Ben Behind His Voices Blog
One Family’s Journey from the Chaos of Schizophrenia to Hope
NEW!– the Ben Behind His Voices audiobook has been updated with a new intro, epilogue, and bonus material! – available only in audiobook form. (updated 2022)
Hear all of the original award-nominated memoir, and find out what has happened in the decade since. We continue our journey through crisis, help, and into hope.
Difficult: Mothering Challenging Adult Children through Conflict and Change, Book Review
Author Judith R. Smith had me at the first glance of the callout quotes:
"You can divorce a difficult spouse. It's much harder to give up on a difficult child."
and
"When a child is diagnosed with serious mental illness, they do not die - but they are changed."
How do we continue mothering, when our children are long past the age when we thought we'd be graduating from the phase of hands-on support? What do we do, what do we feel, what do we fear when our stepping aside could spark poverty, homelessness, even violence for our children?
In this thorough, empathetic account of this important previously-swept-aside issue, Judith R. Smith combines eight years of research and grimly honest stories from mothers of children who have SMI (serious mental illness), addiction, and other issues we never expected to face in our kids.
We learn about the problems presented by not only our own family challenges, but also cultural expectations about motherhood and system failures of support. We feel less alone when hearing the stories and reading the facts. Then, Smith takes us through steps including attitude change, getting support, practicing self-care, and ways to stay safe and possibly even help our grown, difficult, children.
There has never been a book like this. If you're a mother still inside the journey no one wants to speak about, get this book. You'll be glad you did.
Available February 2022, Rowman and Littlefield
The Extra Innings Movie - and Podcast
A few years ago, I had the honor of speaking at an event to increase mental illness and suicide awareness, and to built support for an independent film called "Extra Innings." -described this way on imdb: "Set against the enchanting backdrop of 1960's Brooklyn, Extra Innings tell the story of a young man who is caught between pursuing his dream (baseball) and staying devoted to his Syrian Jewish family that is afflicted with mental illness."
I have stayed in touch with the creator of the film, and last night was honored to be a guest on his podcast. We talked about schizophrenia, family, stigma, support, and so much more.
Listen to the Full Episode: talkradio.nyc/shows/extra-innings
You can see or hear the podcast here:
or here.
Meanwhile, about the movie:
It did get produced and released - and was winning awards all over the place and set to go to movie theatres...and then Covid hit. We all know all about that. But - the good news is that you can now see it on Amazon Prime. Don't miss it!
As for the podcast, here's what Albert had to say:
“The love is pure, but the rest is difficult. I wrote it for families to not feel so alone.” Randye Kaye on what motivated her to write her book chronicling the journey of the development of her son’s mental illness.
Check out this exclusive clip of Extra Innings: Covering All the Bases! This week’s guest was actress and author, Randye Kaye.
Randye Kaye makes her living as an actress. In 2011, she published her memoir Ben Behind His Voices: One Family’s Journey from the Chaos of Schizophrenia to Hope, based on her own experience understanding and living with her oldest child’s schizophrenia. She hosts two podcasts: The Life Talk Show and Schizphrenia: Three Moms in the Trenches.
Find More about Randye Kaye
Website: randyekaye.com
Albert Dabah is a certified life coach and therapist who began his career as a social worker. He founded his video production company, Simba Productions, in 1979, and recently directed and wrote his first feature film, Extra Innings, which is based on his own life.
Life Coaching: adabahcoaching.com
#ExtraInningsMovie is available to stream on Amazon Prime, and on demand at Google Play, Fandango, Apple TV, Vudu, and DVD through our website at extrainningsmovie.com
Watch the trailer! bgpics.com/movies/extra-innings/
Watch Extra Innings: bgpics.com/movies/extra-innings/
Breakdown: The Right Title for a Much-Needed Book
I've often wondered what treating patients with SMI (Serious Mental Illness) is like for medical professionals. I want to know, too, what the intake process is like for clinicians, and whether they feel as frustrated with the system as we family members do. This book answers these questions, and more.
Through it all, author Lynn Nanos, L.I.C.S.W., shows such concern, knowledge, and caring for people like my son Ben (who is diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia), that I kept wishing she were on the team treating and caring for Ben right now.
I had to sharpen my pencil several times, I underlined so many facts and observations.
Five Shocking Facts
Five things that either stuck with me or surprised me - and, after nine hospitalizations for my son Ben, I thought I knew it all...
Often the "easier-to-manage" psychiatric patients get admitted, instead of those who need the help the most, because they are cheaper and less difficult to manage. Those admitted include "malingerers" who just want to get off the street for "three hots and a cot" and can fake psychosis.
Connecticut (where I live) is one of only three states in the U.S. (along with Maryland and Massachusetts) that do not have laws allowing AOT (Assisted Outpatient Treatment), something that most definitely would benefit my son.
Yes, untreated schizophrenia can increase the incidence of violence. And often, when the voices tell a schizophrenia patient to harm someone, it's someone they know...and usually love.
Regarding RLC's (Recovery Learning Communities, often staffed by "peer specialists who endorse the possibility that signs of psychosis are normal"): " Researchers found no significant benefits...to help the seriously mentally ill population"- of which my son is one. I live in fear of those who would try to "teach" him to get off his meds. And yet the government allows antipsychiatry to infiltrate programs it runs. (Chapter 18)
Why do psychotic people not engage in treatment? Nanos lists 17 reasons, and "stigma" was not among them. She argues (backed up by research) that stigma is overrated as a reason to not seek treatment for the seriously mentally ill. She says not one patient has ever mentioned that as a barrier to seeking help.
Lynn Nanos knows her stuff, truly cares about her cases, and fights for what's right - while fearless in exposing the cracks in the system.Highly recommended reading.
"Fix What you Can": Apt Philosophy for Family Mental Health (and book review)
I highly recommend this memoir for anyone who wants to know more not only about the family experience with schizophrenia, but also why it can be such a long and difficult process to change the legal barriers to getting our loved ones the help they so desperately need (but think they don't).
Mindy Greiling and I have many things in common, though we've never met. The biggest shared experience: we both have sons with schizophrenia, and we haven't given up on them. As she says in the epilogue of her new book, we are "the best mothers we can be."
As any parent knows, good parenting is a shifting balance between stepping in and letting go. When mental illness and substance abuse enter the picture, that balance is ever more precarious. And "happy endings" are, often, only fleeting respites from trauma, until the next chapter begins.
Still, we love.
Still, we hope.
Still, we fight.
Mindy, for much of this memoir, is able to channel much of this fight into her work as Minnesota State Representative - a position she held for twenty years, advocating tirelessly for improvements to the mental health laws in that state. She's received more than eighty awards for her legislative and advocacy work. She has so much good reason to be proud.
But her son, Jim, still has schizophrenia. That, as we know all too well, sucks. And in this memoir she is raw, real, and informative about her family's journey, and also her work to enact changes in the system.
I highly recommend this memoir for anyone who wants to know more not only about the family experience with schizophrenia, but also why it can be such a long and difficult process to change the legal barriers to getting our loved ones the help they so desperately need (but think they don't).
When I wrote Ben Behind His Voices almost ten (!!) years ago, there were very few memoirs about the family experience with schizophrenia- and even few that offered any hope or action steps. Since then, I've seen (and read) quite a few - and this one stands out for its honesty, its perspective (Mindy is the granddaughter of, as well as mother of, someone with schizophrenia), and its knowledge about advocacy and the way things work in the world of state legislation.
Mindy Greiling is a fine writer - you'll keep turning the pages. You'll feel less alone, if you share this issue. And you'll get a really accurate ride on the roller coaster of family experience with "recovery" - what happens after someone with severe mental illness is treated and released? I know this ride all too well - am on it right now, as my son Ben is nearing the end of a three-month hospitalization after nine years of relative success.
Highly recommended.
Partnering with Researchers for Brain Awareness Week 2018
"This Brain Awareness Week, we share Randye Kaye’s story – she is a mother of a son affected by schizophrenia. In her search for understanding and raising awareness of mental illness, Randye spoke with Dr Michael Sand, a Medic and Senior Clinical Program Leader CNS at Boehringer Ingelheim to discuss what is important for future brain research. They also shared insights into how they are personally connected to mental illness."
You can view the story here!
Another Mom's Story of Schizophrenia in Her Son - and Suicide
Book Review: Losing Aaron
I keep thinking of the line in a Phil Ochs (google him:) ) song:
There but for fortune go you or I...
This book is a painful reminder of how fortunate we are to have gotten some extra time with Ben - and of how schizophrenia can happen to any family - rich, poor, educated or not, you name the adjectives. Schizophrenia does not discriminate.
Every family member with courage to share their story about mental illness in a loved one opens the door of understanding just a bit more - and that can help reduce stigma and spark action to help those with mental illness and their families. The author begins with the fact of Aaron's suicide, so we know where this is headed and yet we still root for Aaron - and his Mom, Dad, sister and stepdad - to get the support, education, and understanding needed to change the outcome we know is inevitable.
Alas, that doesn't happen - but Ingrid Blaufarb Hughes opens her heart to us as we share in her confusion, frustration and helplessness in the face of a devastating illness that seems to steal the soul of someone you love.
The pearl in the oyster here is the love the family has for Aaron, and how they do their best to support him in the only ways they know how, even though he consistently refuses the medication that might have changed his life.
I know that love well, as it is what keeps our family going too - and we know we are fortunate that my son Ben follows the "house rules" of taking his medication each day, under our supervision. Any day he could choose not to (as he, like Aaron, doesn't think he needs it) - and we have seen too many times where that would lead us: straight to the hospital, and down the chute to square one again. This book renewed my gratitude for the extra days we have gotten with Ben - days that this author's family was denied. Her pain and love, and her struggle to also live her own life as writer, wife and mother - are honestly told.
It also reminds us of the importance of education, support and acceptance - the earlier the better. Could Aaron have been saved? I don't know. But I know I am so grateful (thank you, NAMI Family-to-Family) for education I got into Ben's illness, which equipped our family to do more to help. It doesn't always "work", but education increases the odds of success.
One Reader Speaks: Siblings, Schizophrenia, Support, Strength
Sometimes I open an e-mail from a reader that not only touches me, but teaches me...and these words, from the sibling of a man with schizophrenia, are in my heart forever. The author has granted permission to reprint his words here, for which I am so grateful - and hope you will feel the same way. I have changed the first names, and added some links, but otherwise this is, verbatim, what has re-inspired me today to continue to seek, and see, the strength courage and beauty in my son Ben. Thank you.
Dear Randye,
I am writing to thank you for your strong and beautiful book Ben Behind His Voices. I did not want to read it. I borrowed it from a friend almost two years ago and have been walking past it since then. And I can’t exactly say it was light reading once I cracked it open. Ben’s story is so much like my brother John’s. But, with John now 54 and myself 58, it was high time to rewalk the path and get some new perspective. I simply cannot thank you enough for your clear and detailed depiction of your family’s journey.You do an especially fine job of explaining that tension between trying to help and trying to let be. Also, you truly help readers understand that realization that for a person with schizophrenia, life dreams and plans will need to undergo revision. As Robert Frost’s poem “The Ovenbird” reminds us, the question that needs continually to be asked, about all our lives, is, “What to make of a diminished thing?” One could view the question as pessimistic, but to ask it honestly is actually an exercise in wisdom and courage.
Even though John cannot “compete” for standard definitions of success, he puts most of us to shame in a few specific areas. One is courage. A few Aprils ago I remarked to him on the phone what a gorgeous spring day it had been. He said yes, that he had been out too. He said that he had forced himself to let the bus home go on without him so he could sit out on a bench until the next bus came. “It was hard,” he said, “but I did it.” It was hard? To sit on a bench for 30 minutes on a beautiful spring day? It’s a reminder that, for John, facing the world most days takes the courage of a first responder running into a burning building. But as you so clearly point out, his heroism is not the type to garner honor, gratitude, or even acceptance.
Yet I could speak of HIS acceptance of others, his sensitivity to those who are suffering, his spontaneous generosity.
We talk on the phone a couple times a week. He lives about 90 minutes from me. Yesterday we spoke for about 20 minutes. With your words so fresh in my mind, I was somehow able to enjoy the conversation more deeply. It was one of those moments you talk about that should be cherished for the simple pleasure that it is. Your book did that for me.
I am saying a prayer for Ben.
I love hearing from you, dear readers. Thank you for your e-mails, your comments, and your advocacy - RK
Mental Health Awareness Month, for Caregivers too
Will write more about this later , as I am in Buffalo, NY, getting ready to provide keynote to help NAMI Buffalo/Erie county celebrate its 30th year...but wanted to share one of the interviews about the results of a new survey showing that caregivers of those with schizophrenia do better with more support, more resources, and less stigma. Thanks!
Update: Two More Years into Schizophrenia Journey
Yesterday I was alone with Ben all day. Huge snowstorm, hubby away in California, daughter and her husband in their own apartment, driveway covered with a foot of snow. Ten years ago this would have been a recipe for all sorts of disaster: frustration, loneliness, trepidation. Instead, thanks to treatment which includes medication as well as the other cornerstones of recovery (community, purpose, structure), I was actually glad to have Ben's company. Here is what happened:
Ben helped me shovel the driveway - I mean really helped, as in he did 75% of the work.
Ben cooked us a delicious homemade pizza for dinner.
We watched an animated movie - well, parts of it - during the required "watchful time" after he takes his meds.
Any parent of someone with schizophrenia will tell you that this is a day to be grateful for - and I am, believe me. No, life isn't perfect, and I still wish for the magic wand (or, more to the point, better research and treatment options), but still I know a good day when we see one.
I'm also thrilled that the book still reaches people, two+ years after publication. Although there have been a few changes in our situation since then (two more relapses, a disastrous foray into "independent living" for Ben resulting in our current living situation where he is at home with us, -with a roommate to boot-, and both a part-time job and more college credits earned), the story of our "journey from chaos to hope" remains relevant- at least according to the readers who have written to me. I am so grateful for the feedback, and the chance to share that continues with each reader (or listener to the audiobook).
Truly honored and grateful...all of a sudden, three new 5-star reviews for Ben Behind his Voices:
1 -"I will probably be listening to the CD over and over again for many years. Gives me comfort and courage to deal with my family member. Thank you so much Randye"
2 -"As a person with schizophrenia, I have never seen the journey through mental illness from the viewpoint of a parent. This book made me think, laugh, cry, and many other emotions. I related in many ways to Ben and saw my own mother in Randye. More people, in varying situations, need to read this eye-opening book."
3- "I am so grateful to the author who shares her story to educate and to enlighten those of us who are taking our first steps out of the chaos"
also came across this one, though it was in the form of a comment on another blog, and I can't find the author's page...(ah, Google Alerts)...
"Ben Behind His Voices is surely an inspirational tale a few family’s encounter with schizophrenia. The main target of Randye Kaye’s book is on her son Ben, who struggled for lots of years with psychological well being and compound abuse matters until finally he was as a final point the right way identified with paranoid schizophrenia. Kaye leads her visitors with the family’s very difficult activities using this ailment and their journey toward restoration and acceptance. This book may be a good source for people with schizophrenia and their families. In addition, it serves as the formidable reminder to psychological well being experts to treat men and women influenced with all the ailment with dignity and compassion."
You have truly made my day, readers. THANKS!
"Making Money Off My Son's Illness"? A response
This post started out quite differently.
I write another blog called Mental Illness in the Family, which appears on HealthyPlace.com, and though I usually keep these blogs separate from each other, I often wonder why.
Today's post on Healthy Place has to do with a topic I often - sadly - must revisit: relapse, or the return of symptoms. in it, I write:
I hate schizophrenia because it prevents Ben from moving ahead with his life. It gets in the way of every job he applies for, every friend he tries to make, every dream he has had so far of having a girlfriend, getting married, being a Dad. It forces him to be dependent on medication that he does not believe he needs. It puts him in a position that he knows is a drain on the family. Schizophrenia steals – even when treated to the best of current medicine’s abilities.
Schizophrenia has stolen joy from his eyes, clarity from his mind, possibilities from his future, depth from his
relationships, money from his wallet. He wishes for a car of his own, a job above minimum wage, a life that includes progress – but he seldom complains. His old high school buddy is now the dentist that fills his cavities. His little sister has accomplishments he may never see. Yet he is one of the nicest people you’ll ever meet.
Today, though, it may be hard to be around him. Today, Ben may spend his day sitting at the local Starbucks, the “weird kid always singing to the music in his headphones” sitting in the corner with one cup of coffee for hours (though he does tip well). I hate this. I hate the ticking time bomb, always in danger of being re-set, that is schizophrenia.
In placing links inside this post, I found I had a new review for the book on Amazon. Unfortunately (though I know that, despite mostly 5-star reviews, you can't please everyone) this reader wasn't too happy.
"WAS DISAPPOINTED WITH AUTHOR'S STORYI HAVE SUCH A SON ALSO...WITH MENATL ILLNESS.AFTER I READ THAT SHE WAS A CELEBRITY ... AND HALF OF THE BOOK IS TAKEN FROM THE NAMI SITEWHICH I ALREADY BELONG TO - SEEMED LIKE I ALREADY KNOW ALL THIS .. SHE IS JUST MAKING MONEY OFFOF HER SON'S ILLNESS."
Now, a big part of me knows not to even respond to a review like this. I also expect that the reader wished I had more answers for her, and that she is as frustrated with schizophrenia as we are.
But I feel I need to say four things in response:
I never claimed to have all the answers. I wish I did have them, believe me.
NAMI is clearly cited as the source for much of my information. Still, to my surprise, many families and professionals that I meet still have never heard of NAMI. So one of my goals for the book was to increase awareness of it. I'm glad you've already found that resource.
"Celebrity"? Wow. Simultaneously flattered - and puzzled. Does being in the public eye (to a rather small extent, in my eyes, otherwise I surely would have been invited to appear on Oprah...) mean that my son's suffering is any less real? Or my family's journey?
"Just making money off her son's illness"? To that I must say: Ha! Ha to that as my motivation, and Ha to that as an income source. I wrote this to increase awareness, refute stigma, inspire change, spark empathy, and to help other families not feel alone. I wrote it for Ben's courage, and his right to receive better treatment, a chance at a future, and the understanding of others.
Still, I do thank you for the three stars, and I wish you hope, support and love in your family's journey. I wish my book had been able to give you what you needed from it. Since we are in the same boat, dear reader, I know your road isn't easy.
Loving through mental illness: "It's like he disappears..."
Sometimes we say things, and they stick. Ever have someone repeat back to you something you said which touched them, even changed them, and you had no idea you'd said it? That's how interviews are sometimes.
Two years after Ben Behind His Voices was published, I still get the chance to spread the message of our story, and for that I am grateful. I feel like the book's journey has just begun, and though I plan an updated version sometime in the next year to include the latest developments, many tell me that the story is timeless to them, as it reflects where their family is right now in the mental illness journey - or where they hope to be. Others simply like its message of resilience, strength, and hope - regardless of the cause of the challenge.
Tomorrow night I look forward to a book-reading and Q/A at Plainville Public Library in CT.
Here is Lisa Capobianco's story about it in the Plainville Observer, including the quotes I'd forgotten I'd said - to which I added my own italics...
Author to share story of coping with son’s mental illness
November 8, 2013
By LISA CAPOBIANCO
STAFF WRITER
When national voice talent and actress Randye Kaye noticed her 15-year-old son Ben experiencing mood swings, frustration, and isolation, she thought he was going through a phase as a teenager. But as Ben transitioned into early adulthood, his symptoms worsened, and little did Kaye know that he was exhibiting symptoms of gradual on-set schizophrenia.“
This was beyond what I expected,” said Kaye, a former host of a morning radio talk show in Connecticut. “I did not know anything about it—I really had to learn and explore.”Schizophrenia affects 2.4 million American adults age 18 and older, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness. NAMI reports that schizophrenia, marked by changes in brain chemistry and structure, may inhibit an individual’s ability to think clearly, to make decisions, and to manage emotions. Individuals with schizophrenia may also exhibit hallucinations as well as delusions, and may have a difficult time performing complex memory tasks.
For Ben, he began experiencing delusions at age 17 when he decided to drop out of high school without a realistic plan, and started smoking marijuana. Struggling to find help for Ben as doctors misdiagnosed her son’s illness, several years passed before finding the right medication. Ben was diagnosed with schizophrenia at the age of 20.
“I learned to have empathy for my son and how I could help him", said Kaye, who also serves as a teacher and advocate of NAMI. “When you lose a child to mental illness, it is like he disappears.”
From the time, Ben developed symptoms of gradual onset schizophrenia to the time he received treatment, Kaye said she struggled to support her family as a single parent with several jobs. When she quit her job as a radio station host, Kaye had time to reflect on her family’s experience, and decided to write an account of Ben’s battle with schizophrenia in her own book called, “Behind Ben’s Voices: One Family’s Journey from the Chaos of Schizophrenia to Hope.” In her novel, Kaye said she provides a better understanding of mental illness and the people who struggle with it.Kaye will share her story with residents at Plainville Public Library, 56 East Main St., on Tuesday, Nov. 12, at 7 p.m., reading passages and answering questions. Through her story, Kaye said she hopes readers will gain a greater understanding of mental illness, and how to gain acceptance, resilience, and strength.Kaye also said she hopes not only to spread awareness, but also to break the silence among other families who may be struggling with a mental illness so they may become a sense of comfort for each other.“We need to understand that we are not alone—there is hope,” Kaye said.Kaye said her son, now 31 years of age, has developed stability in his life. Although he continues to take medication, Ben now takes college courses and holds a part-time job while starting a social life.“Parenting comes with adjusting your hopes and dreams,” Kaye said. “If your child develops a mental illness, you have to switch gears and still see what is good.”Kaye’s book will be available for purchase during the event, and is also available online at www.benbehindhisvoices.com.
Radio Interview: "We All Got Issues" Show
What's going on now? Why doesn't Ben "accept" his illness? What tips help families like ours to cope? Latest interview aired today, September 23, 2013:
What is life like with a family member who has schizophrenia? During this episode of the "We All Got Issues" show - schizophrenia is the ISSUE. Dr. Glenda interviews Randye Kaye, the mother of a son with schizophrenia. Randye is also the author of "Ben Behind His Voices: One Family's Journey from the Chaos of Schizophrenia to Hope".
Here is the show - starting with the song "The Climb" setting the tone. Dr. Glenda Clare is an empathetic, knowledgeable interviewer.
New Caregiving Internet Radio with WeAllGotIssues on BlogTalkRadio
North Shore Schizophrenia Society's Review
Thanks to North Shore Schizophrenia, for their review!
The story of Randye Kaye’s son’s descent into psychosis and the long road to recovery reads like a diary, complete with dialogue, commentary, and an account of her own emotions as each incident and turn of events unfolds. You would think the attention to detail would weigh down the reader, but it has the opposite effect. It carries the reader along.
If you’re someone who has watched a member of your family fall ill, it will also bring you to tears – not tears of sadness but, if there are such things, tears of delight at how she got things so right. There’s a fair chance that in reading BenBehind His Voices, which is told by Kaye in the first person, you will be readingyour own story as well.
Her son Ben, a bright, energetic and creative kid, began to show signs ofdifficulty in his mid-teens, when he first went to high school. He started to withdraw. A previous straight-Astudent, he struggled with academic subjects. He declared to his mother that all the other students wereagainst him. He wouldn't take advice.
When he was just fifteen, he broke down one night in sobs after a big argument with his mother. “What’swrong with me, Mom? Please, please, find me someone to talk to.”We, the reader, know what’s happening, but we only know because we’ve been there. Kaye hadn’t. She didfind him someone to talk to – all kinds of people as the illness progressed. She was highly skilled, able toanalyze, had good connections, also had a good income (she was a major radio show personality), and waswilling to go to any length to help him, but still she was confounded by what was happening. The chaos wasjust beginning.
School teachers and counsellors, leaders at alternate programs, and a long list of psychiatrists failed to puttheir finger on what was wrong. In the meantime, his behaviour became more erratic and bizarre. “Newnormal” was replaced by another “new normal” seemingly without end.
Finally there was a turning point. She got the right diagnosis and Ben’s recovery got underway. As the bookends, he’s (responding to medication), and is still fragile and lacking insight, but he’s getting back on hisfeet. Kaye herself, among many other things, is training Family-to-Family teachers in her home state of Connecticut.
"Silver Linings Playbook" and Meds: Why the Secrecy?
At the end of the movie Silver Linings Playbook, when main character Pat Peoples is about to embark on the next, happier, more stable part of his life, I think he says something to his ex-wife about doing much better because he is focused, determined, physically fit - and (shhh!)taking his meds.
I think he says this because it's muttered almost under his breath - like it's a big secret we don't need the audience to know. As if he could do it all by himself without those nasty "drugs".
Really? Most of the one-out-of-four families who deal with mental illness will say that, while all those other elements of recovery are also essential (love, purpose, helping others, exercise, structure) , they could be entirely useless without the medications that stabilize the brain. Albeit not perfectly.
Does Pat Peoples Take Meds in Silver Linings Playbook ?
One quote from the book:
"...a woman who knows all my secrets, a woman who knows just how messed up my mind is, how many pills I'm on, and yet she allows me to hold her anyway",
suggests that Pat did, after initial resistance (which we see in the film), take his medications (which we might see in the film, but it's left unclear).
How nice it would be if people like my son Ben, diagnosed with schizophrenia, could see a movie hero who learns to accept that his meds do help, openly swallow them in the movie, and acknowledge that they have been part of his recovery.
Thank You, Pharma Companies and Reps
In the past year, I've had the honor several times of addressing pharmaceutical reps to tell them how much their work matters. These reps have, well, a bum rap. The face stigma of their own, portrayed as money-hungry, aggressive, pill-pushers. I speak to them in my keynote asauthor and Mom, tell our story, and remind them that that without new developments in medication - which it is their job to make available - my son might not be where he is in life.
One comment from a recent attendee:
"Your story inspired our entire sales force to continue working hard to 'bring value to life' for patients and caregivers alike. I can’t begin to tell you how moved other members of the company from other sales divisions were to hear your story—it really helped put a face on schizophrenia and the many challenges and hurdles faced by all concerned."
So - if you research, develop, work for access, make available, or otherwise help to bring new meds to people like my son - thank you. Keep at it, because many of these meds could certainly be improved. But you give our family hope.
Even if my son still feels he needs to hide the fact that medication is part of his recovery. Even if he wants to think all the success is due to his own willpower and drive.
Recovery Needs Many Things - Internal and External
I am a big fan of drive, exercise, community, purpose, and a positive attitude. But, where mental illness is concerned, those qualities are usually not enough - not without meds, especially in people as young as my son.
Maybe, someday, there will be a popular movie that, loud and proud, gives medical treatment some credit too.
(Still - I loved the movie.)
Conversation Crossroad Interview
Here is the latest radio conversation about mental health, family support, the tragic (and possibly preventable) Newtown shootings, and more. So many issues.
Listen to internet radio with conxroad on Blog Talk Radio
The Mental Illness Family Experience:More Reader Stories
Letters, we get letters....and each time it reinforces the fact that mental illness affects the whole family - and that many - too many - families are left to guess at proper treatment and cope alone, especially if their family member is a "legal adult."
at a recent NAMI conference, I spoke about the truth that underneath every "patient" is a valued person: (this link goes to a short youtube excerpt)
The Courage and Love of Families Dealing with Mental Illness
from a couple in Massachusetts:
I just finished reading your book and I say thank you. Our family has been on this journey for 12 years with our daughter. My wife and I read your story, cried, wiped tears and started again, shared in your triumphs and your challenges, laughed, recalled frantic moments, and on. We are members of NAMI, the F2F course many years ago saved us from bottoming out. We still fight every day for society to support this brain illness. I will hold onto your visions of Pride, Hope, and eternal love for your family. Thank you for speaking out and sharing your family with us.
from Laura in California:
First I would like to thank you for writing this awesome book. I have bought a few copies and am having extended family read it to help understand what our family is going thru. I am writing you because our son who is now almost 24 is diagnosed with schizophrenia...the real problem is at this age we want him to live independently from us. I am worried if anything were to happen to us he would be lost...Thank you so much again for writing this very important book.
from another Mom:
My husband and I both read your book Ben Behind his voices in four days we couldn't put it down you were telling my story with my son.I have both my sons mentally ill.
I have so many question I want to do what you did and help them get their lives back.
My older son unfortunately became violent I called the police one time ... he spent 4 months in jail/ Psychiatry, then he became homeless because he wouldn't go by the house rules and seeing a psychiatrist - let alone taking meds.
Both my sons had a breakdown in their sophomore year in college.
I would like to get my son off the street and get him help.Please help. I am also a member of NAMI.Thank you for the book you are a wonderful mother.
As you can see, the story in Ben Behind His Voices is not unique. Families are to often left to cope alone, and I am thrilled that we are, at least, beginning to reach out to each other. I'm honored our book is a part of that, but without you, wonderful reader, the story will only go so far. Thank you for commenting, connecting, sharing, recommending. I can't help but think that, even though the "newtown shooter" has not yet been proven to have had a mental illness, the situation would have very very different if his family had had education and support.
The Parents Network: Eyes, Ears, Heart and Soul
Yesterday I had the pleasure of swapping stories, issues and tips with Susan Schofield, Host of Bipolar Nation on LA Talk Radio, and her husband Michael, author of January First: A Child's Descent into Madness, and Her Father's Struggle to Save Her. (reviewed in my last post)
Sure,we were talking author-to-author, host-to-guest, but mostly we were talking parent-to-parent.
Here is the episode of the show where you can download or hear our conversation.
We need each other. I can't tell you how inspired, informed, and encouraged I have been by the hundreds of families I have met and shared with in the years since Ben's first symptoms. Some of these encounters have been at NAMI Meetings and Classes, some by e-mail, in media or live appearances, others in the pages of books.
Without you all, I don't know how we would have survived. Thank you - for the courage to speak up, the willingness to ask questions and fight, the empathy to reach out.
This is what I hope to give back to you in the pages of Ben Behind His Voices, and in meeting you too.
Together we can make a difference. My favorite cliche - because, like many cliches, it is true.
January First Review: Yes, Childhood Schizophrenia is Real
January First: A Child's Descent into Madness and Her Father's Struggle to Save Her
by Michael Schofield
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
It's such a mirror reflection of the emotions I went through as the mother of a son with schizophrenia - only my child was in his mid-teens when symptoms began. Jani was only - well, in hindsight for this loving, confused family, she was a newborn when her "differences" became apparent.
But, like our family, the Schofields thought, and hoped, that love - and disciplined, creative parenting - might just "fix" the problem. Not the case if your child has schizophrenia, trust me - and not easy to accept for either parent.
This is a highly readable, honest, raw memoir of the grasping at the straws of hope that we go through to find our how we can help our children. And, eventually, that we can't do it alone. Then, we have to find the right people to fill out the team. This, as you'll read, is a long journey.
Many had thought "childhood-onset schizophrenia" was not a real thing. It is. Oh, it is. And this family, like ours, has worked tirelessly to get through the maze, guided by love and hope.
Bravo!
Randye Kaye, author "Ben Behind His Voices"View all my reviews
What Else is New?: Research, Reviews, Presentations
Quick Updates: (1,2,3...)
1. Ben Behind His Voices Comes to New York City!
Venture House, Inc. sponsoring this awareness raiser - hope to see you there!
On September 20th, 6 PM (reception) 6:30 PM (Book Reading and Discussion) -
Zucker Hillside Hospital - 266th St. and 76th AveG
len Oaks, NY 11104
reserve your (free) seat at events@venturehouse.org
(Venture House is a clubhouse programlocated in Jamaica, New York City that provides services to adults with mental illnesses)
2. 4HealingHearts Radio show - Conversation about Mental Health, Hope, Info, and Empathy - 8/3/12
have a listen here! or here's the link to download it
Listen to internet radio with 4healinghearts on Blog Talk Radio
3. More BBHV Reader Reviews: Thanks!
Thanks to the BBHV Readers on Goodreads for rating and reviews, including these:Kathy says: What an amazing book! Very informative, but above all, the love the author has for her son, Ben, shines through - even when Ben is feeling his worst... I highly recommend this book to anyone, if only to learn more about mental illness & how it changes the life of the person who has it & the lives of his family & friends.
Leslie: "Wow. So humane. So moving. This is going to be the first book I recommend to therapy patients and families dealing with schizophrenia. "
btw, Goodreads is a terrific site for those of us who love to read. Check it out!
Resilience: Bouncing Back...Bolder
One of the letters in "SEARCH" - the acronym I created and present re what families need when mental illness strikes (or, really, we all need for most challenges) stands for:
R = Resilience
I wrote about resilience in an article about happiness called Bouncing Back Bolder -because the way we deal with setbacks can strengthen us. We all have them, of course - but sometimes the road when dealing with mental illness seems particularly full of detours and pitfalls.
So when I was asked to be a guest on Angel Tyree's radio show, Bouncing Back to Your Brilliance, I figured it was karma! Angel was a terrific, well-informed and empathetic host. You can hear the half-hour show here.
Here is an excerpt from the article, too:
Confession: I don’t really like lemonade all that much. And, I also think that lemons have their place in this world without being sweetened and liquefied: to balance the strong flavor of swordfish, add tang to a glass of water, keep apples from turning brown.
This much, though, I know is true: if life hands you lemons, and you choose to make lemonade, you have the supply the sugar yourself.