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.
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.
Thank You, John Oliver. And I apologize.
Wow. John Oliver just summed up the problems with our mental health system in 11 minutes and 54 seconds - with plenty of room for punchlines as well. I know - seems like something that isn't humorous. But this segment provides more respect for mental health issues than so many others I've seen. Well-placed humor can do that.
Watch it here:
His opening statement, like all the facts in this comedy-in-truth piece, is correct:
"It seems there is nothing like a mass shooting to suddenly spark political interest in mental health."
Guilty as charged. My last post was, yes, sparked by yet another act of violence that I suspected would eventually point back to an unaddressed mental health problem in the shooter (and lack of support for his family). After receiving 2 comments which were too extreme to approve, I almost deleted the post today. It seems to have sparked stigma and judgment instead of the empathy and constructive outrage I had hoped to inspire. But I will let it remain in this thread, because while I myself may have jumped the gun on "judging" this shooter with expectations that attention should have been paid to his mental health way before a crisis, I also know that such judgment harms people like my son, who lives in fear that people will find out he has been diagnosed with schizophrenia. (for the record, his name and identifiable facts have been changed in the book and in my posts, with his permission to tell the story that way)
So let's be reminded of the following facts, in Rolling Stone's coverage of the segment:
"The aftermath of a mass shooting might actually be the worst time to talk about mental health," he argues. "Because, for the record, the vast majority of mentally ill people are non-violent. And the vast majority of gun violence is committed by non-mentally ill people." The host cites a February 2015 report by the American Journal of Public Health, which states that "fewer than 5 percent of the 120,000 gun-related killings … were perpetrated by people diagnosed with mental illness."
Yes. Let's not stigmatize those with mental health issues every time a crime like this occurs. But also, yes. Let's pay attention to our broken system - and fix it. Segments like John's, factual as well as (weird but wonderfully true) entertaining, point the way.
Chris Harper Mercer: A Preventable Tragedy?
Another merciless, senseless shooting, this time in Oregon. Another troubled shooter with three names. As details of the life of Chris Harper Mercer emerge on news outlets, I expect, sooner or later, to find out what often is uncovered: undiagnosed and/or untreated mental illness symptoms. Duh. And a family left trying to "handle it" alone. Duh, again. Been there - am there. Except we got some education and support so we could try to help our son. We are among the very lucky families. At the moment.
As mother to a young man who has been diagnosed, and is (reluctantly but consistently) in treatment for a mental illness (schizophrenia), my heart goes out not only to victims and their families, but also to the family of this latest shooter. His father, Ian Mercer, of Tarzana, California, told KTLA on Thursday night: "I am just as shocked as anybody at what happened today".
Once again, the system closed its eyes to the need for support and left a family alone to cope.
Chris Harper Mercer was also, according to a NY Times article, close to his mother, with whom he lived. She reportedly had asked neighbors to help her get her apartment exterminated for roaches that bothered her son, who was "dealing with some mental issues." How else was she trying to help him? Or, like so many other stigmatized families with a "troubled" relative, did she just hope she could keep the situation quiet and keep things under control?
She obviously could not. Neither could Adam Lanza's mother, Nancy Lanza, in Newtown CT. Once your child is a legal adult, the very few rights you had as a guardian disappear completely. But the problem does not. And tragedy, as we have seen way too many times, can result. Though this kind of violence is NOT the norm for those with mental illness, it is the most publicized result of the neglect of our system toward the 1 in 4 families left to cope with mental illness alone.
When will we ever learn?
When will we pay attention to warning signs?
When will we open our eyes to the need for treatment, and put a system in place to help the families left to "figure it out" themselves?
We are one of those families. For the past four years, Ben has lived with us, because the system failed to realistically help him stay in treatment and rebuild his life. The minute he started to succeed, budget cuts took away services he supposedly "no longer needed." That is like stopping chemotherapy halfway through, with no follow-up.
We are Ben's family and we love him. So much so, that we're willing to let him "hate" us during the two most uncomfortable moments of the day: times to take medication that he does not believe he needs. We stay up late to supervise when he gets home from his job, often between 1 and 3 AM. There are nights when I can barely stay awake, and cannot relax until the meds are safely swallowed and absorbed.
But it's worth it. The stability of consistent treatment has helped Ben to rebuild his life. He has a job, friends, and a car and credit card in his name (!). He is starting to feel like he has a life he's proud of. But he hates those two times a day...and I have no doubt that, were we not there, he would stop treatment immediately. He has his reasons, one of which is he wants to take full credit for his "better decisions" lately. He does NOT want to hear that his good track record "seems to coincide" with times he takes his medications.
He melts down every so often, accuses us of controlling his life, of mistakenly labeling him "insane" (his word, never mine). He then says he wants to stop taking medication -with the best of intentions to keep succeeding, of course - but we have seen, eight times, what happens when treatment stops. It's not pretty. Hallucinations. Withdrawal. Resistance. Mania. Police. Ambulances. Sometimes handcuffs. Hospitals. Work, school, money, friends - all can be lost so quickly . So we let him hate us, twice a day.
Ben has never been violent - for that we are so grateful. He hates guns, and loves people. So, no, I don't fear he would become a shooter. But I do fear for his life, and his future. If we should stop managing his treatment (someday he might simply refuse, or we might be away, and - let's face it- parents do die eventually...) where would he go? How could he function? Would his "case management team" even have an idea what is going on? Would he get in his car and drive in a distracted state?
Every family dealing with mental illness lives on a tightrope, with an anvil suspended overhead ready to fall - because there IS NO SUPPORT.
We cannot close our eyes to the people who live with mental illness. We cannot sell them guns. We cannot deny them treatment - not just medical treatment, but services and support. We cannot play ostrich and "hope things get magically better."
According to a guest commentary, Treatment Advocacy Center, "The number of psychiatric beds in the US has been reduced in the last 50 years from about 650,000 to about 65,000—about equivalent to the number of mentally ill that wound up on the streets or in prison."
Or living with their frightened, hopeful, families. Attention must be paid.
Mental Illness Treatment Laws: Does Connecticut Lag Behind?
Weeks after the tragedy in Newtown, though facts are still to be confirmed about Adam Lanza's history, we struggle to understand how it might have been prevented - or, at least, how to help prevent it from happening again.
First, some facts: Court-ordered hospitalization for mental illness is authorized in every state, but each state’s criteria for involuntary treatment is different. Connecticut's report card? Not so great.
“Connecticut's civil commitment laws are among the most restrictive in the nation when it comes to getting help for a loved one in psychiatric crisis,” said Kristina Ragosta, senior legislative and policy counsel for the Treatment Advocacy Center, who serves as the organization’s expert on Connecticut. Ragosta said the law is restrictive in three ways that differentiate it from states with stronger laws.
1. An individual needs to be dangerous before intervention is possible. The standard requires that the individual be a danger to self or others or a danger due to grave disability before commitment is possible.
2. The law provides no option for qualifying individuals to receive court-ordered treatment in the community. This makes Connecticut one of only six states that does not provide the option of assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) as a condition of living in the community.
3. The state’s standard does not take into consideration an individual’s past psychiatric history, such as repeated hospitalizations, and/or symptoms of psychiatric deterioration that could culminate in violence or other consequences of non-treatment."
Here is my letter to the state's bipartisan task force
Dear Committee:
I am the mother of a beautiful son who suffers from schizophrenia. "Ben" is now 30 years old, and with treatment is both a student (Dean's List) and taxpayer (employed in season at a Connecticut tourist attraction, where he interacts beautifully and appropriately with the public).
Without treatment, or when services are cut, he is a patient instead- wandering aimlessly through the halls of a psychiatric hospital until he agrees to go back on his meds. This has happened three times since Ben began his recovery phase - and each time we face the fact that he may never return to us, as there is no mandated treatment, no assisted outpatient treatment, and we his family are left holding the bag and guessing how to help him.
We have struggled to get our adult loved one help and been thwarted by the restrictive mental health treatment laws in Connecticut.
We were fortunate to get educated and supported by NAMI-CT, but other families are not so informed, and eventually feel they have no choice but to give up - and their loved ones wind up homeless, in jail, in a nursing home, or - worst - threatening others and/or acting upon delusions that are very real to them, and may include violence.
While I understand that it is unclear what led to the events in Newtown, it is clear that our civil commitment laws are in need of reform. Nancy Lanza, I will venture to guess, was left with no help, no legal right to mandate help for her son - and ended up guessing how to bind with him. In her case, she must have chosen the only thing she knew from her own childhood: target practice.
Mental Health treatment could have made all the difference.
Too many families, like ours, are left feeling helpless and unsupported. Eventually, our family was able to make educated guesses about how to help our son, because of NAMI, memoirs, and other sources of information. But not all families know how to find this info, and even we sometimes guess wrong. Trust me, no family should have to do it alone. We wind up broke, scared, frustrated, and grieving for the loss of hopes, dreams, and someone we love.
Mental health services make all the difference, and these are woefully underfunded, confusing to find, and difficult to maneuver. The cost of not providing these services, as we saw in Newtown, is so much higher than funding them, both emotionally and yes, bottom line, financially.
The last time my son had a relapse, the government wound up paying for a seven-week hospital stay instead of part-time residential staffing that would have helped him stay stable.
You add it up.
Let's vote for our futures, and for the one in four families left dealing with mental illness all alone, and for the possibilities that can exist for those who receive treatment (assisted as needed) and support services.
We need a Kendra's law in Connecticut. It might have helped us so many times - and it might have helped those in Newtown.
You can read more about our story in my book, Ben Behind His Voices: One Family's Journey from the Chaos of Schizophrenia to Hope. or I will be happy to come and tell you in person.
Thank you.
Beyond Hope, to Promise: Treatment Works
For the first time in years, Ben has spoken to me about goals - and he actually has some, that he is willing to share with me.
When you have a goal, it can be risky to say it out loud. What if you fail? What if your dreams don't come true?
For so long, Ben has been busy getting his life back to where it might have been had his progress not been interrupted by psychosis, hospitalizations, and regrouping. Step by small step, he has returned to college part-time, and recently celebrated a full year of part-time employment. But we have not dared ask, "where will this all lead?" or "What are your plans when you get your degree?". We didn't dare. It has been enough, the reality of these first steps. We tend to stay focused on today.
But Ben must be gaining confidence, as he now talks about wanting to "give back to the world" - as a teacher, perhaps, or an author. Will he get there? He just might. But, not all overwhelming goals, I am encouraging him to take one step toward each one and re-assess as the view gets closer.
But none of this would be possible without the treatment he is receiving for his schizophrenia. None of it. Without treatment, he would most likely be homeless, in jail, in a nursing home, or - let's just say it - no longer alive. Now, with treatment (medical, and also emotional and structural), we have hope, and have taken one more small step: his life also has promise.
Treatment is too often denied, not funded, not mandated - and that is a shame. Watch this video from the Treatment Advocacy Center about how Treatment Makes a Difference. Because it does. And we must keep fighting for it.
Open Hearts and Mental Illness: View from both sides
There is so much potential, creativity, intelligence, and a wealth of new perspectives to be gained by being open to those affected by mental illness. One wonderful example is the aptly named Open Hearts Gallery in South Carolina.
Their mission?
THE OPEN HEARTS GALLERY IS A DYNAMIC GALLERY FEATURING THE TALENTED ARTWORK OF PEOPLE WHO LIVE WITH OR HAVE RECOVERED FROM MENTAL ILLNESS. ART IS A POWERFUL REPRESENTATION OF THE PERSON WITHIN - HIS OR HER PAIN, RECOVERY, AND TRIUMPH. THE GALLERY SERVES AS A BRIDGE TO COMBAT STIGMA AND AS A REMINDER OF HOW RESILIENT AND SIMILAR WE ALL ARE.
Check it out. You can also order prints by going to their "contact" page.
Can we open our hearts to those with mental illness? Of course, as the mother of a wonderful young man who also has schizophrenia, I am going to say yes - still, as you know if you have read Ben Behind His Voices, there were times when I felt I had to harden that heart in order to survive emotionally. The journey to return to an open heart toward Ben was not without challenges; my book pays homage to the obstacles as well as to the results of the lessons of love, respect, and possibility that we eventually learned.
But, still - there is always another view. I recently has a conversation with someone whose heart was shaped by her own experience as parenting Ben has shaped mine. In his case, he had been stalked by someone whose mental illness was allowed to go untreated. Untreated! That can be the difference between love and fear, between open hearts and a mind forever closed. And I can't say I "blame" him. How could I? (for more information about "Eliminating Barriers to the Treatment of Mental Illness", see the excellent website Treatment Advocacy Center.)
So, while most react to my story with gratitude, this person was cold to the idea of someone with schizophrenia being vulnerable, lovable, capable, and worthy of respect. I hope, perhaps, that hearing our story might loosen his heart just a bit. Stories, and art, can help do that.
Practical Advice: Treatment Advocacy Center
This post is for you if you need some clear, practical advice on how to be prepared for a mental illness emergency. The possibility always lurks in the corner, while we try to keep on eye on gratitude for the good days. The Treatment Advocacy Center has an excellent page on this topic, with step-by-step instructions for keeping the monsters at bay by knowing we are ready for them.
I will send you there through this blog post by their Communications Director, Doris Fuller, who says:
We who love someone with a severe mental illness probably all have our own personal coping mechanisms for getting through the worry and fear and frustration of living with the impact of treatable but chronic brain disease. The demons retreat, but they never retire. For me, being ready for them is the first defense.
I suggest you read her short, poignant-yet-realistic post first, but if you're impatient here's the link to the Be Prepared for an Emergency page.
Like all preparation, this takes time - but will save you a lot more in the future. Trust me.
Thanks, by the way, to all of you who wrote to express concern about Ben and his "adventure" in a questionable neighborhood. Like Doris in the above blog post, I had my eye out for a stress-triggered return of symptoms, but luckily his reactions to the stress all seem quite conventional. The only "demons" were the ones I could see as well: fear of returning to that neighborhood, reminding us to set our home alarm and change the locks, some reluctance to be alone. I would feel the same way.