part one: black wednesday – I’m very glad I posted my giving of thanks when I did, when I had a minute to type between leaving work early and my dad’s arrival, before the deep descent, before I forgot to be thankful for anything at all in the midst of this maelstrom. When my father came, we went together to pick up Jonah at the Center for the Disabled’s afterschool program; I walked in and knew immediately from the caregiver’s faces there was bad news. He’d attacked the whole time…children, too. The director essentially told us Jonah is on the verge of being kicked out of the program.
Deflated again, (how many times can a balloon be deflated before it is limp and dead?) my father and I each took one of Jonah’s hands and led him out of the building. My father wanted to sit in the backseat with Jonah; I warned him strongly against it, so he sat in the passenger seat. I don’t remember what the plan was but I knew there wasn’t much food in the house so I suggested we ride to Burger King and get food at the drive-thru to take home.
We got all set up in the kicthen with the food, and Jonah seemed fine. Then he made the hand-swat motion, and I knew he was probably ramping up for an attack, but this truly insane hope rises in me every time right along with the panic, and before I could think another thought, he attacked full-force at my father, knocking the chair over, scattering pickles and french fries and drink everywhere, my dad frantically wrestling him to the floor while I did my best to hold Jonah’s head down so he couldn’t bite. My dad was bitten anyway, several times, then kicked hard all over his torso – I heard his moans and desperate pleas for Jonah to get off him, awful sounds I never wanted to hear – helpless groans, like we were being attacked in a back alley somewhere.
Finally I gasped to my father that he should get up and run away from Jonah. He did, and Jonah went straight for me. I ran into his room, knowing he’d follow me there, and he did, mangling my glasses, ripping at my hair, kicking and hitting and biting me — my dad came back in to try to help and Jonah beat the shit out of us both. Finally I shoved Jonah toward and onto his bed, and my father and I got the hell out of the room. Jonah’s room has no lock so my dad and I took turns holding the door knob as hard as we could while we looked at each other with terrified, disbelieving eyes. Then we heard Jonah fling himself at the window, and SMASH SMASH SMASH he pounded his feet against it – thank God we’d had the Plexiglas installed – I opened the door briefly to check and see if he was okay, and in a rage he flung himself at me again. I shut his door again and tried hard not to sob, scream, punch the wall, wail to the universe that I CAN’T TAKE THIS ANYMORE. My dad, in a broken voice, agreed that we should call 911. We were afraid Jonah’d pull the dresser over on himself, that he’d get out of the room and hurt us more, that we couldn’t care for him and keep him (or us) safe.
It was the fourth 911 call I have made in 4 months. Then I called Andy, who came home from work. He got there first, but shortly after that 3 Albany Police Department cops arrived, 2 of whom were kind but helpless — a third, Officer W, was just plain mean – accusatory in his manner and voice, as though we’d called them over for nothing. “Why are you so unkind?” I asked him at one point. He left the house eventually and I talked to the other 2 cops. “We don’t have anything we can do in this situation,” explained one of them. “We can’t very well arrest him.” No shit, but can you help us? The answer was no. Nope, they couldn’t help us. So the kindest of the three officers made a phone call somewhere and found out they could get child psychiatric mobile crisis involved, but last time that happened we ended up in the CDPC crisis center for four days. No thank you. So they left us, not wanting to meet my pleading eyes. The cops left, and I sat there thinking my son beat up my dad and me and we called 911 to keep everyone safe and they could not help us at all.
Jonah had worked himself into an exhaustion and fell asleep in his bed, so my shaken dad finally left. I wrapped myself in a blanket on the couch and stared numbly into space. 911 is a last resort, right? A way to get someone to do something, finally, to help us? A way to hook us into emergency placement? A way to save our crumbling, threadbare, intolerable situation?
Wrong.
part two: black thursday – I brought M to my mom’s for Thanksgiving, and Andy went to his parents’ house. It was just the four of us, mom, me, M, and Jonah, at the Thanksgiving table, and Jonah was happily eating a buttered roll, when BAM out of nowhere Jonah attacked, sending dishes flying and grabbing my glasses off my face. M pinned him down on the kicthen floor, but it took him ten minutes or more to get Jonah to the point where we could let him up, my mom could clean and pack up some food for us to take with us, and we could leave. I mushed my glasses into a semblance of shape and we drove away.
Later I dropped Jonah off at the house and to Andy (along with a piece of pumpkin pie from my mom), where Jonah soon fell asleep –and M and I ate our Thanksgiving meal alone in his small apartment, the two of us drained, shaky, and quiet.
part three: a big fat friday of black – On Black Friday Andy and I decided to start investigating placement for Jonah. I called OD Heck (what I thought was a local residential placement center in Schenectady) and was told there were no more children’s residential services there; they transferred me to an Albany office, some developmental disability place, and they transferred me somewhere else. Finally I spoke with a kind psychologist from DDSO (developmental disability services office?) who sympathized but could do little else. Nothing exists to help us. He thought maybe we could try the ER. Then Jonah attacked, viciously pulling my hair and mangling my glasses again. Andy pulled him off me and subdued him in his room, then called the doc and got into a fight with him because the doc wouldn’t help us by adjusting Jonah’s meds or dosage. “Take him to the Albany Med ER,” he said. So, having heard the same advice twice from two different people, we did.
I packed up a bag and Jonah’s accordion file folder full of information, and we drove ourselves to Albany Medical Center emergency room where they set us up in a room, took Jonah’s blood pressure and temperature, and listened to our tale. “So you think he needs to be admitted?” asked one young doc. “Yes,” I answered, envisioning a complete work-op with an MRI and whatever else they do to rule out medical causes of behavioral aggressions. Soon Jonah showed signs of agitation, so we asked for a sedative for him. The doc came in with 4 other nurses; they gave him a shot of Atavan in his leg. About 10 seconds later came the attack, not a surprise to us, but the meds took so long to work that they all had to keep a firm hold on him for 10 minutes or so.
Even though Jonah became groggy, they expressed surprise that he didn’t fall asleep. I lie in the bed and tried to get Jonah to snuggle with me and watch Back to the Future on the TV, but he was agitated and kept moving around sluggishly. The mobile crisis unit came and kindly spoke with us, and it started to look and feel a lot like the whole CDPC experience. They made phone calls and tried to find a place for Jonah but to no avail. Albany Med would not admit him. The doctor there would not adjust his meds. “I don’t feel comfortable doing that,” she said. Nobody does, apparently. I asked a few different people what would happen if I were all alone and Jonah tipped a TV over on me and killed me. No one had an answer for me. They simply didn’t know.
A kind nurse made Jonah some turkey-balloons out of medical gloves and he crouched in the doorway, playing with the balloons and pleading every few seconds to be “all done?”
Finally the doc conceded and gave us a script for Atavan in pill form to get us through until our appointment to see the child psychiatrist. So 8 hours and $100 later we left the hospital with what our family doc could have called in over the phone to the pharmacy. I drove to Lenscrafters (at the mall, on Black Friday of all days) to get my glasses fixed but they were so broken this time they had to give me a whole other pair of frames. About four hours later, at home, Jonah puked and shortly afterward, he fell asleep.
NOBODY WILL HELP US.
Oh, the terrible irony of finally coming to terms with the fact that we may have to place him and then find there is nowhere he can go, nothing we can do. I am so angry at a system that gives us no help and no answers and is apparently willing to wait until someone is seriously injured or killed to step the fuck in and DO SOMETHING.
It’s a black Saturday too, folks, but I don’t have it in me to tell that half-completed tale.
I’m done.
Amy…check out this site I found. May be totally useless for you. After talking today I just started playing around looking for help for Jonah.
http://www.devereux.org This place has a location in Red Hook, NY (listed as NJ, but I know it’s NY because of the area code).
Hope you liked your new glasses.
Susan
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Yes, Devereaux is actually north of Red Hook. A family that I had as a teacher has a daughter there and I believe they are satisfied with the program.
Anderson School is in Staatsburg. It is the school the Careys moved their son from to go to OD Heck however. There is the possibility that much change was brought about because of their action.
Peace be with you all.
Lorraine
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Thank you so much for this information. I called already and got someone’s name who will be there tomorrow. THANK YOU.
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This may be to little to late…
My son was pulling this shit 2 years ago. He was 10 then..I pinned him on the floor of our kitchen with my forearm, and screamed this…. You are a better person then this!!! This is totally unacceptable. I expect more from you, you are my son. Now get up and act like it. I think over a 10 day period I had to go through this routine like 3 more times. We haven’t had major, major outburts since & his mood room/closet have tuned him down
For what its worth, JP
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