FIGHTING FOR CHANGE by Allison Brown

My story is pretty long and spans generations. My dad was sexually abused by an uncle beginning at the age of three until he was about 13. At age 17, this uncle died and my dad began having episodes of anxiety. In reality, my dad was experiencing manic episodes followed by severe depression.

By the 1980s, he married my mom and had three children. I was four the first time I witnessed my dad hallucinate. He was convinced my baby brother was a demon. He held him up by his feet and told my mother he had to kill him. My older brother escaped to a neighbor’s house and called for help. I watched from a window as he punched my mother in the face. Police struggled to restrain my father and take him away. He went to Greystone Hospital in New Jersey where he was diagnosed as manic depressive. 

My dad’s “episodes,” as we called them, happened many times throughout my young childhood. Most of them were violent but only in the sense that he saw demons and was attempting to protect people from the demons. 

In 1992, my dad has another episode. My parents were divorced and my younger brother and I were spending the weekend with him. The visit was supposed to be supervised by my grandfather, but the family knew something was off. They told us to leave. I locked my brother and myself in a bathroom until my aunt arrived. Later that day, my dad called my mom to tell her my brother was a ghost. She persuaded my dad to bring us to my grandparents house where she met us.

Allison’s father and grandmother

Allison’s father and grandmother

We had one last Sunday family dinner. My grandmother made her famous sauce and everyone pleaded with my dad to go to the hospital. He refused. There was nothing anyone could do. The next day, he went back to my grandparents’ house and asked to be taken to the hospital. My grandfather had one errand to run before he took him. He was gone 15 minutes. When he came home, he found my father foaming at the mouth standing over my grandmother’s lifeless body. He shouted “The queen demon is dead.”

My dad was found “not guilty” by reason of insanity and moved to the Greystone Psychiatric Hospital where he spent over a decade. He was then released on what is essentially parole for the mentally ill. He first transitioned into living with my aunt and, eventually, into his own apartment, but his illness was not curable. He continued to cycle through episodes. He spent the better part of another decade at Ancora Psychiatric Hospital in New Jersey.

As I came into adulthood, I became an advocate for care for my dad. I also advocated for the court to keep monitoring him for his safety and for the safety of all around him. Many times doctors refused to talk to me because of the HIPAA law. They’d listen to the signs I was seeing then tell me, "He doesn’t seem dangerous to us.” In 2012, after six months of communicating with his doctor to no avail, the doctor called to tell me, “Your father body-slammed me, stripped himself naked, and ran down the highway.” My father was eventually diagnosed with bipolar III disorder and schizoaffective disorder. He spent another five years away. Our story is sad and complicated and layered. It scarred my family.

My older brother turned to drugs. He had six children, by as many women, and was incarcerated for felony domestic assault. My husband and I adopted his youngest son at the age of nine but we were too late. He had been so traumatized that he was unable to function in our house. We had intense in-home therapy for four years. The safety of my own children was paramount. My nephew was Baker Acted (involuntarily committed) in Florida four times in one month for suicidal ideations. One time, a deputy came to the house and told me, “You just need to handle him better. This seems like a family issue.”

My nephew became violent in our home and was eventually removed in cuffs. The state did nothing to help us. The paper wrote a story about us. Nothing changed. Eventually, the court accepted our surrender of parental rights and put my nephew in a group home.

Our family has been knocked down so many times by the failures in the system. We have advocated for help. For change. For a better system. We’ve gotten no where. I believe families should have the right to discuss mental health issues with doctors and therapists even if it goes against what the mentally ill person wants. I believe in continuity of care, from therapist to therapist, which rarely happens. I believe in better training for our officers, teachers, and hospital staff. I believe in common sense laws that could save lives and protect our mentally ill loved ones as well.

Note: After two years in care, Allison’s nephew is healing. He’s receiving treatment and learning to cope with the trauma he’s endured.

HAPPENING NOW: MY SON'S MISSING IN SF by Laural Fawcett

6/19
I want to show you, that even though I've had terrible news and once again my son's been released from jail to the streets of San Francisco and it rips my heart to the core, I'm going to dry my tears away and simply do the next logical thing. I'm trying to get him into a facility through a new friend I've made. It's a residential facility in Stockton.

There are good people in the system who will listen and work with us, we must educate and coach and endure and reverse engineer or it will never change. My son is not an animal. He's lost on the streets. Maybe he'll call me if I'm lucky. I will be strong but not silent.

Laural

Laural

6/20
Update on my missing son. I'm hanging out with good friends today while I do employment related errands to get my EMT career going. Ironically, my friend's father had an older brother like my son. He was murdered some years ago while in psychosis and on the streets. The family, much like mine, was desperate to provide care.

But we must focus on life. We must fight for justice. I'm working on getting paperwork in order from San Francisco county jail so, if found, I can get my son to the Ever Well residential facility in Stockton, thanks to manager Paul Cumming. I need help from San Francisco area friends to locate my son. 

Info about my son: He's very tall - 6 foot 6. His name is Shaylon Hovey,  pronounced Shaelen. He has big, crystal blue eyes and may be in the SF Tenderloin/Mission area.

Shaylon loves food. So that's a good bribe or conversation starter (haha). He's stated to his public defender that he wants to go into residential treatment. He's had a Haldol shot recently and needs another shot July 6. I have a power of attorney for his health care and legal and financial. So I, Laural Fawcett, hereby give permission to all advocate friends associated with Facebook groups such as CCA to make personal contact with my son, Shaylon Hovey, in order to assist him in getting medical treatment and care for his disability. He has a diagnosis of Paranoid Schizophrenia and co-occuring substance abuse disorder.

Thank you, friends. Your support in thought, heart, and deed is priceless. If seen, please call 559-960-6426.

Shaylon and Laural

Shaylon and Laural