An Inmate's Mom: More Powerless Than Ever
Well, here’s a new brick to add to the wall separating me from parents of “normal” children. I am now the mother of an inmate.
Ben has been arrested, and is in jail (not prison, I’ve learned the difference) awaiting his court date.
His crime? He’s accused of trying to snatch a purse (unsuccessfully, but it still counts as larceny). He swears he didn’t do it. It is the victim’s word against his. But my child - my man-child - looks like a thief these days. Though he has been living in a group home, he looks homeless. He won’t let a dentist fix his teeth. He has lost weight and his clothes are shabby because he wears them for days on end. Even his bicycle (which we just paid $500 to have repaired, good as new) looks homeless: the tire off the rim, the paint scuffed.
My son’s appearance itself is a liability when it comes to trust.
Did he do it? I hate to say this, but it is possible. Ben’s life, so filled pre-Covid with work and purpose (yes, even after diagnosis of schizophrenia, but on a different medication), has recently become scattered, desperate and empty. Covid had closed the restaurant business where he had worked for years as a popular server. That was when he lost everything that had given his life meaning.
Back in the hospital for nearly six months. Back on (different) meds after I’d called a hearing for a court order to medicate. Discharged to a group home.
Still. Ben had tried to make a life again. He had valiantly landed a retail job nearby. He’d d tried so hard to succeed at this. He’d walked 3.5 miles to get to work, always on time.
But his odd behaviors between injections of Haldol made him look distracted, even lazy. Of course he never disclosed his illness. He was eventually let go, and I think that’s what broke him. He lost hope after that loss.
Then: boredom, purposelessness, hopelessness. The perfect, awful storm for someone to turn to drugs for relief. What drugs? Can’t say, but we suspect more than marijuana, based on how quickly his money had been disappearing and poorly managed as of late.
Stupid schizophrenia.
The shock of his arrest has worn off for now, and as usual the best support is coming from those who have been there, the power of community. But there are now a lot of new things to learn - and the number one lesson is this:
You thought you had no say in your loved one’s care before? Try having a child in jail, awaiting a court date. He wears a standard uniform. You, parent and conservator, are also lumped into a category: inconsequential. You have zero power.
No one returns your calls. Not the public defender, not the jail “counselor”, not the Marshal's office. There is no way to find out if he is getting his meds, or where his backpack is. Your inmate child can call you, but you can’t call him. Can’t get a message to him. Can’t really help him, except to maybe pay for a lawyer other than the public defender.
So you learn, again, to let go of control, of influence - and even, a little bit, of hope.
The bar of what counts as the baseline of normal gets even lower.
Life with a child with schizophrenia. And now, clearly, addiction. And still worse now, one who has been arrested, fingerprinted, incarcerated.
Yet he is safe for now. And, oddly, doesn’t seem to hate it there in minimum security. He has more people to talk to, play cards and chess with, drink instant coffee with, than he has had in months. He has structure again. He has fewer choices - and is clean and sober.
The future? As always, I’m doing what I can, and letting go of what I must. The specificity of those choices is different now. The bar has indeed been lowered. But the stakes are higher than ever.
I hate schizophrenia - the great thief of lives that could have been. When will we fund research to find a cure, and improve the system that allows lives to get to this point?
The fight goes on.