Sometime within the next few weeks, events were set in
motion to get her admitted to the mental hospital in Wichita Falls. First, there had to be a court hearing. I sat in the courtroom and witnessed the
proceedings. Six jurors were
impaneled. They were all males. This was 1951 and women were still not
considered peers in a court of law. The
jurors were being asked to rule on her sanity.
It took only a few minutes for the jury to declare her insane. I don’t know that I can describe how it felt
to have my mother declared insane by a court of law. I don’t even actually
remember how I felt. I think that’s
probably the worst part…an absence of feeling.
Within the next day or so, the sheriff drove Mama and Daddy
to Wichita Falls. At that time electric shock
was the treatment of choice, and that’s what they did. She wrote letters to us, and we could tell
that her mental state was improving, although it was obvious that she had
certain memory lapses.
Daddy, Murl, his son, Charles, and I contracted to build a turkey
shed for Roy Griffith. It was huge –
probably a third of a football field long.
Our job was to put a metal roof on the shed. It was July, and well over a hundred. The corrugated roof we were putting on made
is much hotter than that, but we built a good shed. It was still standing as recently as ten
years ago. However, the last time I made
a trip to Abilene, I noticed that it had been torn down.
Roy always had a hired man who worked regularly for
him. Roy had employed a man had only one
arm, but he was a jolly sort of fellow who worked hard. He had an uncanny way of getting his nails
started, and he stayed up with the rest of us on that roofing project. During this time Daddy decided we needed to
go see Mama. We told the hired man that
we would be gone for the next day because we would be making a trip to Wichita
Falls. He said, “Well, you’d better be
careful. They might keep you. That’s where they’ve got the crazy house.”
Daddy said, “That’s where I’m going.”
The next day Murl brought him up to speed on our situation,
and the man felt terrible about it. I
think he apologized to Daddy when we got back.
We learned that you couldn’t allow yourself to be offended by the
“crazy” jokes. People were going to do
it, and they usually didn’t mean to offend you.
They just didn’t know your situation.
It has made me a lot more sensitive to that kind conversation. We need to be a lot more sensitive to
everybody. Most people are dealing with
some kind of burden, and if you make light of it, it just adds more pounds to
the load.
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