My friend Marian said it best.
"I feel like when that boy went into the theater, he jerked me in there with him. Like I'm able to imagine it as my own child doing what I fear the most. And that is just plain flat screwed up. It is impossible for me to look at situations like this objectively."
He's a monster. A cold-blooded, heartless killer, dressed as a cartoon character, wielding weapons, wearing a gas mask, shooting indiscriminately. He's the stereotype of every schizophrenic in every movie and TV drama ever made. He is the projection of one of my greatest fears for my own child.
When I look at the mugshot of James Holmes, now splashed on every Internet news site, I don't see the shock of orangey-red hair, or the unshaven chin. I see bewilderment, confusion, and fear in his expressive eyes.
And I've seen those eyes before on my child, more times than I care to count, nearly always from behind the locked doors of a psychiatric ward.
Now, we don't yet know if James Holmes has a mental illness. We don't yet know if he was showing signs of slipping into insanity, if anyone tried to get him help, if he reached out to anyone (other than early reports that he may have sent some sort of manifesto to a psychiatrist).
I take twisted comfort in the fact that my child's mental illness manifested and was diagnosed in childhood. Unlike Arlene Holmes, who is now living the nightmare that could befall any parent of a child that slips into insanity as a legal adult, I had control. I could insist my child be treated, take his meds, go to therapy and residential treatment. I could shield him from the world when he perceived it as dangerous and felt the overwhelming desire to lash out violently. I could instill in him the importance of continuing his treatment for the rest of his life, making it habit before I lost my grip on his daily routine.
I pray the lessons will stick as he turns 18 this week and I legally lose that control. In the shadowy recesses of the story of Aurora, I can see myself as the mother of the monster. And I fall on my knees nightly and pray that in the shadowy recesses is where that possibility will stay.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Friday, July 6, 2012
Yeah, Not So Much
Suicide Bridge by K(ittenhotep)
So, the transition to the new school is not going as smoothly as I'd hoped.
He had about two good weeks, then the agitation began, fueled by teenage housemates who have figured out that pushing his buttons is excessively easy.
He had a particularly bad day last week - we know it was bad because he called, his teacher called, and his case worker called - but we didn't realize how bad until we got the incident report in the mail last night.
"Client had an altercation with his roommate. The roommate was asked to leave the room, and staff asked Tim to take calming breaths. Tim yelled that he wanted to kill himself and put a plastic bag over his head. Tim struggled when staff removed the bag from his head. Tim again expressed the desire to die."
Great.
He's been home for four days this week, and in a very good mood, doing really well. But he goes back to RTC today, and we leave for vacation - the first without him since his birth - tomorrow. I'm a little paranoid. Today I bought the International calling package for my cell phone so we can call him a few times while we're gone. Remind me to remind Wonderboy to call his brother too, every few days. I was feeling carefree about this vacation. Now? Not so much.
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