. It was an
unnerving experience for a 16 year old boy.
Mental health hospitals were pretty primitive in those days, and they
were primarily there to protect the “sane” public from the “crazy” people. That was not an altogether bad thing. When we got there, we realized the water pump
had malfunctioned on the car. I managed
to find some water to fill up the radiator.
While I was doing this, a resident was standing on the other side of the
chain link fence yelling at me. I was
glad there was a fence between the two of us.
As a minister, I’ve had the experience of visiting maximum
security prisons. There’s really not a
lot of difference in the way people are treated in today’s prisons and they way
mentally ill people were treated in the fifties. In today’s prisons, inmates are called
“residents.” I don’t remember what they
called the patients in a mental hospital, but it all boiled down to a complete
loss of freedom. There were several doors
that had to be unlocked for us to get through, and those same doors were locked
behind us. The only difference between
that visit and a prison visit lay in the fact that visitors to a mental health
facility weren’t frisked in the fifties.
When we finally got to my mother she was in good spirits,
and rational except for some memory lapses caused by the fact that she was
recovering from electric shock therapy.
She was terribly lonely and wanted to come home. She believed there were people in the
hospital who were completely sane, but had been committed by family members to
get them out of their lives.
In the early fall, she was thought to be well enough to go
home. She was in good spirits, and she
was extremely glad to be home. She was
aware of what she had gone through. She
said, “If I ever get that way again, just lock me in a room until I’m all right
again.” Of course we couldn’t honor
that.
From that point on her life satisfaction was often
interrupted with periods of psychotic behavior.
These episodes tended to last longer with the passage of time. Conversely the periods of rational thinking
got shorter. Mercifully, mental health
science reached the point in which widespread use of electric shock therapy was
used less and less. Drug therapy became
the treatment of choice. It’s didn’t
solve the problem, but it greatly reduced the severity of the attacks, and
eventually made institutionalization unnecessary. At least my father viewed it that way.
After college I moved away from home, so I did not have to
deal with it on a daily basis. To be
quite honest, I don’t think I ever learned to manage that situation very
well. I didn’t know how to relate to
her. I didn’t know how to manage the
situation in the public. Her public
behavior could be embarrassing at times, and my conscience bothered me because
I was ashamed of what was happening. On
the one hand I knew she couldn’t help it, but I was also wishing we didn’t have
to go through this. That’s not a
self-pity statement. It’s just an honest
assessment of the way things were.
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