DaisyJane said:
Yesterday the decision was made to place Matthew in a group home by fall. Rationally I know we need to do this. Emotionally I am a wreck.
Long before WonderCafe.ca came into being, when the only online support I had was the United Online community my family and I lived in NL (Botwood, NL) at the time and Robert was in full crisis. The next to non-existent support from the Medical and Educational communities placed a great deal of stress on our very young family and our options were very limited.
Actual suggestions given to us by Family Services included:
I divorce Kimberly immediately making her eligible for more support as a singly parent. Money was not our primary problem. Robert's early manifestation of a Bi-Polar disorder which every, and I mean every, Psych in the Province refused to admit was a possibility was.
That was not received with a great deal of enthusiasm.
Option Two. Put both Grace and Hannah into the Foster system since they would be easy to place so that Kimberly and I could focus our energies entirely on Robert. Because clearly the way to solve Robert as a problem means creating further hardship for his sisters.
That was also not received with a great deal of enthusiasm. In fact there was a great deal of hostility directed towards the social worker for even considering that as an option.
In all fairness. When you have no resources and live nowhere near a perfect world your choices are often between a rock and a hard place.
Option three was to surrender care of Robert to the Province. This was the one the Province cared least for and of all the options this was the only one that they actually tried to discourage us from taking.
It was, in the end the only option we had that offered the family the respite it so desperately required. We made sure all involved knew this was only temporary and that we were beginning to get the ball rolling in getting the hell out of NL to someplace where the inadequate support would be better than anything NL could hope to offer.
That would take time.
It also took time for the Province to put into a place a suitable care plan for Robert.
While Robert was in the care of the Province of NL he managed to trick both of the on-duty 24 hr care attendents into leaving the cottage they were renting and lock them out. He then proceeded to consume all of the meds of every prescription he was on at the time. Let me tell you that was a very tense phone call when we were informed. Robert was relocated to another location, closer to hospital in the most probable chance that would be a scenario which repeated itself. Robert also escaped from the two person 24 hr care a second time and survived a blind run onto the TCH by the blink of an eye. That was also a tense conversation and afterwards Kimberly and I were faced with knowing if we did not get him someplace actually safe there was a strong possibility he would not live.
And we had to do all of that on our own. The care provided by the Province had nearly gotten our son killed twice.
Now Robert has been properly diagnosed and is appropriately medicated and in what I think is a tremendous grace to him, has no memory of the scariest moments those two years in Botwood gave to our family. Memories which Kimberly and I do not dwell on but will carry to our graves. Every now and then one of us has a nightmare and we are back in that time and in that place. They are rarer as the years between grow wider.
I have no idea how I could have handled that alone.
So I grieve for the loss that this feels like. No parent should ever be forced to make this decision. I am glad that you have support from someone who walks the same road with a slightly different set of eyes.
I have had an opportunity to meet your family briefly, I have watched and listened to you tell of your walk. I am impressed with your ferocity and determination it encompasses, what I believe, is a deep abiding truth of motherhood. I know it can seem heavy. I have to say you wear it gracefully.
If I was in the habit of wearing hats I would certainly tip mine to you.
You are amazing.