can't trace the owner. The most bewildering thing to me is how much the senior police officer doesn't seem to know about Utah's gun laws. I'll call the detectives next week and ask them to pursue finding the person who sold the gun to my son. It was an illegal sale as my son has no ID.
The hospital was going to release my son this morning. When I told Mitchell he couldn't come back to live with me, he had a melt down and the hospital realized how sick he is. Now, they're transferring him to an inpatient psych hospital that has an open bed. He has to be stabilized on meds. The hospital crisis worker called and she "got it." She was perplexed about my son's access to a gun with his history. I also reminded her of his suicide attempt 2 years ago. She was calling about his health insurance. The Medicaid he has under mental health disability needed to preauthorize Mitchell's admission to the psych hospital. If my son didn't have Medicaid, he'd have a much harder time getting admitted.
I feel traumatized but can't really place the emotions anywhere. So many what if's. I'm lucky we're all still alive. My son was so psychotic last night. My husband said, "I'm glad Mitchell didn't try to shoot the aliens trying to get into his mind by shooting off bullets in the house." Mostly my son would have taken the gun to his brain to get rid of the intrusive thoughts.
Guns are out there being sold folks. We must have stronger restrictions. It won't be perfect but, my God, what value do you place on a child's life? Your child's life? Put your guns in caskets, not our children. Our nation is a mess full of freaking a-hole cowboys and mental health care that is a tragedy. Innumerable parents and guardians are trying, behind the scenes, to get help for our children. Many, many of us. Yet we feel powerless to change this abysmal system with its lack of beds for treating our mentally ill. And I'm a nurse who knows the system well.
My son is a beautiful young man inside and out. He's just seriously ill with a brain disorder. I love him so much.
See Heidi Franke's post - I LOVE MY CHILDREN - February 14, 2018.
Mitchell at 12, two years before life changed for him. He loved to climb.
Photo credit: Marisa Farnsworth
Focus.
Hope you have a good weekend everybody!
My youngest son, Mitchell, remains at home with us and is trying so hard to feel well. He's been manic and short tempered. He's now highly aware of his illness and has felt depressed about having bipolar, anxiety, and schizoaffective disorder. He said he joined an online support group for people with bipolar disease. That is a first. Sometimes I question the schizoaffective diagnosis, but there is so little we truly know about the brain and it's machinations.
Mitchell is always apologizing, now, after an outburst. This shows me he gets it. Before he held onto his dark angry moods. Brooding. I'm grateful he's not on the streets as he's been before. He would likely die. One time, while rambling through a rail yard, he was talked out of walking into an oncoming train by another homeless person. Something about age 23 seemed to add some healthier neuronal pathways this last year.
Mitchell's started back on Seroquel again. Though he smokes marijuana on a daily basis to help with his extreme anxiety, he says he no longer looks to get high. He says he's found he reaches a plateau with pot. All he wants is to not feel like there's a wound up spring in his head that pulses to every pore in his body. I describe it as such and I know he would agree. I'm blessed because, so far, he shares his thoughts at times. There are many times he doesn't. Those are the things I worry most about. The things that aren't said.
Mitch seems not able to focus and learn recently. He's been trying to send packages back to Amazon and has had trouble learning how to do this. I think it's more related to his short temper (which he, himself, is frustrated about). He's highly critical of himself which creates more anxiety. Circuitous routes of neurons and unorganized, capricious synapses are a hallmark of mental illness.
It's stressful at home with three men - Mitchell, my husband, and my older son. They lack closeness and live in a past of regrets and grudges which really is depressing in itself. Neither my children nor my husband have been angels but they're all trying. I know you can't change another person. We only have control over our own reactions. I'd rather see the glass half full or get a smaller glass. Dealing with one's own expectations is key to surviving trying times. And being able to laugh.
We need my boys to be independent and we're doing as much as possible to get them there. I, too, am not perfect and wish I had some other quality I might be lacking. But I am who I am and don't want to live with regret should I kick my sons out again and have them die from an overdose or lack of care for their mental illness.
We all do the best we can with what we have at any given time. Housing costs are horrendous for someone making less then $12/Hr, or someone on disability of $750/month. They can't afford health insurance, let alone methadone treatment for an opiate addiction which is what my older son suffers with. It does leave the extended family to help fill in the gaps if they can and are willing.
I can. I'm willing. I love my children.
Mitchell
February 9, 2018
Dear Travis,
Hi. I’ve been working with your mom on a couple of stories about you and your situation in solitary confinement. I don’t know that sharing these stories is going to change anything but I can hope. I’m sorry you’re not getting the attention and the help you need.
I live in Lincoln, California - about 33 miles northeast of Sacramento. I have a website with two blogs. One blog is where I posted your stories. The other blog is my book, Sooner Than Tomorrow, A Mother’s Diary which I post in sections every other week. When I finish posting the book in August, I’m going to publish it. Among other things, it’s my story and my son’s (Patrick) story of serious mental illness. I’ve been a mental health advocate for a long time.
When I’m not blogging, I have two granddaughters who live nearby and I enjoy spending time with them. I also have two grandsons in Utah and a grandson and granddaughter in San Diego. It helps to see the world through the eyes of young people — everything is fresh and new. They cheer me up.
Today, the weather is sunny and 71 degrees. It’s like spring and it’s only February. Don’t laugh. I have a cat stroller and I’m going to take my black cat, Jazzy, for a walk. She loves being outside and I can’t let her roam free so this is another way to get her out to see trees and flowers and birds and bunnies (we have lots of rabbits in the neighborhood). I always hope that no one sees me pushing the stroller — it probably appears eccentric. But hey! We walk dogs. Why not cats?
I hope you can focus and write more about your experiences in solitary. If you do, please send what you write to me. Maybe I can share your thoughts on my blog again.
I’m thinking about you and praying for you everyday, Travis. I’m praying that you will be strong and that things will get better. Your mom loves you so much and is fighting very hard for you. There are lots of us who care.
Hugs. Dede
You can write to Travis. He can receive cards and letters, no books. Sometimes we just need to hear, "I'm thinking of you." Thank you so much.
Since this post, Travis, due to health reasons, has been moved. His current mailing address is the following:
Mens Colony
Travis Christian
cdc#bb8099
Mental Health Crisis Bed
PO BOX 8103
Colony Dr.
San Luis Obispo, California
93409
See previous posts:
Letters from Solitary Confinement by Kathy Baker & Travis Christian, Feb 3, 2018
So Where Do I Go From Here? by Kathy Baker, Feb 6, 2018
Travis
Travis at 24
I've called all of the referrals people are sending — even the Prison Law Office. I wrote them a letter and Travis wrote them but they couldn't help him. I can't find help. Even NAMI could not help with anything. I called them before he committed his mental illness crime and after. I even paid an advocate 1500 dollars to help my son and got no help for the money.
Below is a letter which is typical of the responses I receive. I've been turned down or not been responded to by more than 50 lawyers and advocacy groups including Mental Health America, National Institutes of Corrections in the Department of Justice, The Center for Prisoner Health and Human Rights, California Innocence Project, Justice Solutions of America, Solitary Watch, and Treatment Advocacy Center. I could name more. So where do I go from here?
2/1/18
Dear Kathy,
We received Travis’s letter today giving us consent to speak with you on his behalf. I presented your questions to our attorneys for review, but unfortunately our organization will not be able to accept your son’s case. We do not have the resources to advocate for him directly at this time.
I recommend that you try to contact the Prison Law Office again after Travis has written them a letter himself. I have also attached a referral list for criminal law attorneys and civil rights attorneys in both Sacramento and the Bay Area.
Please keep in mind that Travis will need to contact attorneys and give his permission to speak with you on his behalf whenever you contact an attorney to seek representation. Because Travis is the potential client, you do not have authority to seek counsel for him unless he contacts the attorney.
We are closing your file on this issue and will not take further action on your behalf. If you have questions in the future about a new legal issue, you can contact our Short Term Assistance Line at 1-800-776-5746.
You have the right to file a grievance if you are unhappy with this decision. A copy of our grievance policy and form can be found on our website at http://www.disabilityrightsca.org/connect/507401.pdf.
We would like to know what you thought of our services. Please consider filling out a client satisfaction survey, available at this link: www.disabilityrightsca.org/ClientSurvey.
I wish you the best as you continue with the advocacy process. Please feel free to contact Disability Rights California again in the future should you need assistance with a new disability related legal issue.
The reason I'm fighting so hard to help my son is because, when I saw him for the first time on December 4, 2017, he'd been at California Health Care Facility (CHCF) since November 8 with no mail, no pen, no paper, no TV, no radio, and no books. He was just staring and banging on walls. He was crying for me to pray for Satan to leave him alone.
As he stared at me, he picked hairs from his long beard and ate them. He said, "Mom, I would rather be in the SHU (solitary housing unit) at Men's Colony. Ask anyone how horrific the SHU is and he would rather be there. That's what CHCF was doing to my son. He was vibrant and alive on lithium when he was sent to Men's Colony.
See the previous post 2/3/18: Letters from Solitary Confinement by Kathy Baker and Travis Christian