Lara
Friend of the Arts
- Location
- Mid-Atlantic Coast

Oh, I hardly ever bottle tings up.
I just don't care to bore anyone, especially when it's been posted more than once.
But, here 'tis;
I just watched the movie 'Shine' last night
.....reminded me of my eldest son
was hard to hold emotion thru some parts
was much harder for my Lady
but we remained
riveted
My son
Excelled in academics
Skipped grades
Won awards
Became somewhat sought after
Mensa
Artistic things hung in municipal halls
Life for him was just too slow apace
Stayed up for days at a time
He’d regurgitate all his thoughts to his mother and I
It was a bit suffocating
Then one day he came to me in my shop
....and began crying, telling me he felt he was going crazy,
but unable to put his feelings into words
I hugged him
Told him all kids go thru puberty and change
‘this too shall pass’ kinda thing
The next years are a blur
I guess maybe I never have wished to dwell on the events in those years
I’ll try to piece some together on my own, as I know better than to ask my lady
He ended up in prison
At 19
Advancing from a minimum security facility to OSP
And on to ‘thunderdome’
Where nobody wants to go
Tried to arrange visits
Rejected countless times
Talked to OSP counselors
‘forget your son, concentrate on your other children’
We got a call
OSP does not call anyone
‘You need to see your son’
The visiting area was like a staging zone for zoo critters
Steel tables, benches, cemented in
Chain link walls and doors
He was led in by guards
Shackled head to toe
Made to sit
Unseeing eyes
No recognition
Indistinguishable utterances
He stunk to high heaven
Never looked our way
On the way home I had to pull over, off the freeway
I don’t remember the last time I cried
Maybe as a small child...
But
Never wept like that in my life
And have yet too since
Bitter
Helpless
Godless
Utter hopelessness
A week (?) later we got another call
He was being transferred to the psych ward across the street
Where ‘One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest’ was filmed
We were told he had quit eating entirely
Weighed 90 lbs
A guard carried him across the street
We were led to the visiting area
Typical booth like situation for visitors
Only, the other side of the glass was something from a zombie movie
We got to watch him attempt to drink milk and cry
My lady had a very hard time
I went alone
Weeks of visiting later, he was released
Just like that
After 7 years of maximum security
to us
I do not do well when cleaning up men with uncontrolled body functions
Triage
Nut bins
Meds
It’s all a blur
Somewhere in there, when he was still cognizant, I did a bit of a fraught thing…
We talked about his options
He wanted to go camping
So
Him and I packed his meager belongings
Bought him some basic camp stuff
Drove him to the Trask river area
And dropped him off
while it began to rain
Ever do something that gave you immediate relief, knowing the end result would probably not be optimal?
The sack of cats Dad would have me toss out the window of a speeding Chevy may have had an influence
On the way back home, I tried not to think.
Still
Thoughts crept in
Maybe he’d just lie there curled in his sleeping bag
Inert
Oblivious
Until days later large birds of prey would dine on his remains
It’s all a blur
They found him 300 miles south
Incoherent
The Tillamook women’s mental health facility asked us to take him back 'he can't stay here'
More triage
Got him hooked up with a place called Luke-Dorf
General population nut bin for semi-functional goofballs
Then what they call the quad
Then paired up in a shared apartment
And now
On his own
On a budget
I figger the tax payer’s dollars for this are from this tax payer
During these times he’d ever so often not take his meds
Sometimes it was because they changed colors or shapes and he didn’t think they were right
Sometimes it was just because he thought he no longer needed them
Always ended with me going over there, reattaching his phone, and fishing his glasses outa the toilet.
He’s as functional now as you and me, first look.
As long as he takes his meds.
Sorry
This is jumbled time line mess
My lady can recite the events like they happened yesterday
7 or more years of them
I will not take her there
Yes, He's with me alwaysDo you have support to give you comfort?
Heh, don't know anybody that deserves what most go thruyou and your wife don't deserve this
What’s the hardest thing you have done?
Visiting my first born son in a secured mental ward (seeing him chained head to toe), before he was diagnosed with catatonic schizophrenia.
That was a tough one, probably the toughest
I'd post my story on that one, but it's been posted too many times
I don't mind re-reading it, just don't wish to upset anyone
I get that
Darkness can never exist in light
Yet light can remove darkness
You're on a good path Mr. Ed. Keep faith in yourself, one day at a time.For me the most thing I have done in life was emptying myself of all preformed notions of life and trusting in myself to live each moment as it comes to me. Sometimes I lose patience or get upset over trivial nonsense I put myself in a context from people from whom I feel wronged until I realize my error and recenter myself.
Overcoming mental illness was not easy, but highly productive.
Did that 7 months ago. The first month was the hardest. Luckily I had a friend staying with me to make life easier. Physical therapy was necessary I suppose, but couldn't wait to escape that tedium! No regrets though, my new knee has changed my life.Total Knee Replacement!!!!!!!
@Repondering I feel the same as you in that I am the eldest of 2 girls and in my Alcoholic Mother's eyesI looked after my bipolar mother for 60 years and dad despised me for doing what he wouldn't learn how to do. When his pancreatic cancer struck, I nursed him as well......mercifully for everyone his death came pretty quick. His last words to me were, "You're not good enough to shine Skip's shoes". Skip was the older of my two brothers and dad's favorite. Dad's been gone 19 years, Mom a bit more than a year and a half and Skip 2 years.
Now I'm 67 years old and figuring out what to do with the time I have left. It would be nice to not keep thinking about the past.
Your story has broken my heart in a million pieces. I am so sorry for what you and your wife have had to endure all of these years. Mother, my sisters and I dealt with a very similar situation with my one and only brother. He led a tragic life and experienced an even more tragic death. My beautiful baby brother is now resting in peace.Oh, I hardly ever bottle things up.
I just don't care to bore anyone, especially when it's been posted more than once.
But, here 'tis;
I just watched the movie 'Shine' last night
.....reminded me of my eldest son
was hard to hold emotion thru some parts
was much harder for my Lady
but we remained
riveted
My son
Excelled in academics
Skipped grades
Won awards
Became somewhat sought after
Mensa
Artistic things hung in municipal halls
Life for him was just too slow apace
Stayed up for days at a time
He’d regurgitate all his thoughts to his mother and I
It was a bit suffocating
Then one day he came to me in my shop
....and began crying, telling me he felt he was going crazy,
but unable to put his feelings into words
I hugged him
Told him all kids go thru puberty and change
‘this too shall pass’ kinda thing
The next years are a blur
I guess maybe I never have wished to dwell on the events in those years
I’ll try to piece some together on my own, as I know better than to ask my lady
He ended up in prison
At 19
Advancing from a minimum security facility to OSP
And on to ‘thunderdome’
Where nobody wants to go
Tried to arrange visits
Rejected countless times
Talked to OSP counselors
‘forget your son, concentrate on your other children’
We got a call
OSP does not call anyone
‘You need to see your son’
The visiting area was like a staging zone for zoo critters
Steel tables, benches, cemented in
Chain link walls and doors
He was led in by guards
Shackled head to toe
Made to sit
Unseeing eyes
No recognition
Indistinguishable utterances
He stunk to high heaven
Never looked our way
On the way home I had to pull over, off the freeway
I don’t remember the last time I cried
Maybe as a small child...
But
Never wept like that in my life
And have yet too since
Bitter
Helpless
Godless
Utter hopelessness
A week (?) later we got another call
He was being transferred to the psych ward across the street
Where ‘One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest’ was filmed
We were told he had quit eating entirely
Weighed 90 lbs
A guard carried him across the street in his arms
We were led to the visiting area
Typical booth like situation for visitors
Only, the other side of the glass was something from a zombie movie
We got to watch him attempt to drink milk and cry
My lady had a very hard time
I went alone
Weeks of visiting later, he was released
Just like that
After 7 years of maximum security
to us
I do not do well when cleaning up men with uncontrolled body functions
Triage
Nut bins
Meds
It’s all a blur
Somewhere in there, when he was still cognizant, I did a bit of a fraught thing…
We talked about his options
He wanted to go camping
So
Him and I packed his meager belongings
Bought him some basic camp stuff
Drove him to the Trask river area
And dropped him off
while it began to rain
Ever do something that gave you immediate relief, knowing the end result would probably not be optimal?
The sack of cats Dad would have me toss out the window of a speeding Chevy may have had an influence
On the way back home, I tried not to think.
Still
Thoughts crept in
Maybe he’d just lie there curled in his sleeping bag
Inert
Oblivious
Until days later large birds of prey would dine on his remains
It’s all a blur
They found him 300 miles south
Incoherent
The Tillamook women’s mental health facility asked us to take him back 'he can't stay here'
More triage
Got him hooked up with a place called Luke-Dorf
General population nut bin for semi-functional goofballs
Then what they call the quad
Then paired up in a shared apartment
And now
On his own
On a budget
I figger the tax payer’s dollars for this are from this tax payer
During these times he’d ever so often not take his meds
Sometimes it was because they changed colors or shapes and he didn’t think they were right
Sometimes it was just because he thought he no longer needed them
Always ended with me going over there, reattaching his phone, and fishing his glasses outa the toilet.
He’s as functional now as you and me, first look.
As long as he takes his meds.
Sorry
This is jumbled time line mess
My lady can recite the events like they happened yesterday
7 or more years of them
I will not take her there
Have you pondered why you keep ruminating on the past? Our past is there to teach us lessons and not like a boulder we carry on our shoulders.Now I'm 67 years old and figuring out what to do with the time I have left. It would be nice to not keep thinking about the past.
Me too..a 3 day labourOne of the hardest things was give birth.
Heartbreaking...I looked after my bipolar mother for 60 years and dad despised me for doing what he wouldn't learn how to do. When his pancreatic cancer struck, I nursed him as well......mercifully for everyone his death came pretty quick. His last words to me were, "You're not good enough to shine Skip's shoes". Skip was the older of my two brothers and dad's favorite. Dad's been gone 19 years, Mom a bit more than a year and a half and Skip 2 years.
Now I'm 67 years old and figuring out what to do with the time I have left. It would be nice to not keep thinking about the past.
None of us, even those that lived/lives a sheltered life are spared from adversities, heartaches, difficulties, or whatever...Y'know, there's some horrific stories here
It may not be so good to dwell on them
Kinda hard to not if it's ongoing
Someone here posted 'one day at a time'
So true
But, you know what?
If you dwell on others, in a kind way
Your own troubles take a back seat
I've found this early on in life
One's own burdens tend to go away
Heh, I've even seen it right here in this thread...folks caring for others
You guys all rock
Guess that's why we're now so freaking old
We know how to get old
And how to enjoy life
No matter what comes
None of us, even those that lived/lives a sheltered life are spared from adversities, heartaches, difficulties, or whatever...
BUT
The fact we're here discussing this means we're all survivors. Ain't that great? Today, tell someone you love them and that love will come back to you
Ah, but they have you, dear HollyUnfortunately not my parents, or any of my siblings..we were raised without love, and ergo my siblings don't know how to give it
Now you made me cry....Ah, but they have you, dear Holly
...and so do we