Monday, March 10, 2014

MENTAL ILLNESS[1]-WHERE IS THE LOVE? © 2014 by Wayne Dan Lewis, Sr.



INTRODUCTION

This is a grassroots discussion on mental illness.  Why?  Because in many cases, the discussion is often reserved for those of the medical profession.  For the most part, everyone must have letters behind their names or in front of their names.  In this discussion, while several references will be made to those with their respective letters, we are going to try to have a plain discussion about mental illness and those whom we love.

The timeliness of this discussion is related to the most recent incident of a pregnant mother, who allegedly drove into the ocean off of Daytona Beach with her three children, reportedly, in an effort to kill them.[2]  The jury is still out on this accusation, but it still opens the door to incidents of this nature which are not as isolated as the media accounts may suggest.  Do we have an abundance of proof?  I grant you that we don’t have an abundance of proof, and that there may be a reason that we do not have that proof. 

 My guess as to why we don’t have sufficient proof can be compared to the recent story of the young Missouri All-American, Michael Sam,[3] who reported to the national media, that he was coming out of the closet, or that he was gay.  The benefit to Michael could be that it raised his stock on in the NFL draft.  The other benefit to him may have been that for personal reasons, he no longer has to worry about his past being thrown in his face at an inopportune moment.  Whatever Mr. Sam’s reason, the benefit is not the same for those who necessarily face mental illness.  Very few of those who suffer from mental illness can afford to come out and announce to the world, “Hey, I have mental illness!”  Why? 

We live in a society that is quick to judge, and is bias to a sinful degree that causes many of our family members to remain quiet, as much as possible, about their condition.  Thank God for confidentiality laws.  But, even with confidentiality laws, many of those who are victims of mental illness have to eventually reveal to some small, but compromising degree, that they are suffering from a case of mental illness.  And to that end, much is on the line, especially when it comes to employment.  What are the options for the mentally ill?

WHY THIS DISCUSSION?               

In a lead up to this discussion, we mentioned Andrea Yates,[4] Susan Smith,[5] Miriam Carey,[6] and most recently accused, Ebony Wilkerson.[7] (In error, previously referred to as Ebony Williams. Please accept apologies for the misspelling or misreference).  Each of these women could very easily be the poster child for mothers with mental illness.  But unfortunately, mental illness is not a mother’s illness, nor a father’s illness.  It is a disease that affects every family, at every level of the economic spectrum.  It is a disease that affects all of us, regardless of race, creed or nationality.  And while it is not a fair comparison to being gay, lesbian or transgendered, the consequences of revealing oneself in these genre’s could be far more devastating. 

This discussion needs to happen not just because of the mothers who suffer from their various problems, but because of the fathers, brothers, sisters, and other members of our society who sit in silence and torment, trying to survive day to day, fighting for some level of decency.  From the medications that many receive to the counselling and treatment that exists only as much as insurance companies will allow, or as much as governmental budgets will exist. 

This discussion needs to occur with the intent of helping not only our families, but many of the professionals whose jobs exist to the extent, that should a police officer, a fireman, a doctor, or a military vet needs to express their anquish, they will not be punished, or publicly humiliated or embarrassed because they spoke up and spoke out, because they need help, not to be ostracized.

WORST-CASE SCENARIO

Unfortunately, the mothers mentioned above need not be distinguished or categorized to themselves.  Our country and our world have witnessed all too often men and women who have taken out their frustration in schools, movie theatres, malls, work places and too many other places to mention, perceivably because of mental health treatment or possibly, the lack thereof.  How unfortunate (a phrase I may use too much in this piece), that those who resorted to these alleged acts or threats of violence became the face of mental health.  Because for many of us, the face of mental health is not those who go to these extremes to seek help.  While many of those who suffer from mental illness required more assistance than their medical provider may provide due to various limitations, they aren’t all prepared to go the extremes that have become front page news.  These are the cases that have become the worst-case scenarios.  These are the cases that have unfairly tainted the issues relating to mental health as being in extreme need of assistance.  If anything, the kind of acts that violence, or threats of violence, are radically extreme.   For those who still need our help, they can’t possibly be at this level,  they can’t allowed to be, nor believed to be, at the level of worst-case scenario.

TO WHAT DEGREE DO WE OPEN OUR HEARTS AND MINDS?

If this discussion ever leads to someone with mental illness standing up and announcing their condition, what will be the next course of action?  For us? For them? Will we call them courageous?  Will we be as accepting of them prior to their revealing their condition?  Will we call them names behind their backs, or make fun of them?  Will we make the familiar circular motion with our fingers to our heads (suggesting crazy, loony, or not all there)?  And how will we go back to our daily routines?  Will we treat them the same as always, or will be sensitive about everything that we say or do?  And what about them, having revealed their status?   Will those, who maybe our co-workers continue their treatments?  Will they continue to go to their counseling?  Will they begin to change in how they respond to us?  To what degree does anything changes? 

In essence, nothing needs to change.  I am going out on a limb here, and you may want to consult a professional on this, but I believe that those who suffer with mental illness, just want someone to understand what they go through.  They don’t need to share everything; they don’t need to share every day, or with everyone.  They may only want to share with one special person, not necessarily a medical professional, not necessarily counselor.  The real issue is to what degree do we, as family, as friends, or as a community, open up to those with mental illness who are willing to stand before the world and declare their condition? 

There is no real measuring stick, but there has to be a better way of making it easier for those with mental illness able to reach out as a whole.  Granted, there are doctors, psychiatrists, and other professionals who play a vital role in trying to help those with mental illness.  But their reach is not as extensive or as far-reaching as the individuals that patients interact with on a daily basis.  What doctors, psychiatrists and other medical professionals know can’t help those who interact often with patients who are family, friends and co-workers.  The confidentiality aspect protects our loved-ones and friends as patients, as it should.   But for those us who are not in the know, who need to be in the know, on behalf of that loved-one or that friend, the dynamics would otherwise seem to be counter-productive. 

LET’S BE TOTALLY CLEAR

Not all of the mentally ill are subject to act such as the mothers referenced here are accused.  That reference is extreme, and is not intended to suggest that those who suffer from mental illness may remotely resort to the instances that inspire this piece.  As a matter of fact, it maybe this kind of piece that causes those with mental illness to not come forth.  And if it is that kind of piece, let me the first to apologize if anyone is offended.  But whether or not this piece gives the wrong impression, it is perhaps an opportunity for those who suffer from mental illness, as well as their families, to set the record straight.  Maybe, it’s time to come forth.  Put the world on notice, that whatever your condition, you are coming out!  That whatever your condition, you are going to be brave, and that you are going to fight this thing, with or without the community’s support.  Because if nothing else, we have to believe that if no one else supports our mentally ill, it is their families who stand by them, and stand with them to overcome many of the challenges that many of us take for granted.

DON’T’T CALL THE POLICE, CALL FOR HELP

In Louisiana, the signal code for Law Enforcement officers is 103M (Mental Patient)-  For many police officers it is a signal that suggests that there is a disturbance in the community, and it involves a possible mentally ill patient.  It is an unenviable position that our law enforcement officers are all too often placed in when responding, and for those who are the subject of such calls, help is not coming- the police are.  What is the difference?  From a grassroots perspective, for the patient, men and women who are responding are coming with handcuffs, tasers, guns, maybe a stick of some kind.  Whoever is coming, they are not coming to discuss, persuade or put the patient back to bed.  Their power, and particularly their training, as police officers dictates that they take a tactical approach to bringing things under control.  Theoretically, that is great, but for the patient, it suggests that the deck is already stacked against them.   Police officers are as much a contributing factor to an escalation of behavior by patients as a deterrent or encouragement for a patient to be compliant.  How so?

Police officers training, by and large, is pretty straight-forward.  When they arrive—Scratch that!  When they are called to a scene of a disturbance, it should already be understood that our Police Officers’ presence is not to babysit, nor hold the hand of a patient who refuses to take their meds, or who refuses to get back inside and stop screaming at the moon.  Police officers’ response is typically five-fold:

  1. Show your hands
  2. Stand against the wall
  3. Turn around and put your hands behind you
  4. “Do you have anything on you that could harm me?”
  5. “The suspect refused to comply, so we shot him!”

To our men and women of our various law enforcement agencies, if you are offended by this characterization, you should be.  If you are responding to mentally ill patients who, unless armed, or threatening to harm someone, is not complying with a family member, your presence becomes an antagonistic problem for the mentally ill.  It is almost a foregone conclusion that if a police officer responds to a mentally ill patient out of control, the training that police officers receive prepares them more to shoot a patient rather than try to capture or at worst-case scenario, incapacitate them to the point where they no longer pose a threat or harm to themselves or their family members.  How? The net used to be used to apprehend a mentally ill patient.  And what about hypo-dermic needles?  We used them on bears and return them to the wild.  We capture alligators and bring them to sanctuaries.  But call the police and the ultimate response could be that someone is going to die.  That is not help, and that is not resolving the problem.  If those who are mentally ill, who have no intention of killing themselves or anyone else, find themselves dead, then help did not come.  The police did. 

The police need to be taken out of the equation.  We are doing the same thing with respect to mental illness and expecting a different result.  Taking the police out of the equation with respect to those who are mentally ill forces us to look at what we can do better.  But, let us not just take the police out of the equation and then shuffle the problem over to the firemen or even EMS.  The call for help should be a call for help, and our family members in need should feel that whomever responds is going to come in and help their family member transition, if necessary, within the home, or from the home to a treatment facility.  Our families need to feel as though help is coming, not an execution squad, in the form of police officers.

 

 GOING FORWARD

As always, the intent is to seek a solution to how we address and improve the circumstances and conditions not only for our family member suffering from mental illness, but also, and this is key, for our families who live with and provide invaluable care.  Unfortunately, as we speak, budgets are cut by governmental forces, insurance coverage is limited and shrinking, and the costs to families, not only financially, but emotionally, are in many cases, overwhelming.  The need for families themselves to receive support in their effort to be the cheerleaders and in the corners for their loved ones is an on-going challenge.  Going forward, the cure may lie in what those who suffer from mental illness are able to do, or are willing to do, with their medical professional’s advice.  Going forward, if it is possible, and beneficial, those who suffer from mental illness, may need an opportunity to express or share their condition with the greater community.  As fewer dollars are committed to their treatment and medication, or housing, then those who suffer, should have an opportunity to take their condition to a greater level, to the streets, if you will.  For those who suffer not only from their disease of mental illness, but also from the economic shortfall that will eventually force them to seek other alternatives, allow one of those alternatives to be to speak out, to be heard, and to be known by their condition(s), so that we can see them for how courageous they are, and what they are going through.  And, wherever possible, we must be willing to provide them with the kind of love and support deserving of anyone who suffers from a condition that they did not choose for themselves.  This is that time for those among us who suffer from mental illness to come out and be heard.  This is that time for us, as family and community, to show those who face a need for mental health assistance, empathy, not sympathy, and above all else, love and happiness.

 

Disclaimer:  No information here should be considered medical or legal advice.  If you or someone you know need medical assistance, or have an medical emergency, call your medical provider or 911.  Information provided here is deemed to be from reliable sources, but not guaranteed.



[2] Woman drives car into ocean: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=siUrSL_AUns

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