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A Fractured Mind

The Pain of Mental Illness

Thirteen years ago, my oldest son, Matthew, fell in love with a wonderful girl and asked her to be his wife.

She was a classic beauty, tall and slender with long dark hair and amber eyes. We immediately bonded with this vibrant, lovely girl and welcomed her into our family.

She said voices were telling her to kill me...

It was a beautiful, traditional wedding and we had the joy of seeing our son, a handsome groom, stand with his bride under the chupah, the marriage canopy

It was a fairy tale wedding.

It has been a nightmare marriage.

Four months after the wedding my telephone rang at 3:00 a.m. Any mother will tell you that when your phone rings at that time in the morning, your heart skips a beat and you scramble to answer, praying all the while that the call is not bad news.

It was Matt; he was at the emergency room with his bride. "What's wrong?" I asked. "I don't know Mom, she has been acting very strangely lately and then tonight she just flipped out. She said voices were telling her to kill me, she hit me in the face with an aluminum bat."

There was dead silence on my end of the phone. I had not seen them since the week of their wedding. "Matt are you alright?" Matt had a nasty knot on his cheek but no serious damage was done to his head. It was his heart that was broken.

During those first few months of marriage, my son had been hiding a tragic secret. He watched helplessly as his beautiful wife gradually drifted into madness.

Mental illness is highly misunderstood and difficult to admit. While it is as debilitating as any serious physical illness, embarrassment and denial make it a closet epidemic. While no one has a problem admitting that he has a broken leg, admitting that part of one’s brain or emotional abilities is broken is much harder. The uncomfortable silence that surrounds diseases of the mind leave those who suffer (and those who suffer with them) with few resources. Matt could not have known what was wrong with Denise nor where to go for help.

Without professional involvement, how does the average person determine if someone they know is clinically depressed or is merely depressed because of a bad day? Persons who suffer from mental illness are sometimes the last to notice that something is seriously wrong. The deeper the sufferer sinks into depression, the less able he or she is to rationally judge his or her own behavior. The warning signs are ignored.

When Denise finally did receive professional treatment, she was diagnosed as a manic depressive, schizophrenic personality. She spent several months confined to a ward for patients who were a danger to themselves or to others. She was given anti-psychotics, antidepressants and psychiatric intervention. Sadly, none of the traditional approaches seemed to help. All that was left of Matt's beautiful bride was a medicated shell of a human being whose brain had short circuited and whose soul had somehow disconnected. Her face was gaunt, her eyes were hallow. Her hands trembled uncontrollably. She could not seem to make eye contact and what few words she spoke were slurred and unintelligible.

Embarrassment and denial make it a closet epidemic Schizophrenia is one of the most severe and dangerous brain disorders. It seems to strike in early adulthood and it is likely that Denise was stricken with this disease even before she and my son met. Untreated, the disease grows worse with time and can trigger hallucinations, delusions, paranoia, lack of normal emotions. It can be profoundly disabling and treatment is not always effective.

Over the years, we have watched Denise go through periods of "normalcy" when whatever cocktail of medication she was on at the time seemed to bring her back to us. But even during those times, she suffered brief bouts of anger that resulted in acts of violence.

Then, one night about three years after her diagnosis, Denise walked out of her home and disappeared. Because she was an adult and had left willingly, the police would not aggressively search for her. The fact that she was seriously mentally ill did not seem to matter. Unfortunately, the lack of proper education regarding mental illness affects all of society. We found that even the police felt that this was her problem or our problem. The sad reality is that a person suffering from mental illness is everyone’s problem. Not only is this person a danger to him or herself, but is often a danger to society at large.

Finding Denise was basically left up to the family. Matt tried to keep an attitude of hope, but I watched him disintegrate. Who can know the depth of his anguish. Was she safe? Was she even alive? The search continued for two long years. Matt traveled all over the country checking out promising sightings. Every time the body of an unidentified woman was discovered, he hurried to fax Denise's poster and description to the detectives who were working the case. Each time he had to do this, Matt's hope of finding Denise alive dimmed.

Then one morning the phone rang. A stranger was on the other end of the line. "Do you know a lady named Denise?" he asked. My heart was racing. "Yes! Is she there, is she with you!". The man had found her over a thousand miles away sleeping on a bench at a bus station.

"I have her driver's license and a piece of paper with your phone number on it."

"Look at the picture on the license, is it her?"

"Yes Ma'am, it is definitely her."

"Can I talk to her?"

For the first time in 2 years, I heard her voice. It was weak and her words were garbled. "Mom, I went to the store and couldn't find my way back." She had no idea that she had been gone over two years. The man who found her helped me buy a non-stop plane ticket for her and we met her at the airport. When she walked off the plane, she carried a filthy pillow case that contained everything she owned. Matt grabbed her and sobbed, she stood almost motionless. She had been living in the streets. She never told us how she survived. Those two years were nothing but a blur.

Denise walked out of her home and disappeared

Denise was hospitalized again. She has spent more than six of the past 13 years either missing or hospitalized. Her good years were scattered with bouts of violence. Still, Matt never once thought of divorce. When she was home, Matt was a dutiful husband. When she was missing, he searched for her. When she was hospitalized, he visited regularly and participated in every type of therapy offered. He never gave up on her.

During their marriage, one child was born. The baby was conceived during one of her mother's more lucid periods and for the first 18 months of my granddaughter's life, she had a wonderful, attentive mother. But sadly, this was not to last. Three weeks ago, at 3:00 a.m., Denise walked out into the night and into her world of delusion leaving her husband and baby behind. This time, Matt's reaction was completely different. While it was the most difficult decision he has ever made, he is determined not to put his baby at risk, even if that means that he can’t remain with her mother. He immediately went to court and obtained a custody order for the baby. Now, for the first time, he is contemplating divorce.

Though this is not the outcome we had all prayed for, all I can do is support him no matter what he ultimately decides. While we will continue to try and help Denise however we can, at the same time, we have a baby who must be protected. The Torah teaches that a parent has a profound responsibility to his child. Matt takes this very seriously.

Even if the marriage cannot be salvaged, we still hope and pray that we can help Denise and that she will be able to heal. According to Judaism, if there is something that affects us physically (either our bodies or our minds) there is a spiritual counterpart as well. The goal is tapping into not only the physical or mental source of her illness, but finding a spiritual way to work on it simultaneously.

One thing that has been most lacking is that Denise has not wanted, and certainly the hospitals have not pushed, for her to have any counseling or discussion with a rabbi or someone to offer her a Jewish perspective and support. Psychiatry seems to ignore the spiritual aspects of mental illness. And yet it was faith that has enabled our family to endure the past thirteen years. As strange as it may sound, her illness has strengthened my faith in G-d. I went from a nice lady who only showed up at synagogue on High Holy days to a woman who connects with G-d through prayer and worship daily. Denise's illness has changed our lives.

We have a baby who must be protected

While it has been far from easy, I have witnessed that faith and belief, knowing that we don’t run this world and knowing that there are reasons and a purpose behind what we see, has helped us through. And while we don’t understand why we have all had to suffer, we do know that at the same time G-d has protected Denise in endless situations.

Though Denise has wandered the streets aimlessly for months at a time, she does not recall nor does she have any symptoms of having been physically harmed and she has always managed to survive.

In the meantime we pray that G-d will continue to protect her and help her realize that she needs help and needs to help herself. We have entrusted her into His mighty hands, and we pray for the day when all suffering will cease. In the meantime, bewildered we approach Him and ask "why?" Why does such a beautiful girl suffer from a life with a fractured mind and a tormented soul?

We do not necessarily know enough to comprehend the answer; we must, however, believe and care enough to ask the question."

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Author's Postcript, 5/26/06

For anyone who thinks G-d only listens to set formulas of prayer and not the individual cries of our hearts, this is proof that they are wrong. He hears and He answers!

A local mental hospital called my son and said that Denise has been a patient there all this time she has been missing. This time, she was lucid enough to take herself to a facility. She did not call my son (or let the hospital notify him) because she was conflicted over her condition with a baby in the picture. Again a sign that she has learned to recognize the onset of a serious situation.

The psychiatrist feels she may be on the road to a better solution with new medications that have been very effective during her confinement. Matt is not going to divorce her - he cannot do it - but he is taking all precautions for the safety of the baby and he is retaining sole custody. Baby and Mom have been reunited for visits and it was, in my son's words "gut wrenching." The baby just jumped into her arms and laid her little head on her chest and wouldn't let go. I got to see Denise after Shabbos, we had a good cry – afterall, she has been my daughter since she was just 19 and she has no mother or father of her own.

G-d willing, there may be a better outcome than what we were fearing.

Leah

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Jan 8, 2012
mental illness
wish there was support group in u.k.
Posted By Anonymous, londson, u.k.

Posted: Sep 11, 2011
Suggestion
Please consider taking a class called Family to Family by NAMI(National Alliance on Mental Illness). It will help you understand organic brain disorders which can be treated with medication. We also have support groups that can help as well. Check the NAMI web site to find an affiliate close to you. May hashem bless you and your family.
Posted By Joseph M. Jason NAMI BA President, Buffalo Grove, Illinois

Posted: Sep 10, 2011
My son has been married for 5 years to a woman diagnosed as bi-polar. He has stuck with her through 2 hospitalizations and 3 psychotic episodes. He is now probably going to divorce her, mostly because he wants to give their daughter a chance at a normal life. My son's wife truly wants to be re-parented. My son has done that, but she cannot or will not help herself at the same time. Her parents have interefered terribly and have made my son's life miserable. I feel tremendous empathy for mentally ill people but I think that a child is much better served by having one parent working at full capacity, rather than a mentally ill mother and a father who has to take care of both the child and his wife and has to protect his daughter from her mother's psychosis.
Posted By Anonymous, Fairlawn, NJ

Posted: Jan 24, 2011
mental health
Schizophrenia , bi-polar etc ARE physical ailments .They are no different than a brain tumor or stroke, All stem from a physical cause.
It is this misunderstanding that causes much of the stigma. If I said I had down syndrome everyone would take pity. But let me say I have bi-polar and I am lazy or not trying hard enough.
What I can tell you is that when my medication isnt working I am an ugly creature I had to give up custody of my daughter because of it.
I applaud your son for keeping his promise. Mine wasnt so understanding and because of that I face this battle with no one to support me.
As sad as that is I have found that reliance on G-d is all the strength I need to make it through this and every trial. I can tell when Im not right because thats when I stop seeking his way and begin my own always with disastrous results. I pray you all find recovery,
Posted By Victoria, Garden City, 12

Posted: Dec 26, 2010
To Bethesda, Md. My son is a very loving person. Although he is the primary parent, he knows that his now 3 year old daughter has a relationship with his mother. In fact, she's become more able to take care of her as time has passed. I think he holds onto hope that she will be fully better. I just wish she'd allow herself to receive more support. She's very secretive about her illness. But everyone has to cope the way that they can. I hope you too can find someone to care for you.
Posted By Anonymous, Fairlawn, NJ

Posted: Dec 12, 2010
What was most tremendous for me was that your son is staying with her. So many others would have just walked away to an easier life, but he is holding on. As someone who suffers from milder, but still immensely difficult, mental illness, I can only pray to find someone who would do that for me.
Posted By Anonymous, Bethesda, MD

Posted: May 3, 2010
To the "Dear-Heart" Author of this Post
Dear Lady,
What a wonderful Mother in Law you have been. My soul feels for your pain. It seems you have been blessed by the ordeal to become closer to G-d.
Both my husband and I suffer from mental illnesses. He schizo affective disorder, and me, severe almost life threatening depression from my menstrual cycle about 2 weeks of every month...

Somehow I have been able to bless my husband in our 8 year marriage and he is able to work full time for the first time in about 15 years &is involved in the Synagogue much of the time. He seems almost "normal." He has been able to help me, too, yet I am still not doing that well.

The only thing a life long illness has blessed me with is a close relationship with G-d.. That is worth all the suffering.... I still don't understand why HE wants us to suffer?
Hang in there with your daughter in law... help her learn to pray and ask HaShem for help. My husband takes a time release shot for schizo-affective..an Enormous help...
Posted By Anonymous, Los Angeles area, CA

Posted: Feb 28, 2010
I read your post and have so many thoughts. My daughter in law has bi polar and they have a 2 1/2 year old daughter who my son has been both mother and father to. Now my daughter in law is doing better, thanks to medication but I think it is very hard on my son. It sounds like your family does not give you support; that is what happened to my daughter in law also, and I think that is one of the reasons that she is not fully better. A good therapist can be wonderful-even beyond wonderful-but you need someone in your life who is a constant that can help and support you. Do you have such a person/people? I don't think you can go through this alone. You sound like you're working hard to get to a good/better place and maybe that can help you connect to your child.
Posted By Anonymous, Teaneck, NJ

Posted: Feb 26, 2010
I too suffer from schizophrenia
I was diagnosed as a bipolar/schizophrenia just ove 4 years ago and the last few years have been a nightmare/blur. I have not found the resources in the Jewish community to connect to a higher spiritual cause for the illness and my extended family has hardly been in touch with me. I know that there are prior cases of schizophrenics being dangerous but I am no so. Despite this, my friends are weary of going on with things the way they were before my illness and I'm left feeling depressed often and unsure of the future. In the midst of my recent history, during a "good" period I got pregnant and had a child. During my 8th month of pregnancy, I got sick and was hospitalized causing me to lose the baby into the foster care system. I am still fighting for my rights as a parent. I was connected in a meaninful way before my illness but running from my past. I'm trying to work with a therapist to figure out what I'm running from and why my mind goes to such extremes at uncertain times.
Posted By Malky, East Elmhurst, NY

Posted: Dec 13, 2009
I appreciate your comments about this. One obstacle to this though is that I am not really allowed to be part of this. That is really okay with me, but I see that there is no-one who is willing to help my daughter in law. They just want to encourage her to keep it quiet. She has been put in the closet by her parents and siblings, she believes that she should be in the closet, and that has made it all the worse for her. Yes, if I were her mother I would call her psychiatrist and respectfully suggest that taking away her shame be a goal. And lest you think that I am not aware of privacy in therapy, I have been in therapy and really know how important it is to have utmost privacy. But a mother can help in a way that doesn't shatter boundaries if they really care for and respect their child .
Posted By Anonymous, Teaneck, NJ



 


Mental Health
The Wake-Up Call
Growing Up in the Shadow of OCD
Postpartum Depression
Signs of Postpartum Syndromes
Stigma
A Fractured Mind
A Torah Approach to Anxiety Relief
Understanding Anxiety Disorder
Mental Health Myths
Understanding Postpartum Illness
Regaining My Balance
To Run and Return
A Narrow Bridge
Faith and Anxiety