10) 4 Months (8 Month Break)

4 Months (8 Month Break)

It's September 2013. I had no idea the problems this month could hold. Not just for my son and I but for this generation of youth that are struggling with what seems like everything. School started. The very things that I grew up with that I really had no choice but to take in stride, seems to be crippling some of my children's generation. I read an article the other day on www.psychologytoday.com. It was an article titled A Nation of Wimps. The full link is: http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/200411/nation-wimps

Now don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to imply that we are all raising wimps. However I do find myself questioning that in our quest to give our children a better life then we had that we may be robbing them of some basic coping skills. It seems that we may have tipped the scales just a little bit further then we intended. We needed to be more aware and we needed to be more involved so that our children could reap the benefits of that. However have we become so caught up in making it easier that we have perhaps taking away some of the very frustrations, disappointments and challenges that helped us to build our own identities and forge a path for ourselves out of perseverance. Anxiety is a normal part of life. It's a normal response to uncertainty, trouble or feeling unprepared, it's a human emotion that everyone experiences at times.  I'm touching on this because my son still resists learning how to deal with anxiety. The things in life that make you anxious are not going to go away. If anything they will continue to grow until they are unmanageable.

I'm still delaying on writing about spirituality. Honestly I question more and more if it even pertains to what is going on in my son's life or mind. I still support his goals to be a shaman healer or whatever else he decides he wants to be but it's like me saying I'm an architect when I haven't the faintest idea how to even start drawing up architectural plans. Saying that I am doesn't make it so. I used the term spirituality in the past when talking about my son and his right to explore it. Maybe I was afraid to question what spirituality actually meant, at least to me anyways. I didn't want to seem... close minded? I don't know. I guess it's like questioning someone on their religious beliefs. It seems taboo. For me spirituality isn't about ego or control. For my son... I think I need to find another term for his quest. As with everything else I find myself with a lot more questions than answers.

Now that those rambling thoughts are out of the way. An update on my son. He was inpatient for 3 weeks. It was his 6th hospitalization. The first one that I had to watch him go through. It was a slow decline over about 2 weeks. For about a week or so after receiving disability he actually managed to keep it together. Even though he was drinking he was taking his medications and making progress in self care, etc. He couldn't sustain it. Discipline started to become a problem again. His attitude started getting worse. I started doing research into how to discipline adult children of ODD (Oppositional Defiant Disorder) and ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder). He hasn't been diagnosed with these but certainly has the symptoms and I was looking for anything that would help to calm the situation. As each day passed his insight into what was happening got less and less. His own feelings of depression and anxiety toke over. Marijuana use increased. He was being controlled by his addictions. About 6 days before I had to have him admitted he decided to go off his medications. It took about 4 days for him to really start to what they call decompress or show obvious signs of psychosis. 2 days later he was admitted. Once psychosis took over he went downhill fairly quickly. 3 days of little to no sleep and little food was contributing to his mental state. Small bouts of hysterical laughter that he was able to control when talking to the crisis hotline that we were in touch with. I am very grateful for the crisis mobile team that came and got him. They had been in contact with us for about 2 days and where aware of his declining state, talked to him about his hysterical laughter and confirmed that he was not suicidal. When I called them informing them of an extended period of hysterical laughter and the apparent emergence of a voice, on top of the no sleeping and eating, they were at my door that afternoon. They were very gentle with him and escorted him to the hospital.

For a week or so I struggled somewhat with wondering if I could have done anything differently. Could I have gotten him admitted earlier? I have been assured and reassured by our team that I could not have done anything differently. Not being on medications alone is not enough to meet the criteria of being involuntarily admitted for psychiatric assessment. I wish that it was. Since living with me he was not been under any type of order that stated he had to take medications. With his previous caregiver he was. I only recently discovered this as I went through the 50 odd pages of notes that was sent to us when he moved. I condensed these into 4 pages of notes consisting of hospital admission and consultation dates, symptoms, medications and their dosages and treatment plans. I did this partly for the hospital staff and his team and partly for myself. Trying to go through 50 pages of notes to see what medications and symptoms he previously had was going to be time consuming. Anything I could do to make it easier for them was in everyone's best interest. It also helped me to put things into perspective. A history of non compliance with medications and either lying about or downplaying positive symptoms. Every admission was due to a significant re-emergence of positive symptoms. Substance abuse always has and still does play a key role.

This lead me to talk to my counsellor about the benefits of outpatient treatment orders or community treatment orders (CTO's) like he previously was under. From his team's point of view they would rather build a network of trust between my son and his psychiatrist with regards to taking his medications. However the possibilities of putting another one in place is certainly a consideration as my son has a history of being non compliant. At one point he was receiving injections for this very reason. I was cautioned however that even with a CTO in place he still has to meet a certain criteria to be involuntarily admitted. Possibly he could have to submit to a psychiatric assessment sooner but still would have to have symptoms that justify an admission. The only benefit I see to a CTO is if he's receiving his medications through injection and it's part of the order that he attend for treatment. At least that is my understanding of what I have been told. I find that having a better knowledge of how the system works helps me to have more realistic expectations of what can and does happen.

So I find myself again questioning what is more important. His rights or his mental health. It's a tricky situation. It took about a week for me to have access to his file as he had to sign a release first. He's legally an adult now and I don't have any type of guardianship or conservatorship. He only signed the release because he wanted me to talk to the doctor about getting him out. I told him I couldn't because I didn't have access. Without that he was protected under The Mental Health Act and they couldn't give me particulars about his treatment. I acknowledge that he has rights but I also know that some of these very same rights are only causing him harm and getting in the way of recovery. We want the very same system or act that supports his right to self harm to protect him from himself. Doesn't make sense to me. Perhaps The Mental Health Act needs to be fixed. I probably have too much to say on this so I will end it here.

How is my son doing? The first couple of days had their own difficulties. Paranoia and psychosis had certainly taken hold. For a period he didn't even believe that he was in the hospital. He was in his own world of delusions and happily so. Getting him stable again is going to take time. His only insight into being there was that he wasn't eating and sleeping. According to him he started eating and sleeping good so he should have been able to come home. I'm the last person he wanted discussing his psychosis so that was making things difficult. I couldn't give him any answers that he was willing to accept about why he was still there. He did a lot of writing and doodling. He had some ups and downs as they changed medications. My son complains of high anxiety and depression. I have a hard time with this. He's depressed after abusing drugs and alcohol. Same with his anxiety symptoms. When not abusing he rarely has symptoms and doesn't even talk about it. Anyways he was put on Valium. He liked it, I didn't. My son's idea of being without anxiety when dealing with withdrawal symptoms or even boredom seems to be, for lack of a better word, high. I guess that's why the first couple of paragraphs of this chapter had been playing on my mind for awhile now. My son in my opinion has very little coping skills which is different than high anxiety. I'm not a doctor and I could be way off here but I can only go by what I see. They had to wean him off the Valium using Benadryl. He was tried on a couple of new medications, Clonidine and Trazodone. I was actually hopeful about these helping him as even though my son has not been diagnosed, he has always displayed characteristics of ADHD, OCD and according to him anxiety. Not sure exactly which symptoms his doctor was prescribing them for and no one seemed to be volunteering that information. This is something that I'm having difficulty with. I can do all the research I want on what he's being prescribed but then I get cautioned to not always go by what I can find on the internet because each doctor has their own approach and reasons for prescribing certain medications. After one day of being on the Clonidine my son said he didn't like it and they discontinued it. He wasn't minding the Trazodone as it's pretty calming and sedating. Still he wanted the Valium so they put him on Gabapentin. They got his Clozapine back up to the 300 mg that he was originally prescribed to get him stable and back on his Lithium. Other then bringing up to me a couple of times that he wanted to come home he seemed fairly content. Surprisingly he did not asked for his computer. Only once asked about going for a smoke and since he declined nicotine gum I think the motivation behind that was more about getting out. Trying to keep him supplied with enough treats was hard however I was glad his appetite had picked up. Hopefully that too will even out as he is was eating a lot. Not that I mind him gaining weight but I'm aware that he may end up using that as an excuse to not be on his Clozapine. He can exaggerate side effects as easily as he downplays positive symptoms.

After 3 weeks he was discharged. 2 day passes on the weekend that went reasonably well and discharged on Monday. They had already switched him from involuntary to voluntary the previous Friday.  Currently on 5 medications. I think it's a little much but my son didn't want me talking to them about streamlining them before letting him out. When first admitted they had put him on Risperidone which I thought they had taken him off of but apparently not. So he has to take medications 5 times a day. We have an appointment with his psychiatrist next week so hopefully we can start lowering some of them. The Risperidone is meant to be short term to give the Clozapine time to work.

He is still having some symptoms of being a little delusional although that has never completely gone away, even at his best. A lot of his ideas or beliefs seem to stem from a childlike view of the world. Until I can teach him about things like science, etc. then his understanding of what is going on in this world will continue as it is. I had some concerns that perhaps I had allowed him to come home to early as he is still displaying some signs of psychosis and his emotions were still relatively unstable. I had to step back and give myself time to think it all through. If it takes time to recover from a break then keeping him in the hospital because he was still showing residual signs of psychosis from this break could mean him being inpatient for a fairly long time. If recovery from a break can take up to a year, as they say, then it only makes sense that these symptoms will take time to go away as medications continue to build and stabilize.  In stepping back I also had to recall the first month or so when he first came to live with me. Almost literally climbing the walls from withdrawal, hours spent trying to do telekinesis that spirits would not allow him to do and seeing if I could feel his chi. Emotions that were completely out of control. Voices and paranoia. As always I am so thankful for my counselor as she again helped me to realize that they could not have kept him inpatient to much longer. Other then when he was first admitted no signs of voices. They have again receded to background noise. As he puts it, a happy singing. My counselor reassured me on this as well as my son has some pretty obvious signs of when he is hearing voices. The delusions or ideas that he currently has are based on his very limited knowledge of how the world works.

The first couple of days were a little tough. I allowed myself to get pulled into some pretty childish manipulations. At first I thought they were delusions until I brought them out into the open and he told me the truth. I made it clear that these types of lies and manipulations cannot continue. If this was psychosis related and a delusion then he would have held firm to the lies but he didn't. I'm glad that I got it out in the open as a change in attitude took place fairly quickly. I had deflated his justification for defiance. I pointed out that he can't expect me to treat him like an adult when his behaviour was so obviously childish. Sounds a little harsh but we help our children grow up but helping them to recognize behaviours that it is time they outgrew.

We had a good discussion yesterday, that he instigated, about my expectations and what he can deliver. We agreed that studying can wait for a month to give him time to recover. We also agreed that the other rules previously put in place regarding him picking up after himself and not slamming doors, etc. are still reasonable. So I'm back to learning how to cope and discipline adult children with symptoms of ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) and ODD (Oppositional Defiant Disorder). Make the rules and expectations clear. Make them reasonable. Give positive feedback whenever possible. Stand firm on consequences and walk away from arguments.

From my point of view he is currently doing better than he was 4 months ago. It's to be expected that my son will have relapses as he tries to figure out how much control he wants and learns to recognize that for the moment anyways he needs to do certain things to remain stable and out of hospital. It's been just over 3 weeks since his break and already we are back to where we were about 2 months ago. That means back on the road to recovery. His attitude is better. He's starting to pick up after himself. He's agreeing to meet with his support group. Other then the first couple of days he appears to be taking his medications. I can't watch him do this all the time. I have to put some faith in him and if he decides not to take them then whether I agree or not it's currently his choice. He went 8 months between his last 2 relapses which is the longest yet. If we can make the next one 10-12 months... If not, we will deal with them as they happen. I guess the real test will come when he receives his next disability payment. Myself and his support group have tried to get it released into my name but so far no luck. I could probably write for hours on my own feelings regarding this but in my opinion I'm fighting a broken system.

Until next time....

Mom
BarbieBF

© September 2013

No comments:

Post a Comment