Thursday, July 12, 2018

When you're a failure at parenting . . . .

"All hope abandon, ye who enter here."
--- Inferno, Dante

Today is one of those days when I feel like a complete failure at parenting. To be honest, I am always uncomfortable when people say I'm a "strong" mom or other complimentary words. I kind of feel like a fake because deep down I think I should have done better. While struggles with Ethan and his addiction are pretty big to feel the parent guilt on, there are so many more which plague me, and while Asa isn't typically the focus of problems, I know so much guilt with him too. Parent guilt sucks! I wonder, does anyone NOT have it? I have many good days when I can rationally tell myself, "Leigh, you did the best you knew how with what you had." But, I also have many days where I say, "Bullshit! That's just a cop out! You should have done this or you should have done that . . . . "

"…But I would
not have you, reader, be deflected from
your good resolve by hearing from me now
how God would have us pay the debt we owe.
Don’t dwell upon the form of punishment:
consider what comes after that; at worst
it cannot last beyond the final Judgment." (Purgatorio. X, 105-111)
---Dante

Look, I'm just giving some truth here. Haven't we ALL felt that way probably many times during our tenure as parents of the little darlings we so looked forward to having? I know I'm not alone. I know that parents who parent together (married or not) also feel this way at times, but I can't really speak to that because it's not something I've ever known much of. Not really as a child or as a parent. So here, I mainly speak to those of us who have been in the single-parent realm of Purgatory. It's not a permanent state of Hell or Heaven. It's somewhere in between, hence, Purgatory. Referring to Dante's words above, don't dwell upon the debts we're paying now, just know it won't be this way forever. Or so they always say.

Remember how we thought it would be so wonderful to have children? The babies were precious! My own two boys were absolutely beautiful and I couldn't have enjoyed them as babies any more than I did. I nearly died giving birth to the first one and had it not been for living in the modern world of surgery I wouldn't have survived the second one either. That was the price for these amazing beings and I happily paid it. Do you also remember when they were young, toddler through 5 perhaps, and we thought it would get easier as they became more independent? No more diapers, diaper bags, blah-de-blah. Looking back, those were the easiest of times. It all started turning downhill not long after that. For me, I think I was managing pretty well until Ethan was in 4th grade. That year his father and I got divorced. It was also the year Ethan had a really horrible, mean teacher. The combination of everything was tough. Asa seemed to be weathering that storm a little easier at age 5 or so. Then, I actually thought I was doing pretty well, until it was clear that I wasn't.

Yes, I actually thought I was kind of rockin' it as a single parent. In many ways, our lives were much more relaxed at that point and we seemed to be on the upswing. I thought it would probably get easier from there. LOLOLOL!! Boy, was I wrong. What followed was moving across the country with the boys and starting all over again. Then, again, just when I thought I had it down . . . . BOOM!! Addiction! If anything will make you question your parenting skills, it's discovering your child is a drug addict, your child is in juvenile detention, your child is in the state hospital, your child is in jail, your child is in rehab, your child has overdosed multiple times and only alive by multiple miracles, and then your child is in prison. Yep, that'll make you think twice! How did I not know? Why was I not able to fix it? What the hell am I doing??? This must be a result of something I did terribly wrong! As if addiction doesn't have enough of its own stigma, parents of addicts get a big dose too! "MY kids would never do that!" "How did the parents not know?" "That's bad parenting right there." You get the picture, and many of you have probably said these things. It doesn't matter how many times anyone, including Ethan, tells me it's not my fault and NOT a result of something I did or didn't do, I will never completely believe there wasn't something I should have done differently. I just can't let go of that little bit of paper firmly super glued in my brain that says I should have been able to do something.

Ethan isn't the only issue though. Asa has his moments! Although he has never ventured down the dangerous path his brother went, he is on his own frustrating one. It was such a struggle to get that child to school, get him to do his work, and get him through graduation. He was bored at school and just didn't want to be bothered by any of it. His room looks like a disaster area, but I let it go, rationalizing that the battle wasn't worth it and at least he wasn't doing drugs or anything. He's one of those kids who does everything in his own time and although I stress obsessively, he typically accomplishes whatever it is by the deadline, barely. I have to nag at him about everything and I feel like a total bitch doing it! I had to practically force him to get a driver's license. We've had knock down drag outs about him getting a job! Bad enough that for a split second, he even thought about going to his dad's (he got over that after 2 hours with his dad the other day.) I don't know if it's a generational thing or what, but kids these days (yes, I'm officially an old person for saying that) just don't seem at all interested in independence. When I was a teenager, we couldn't wait to drive, to go off to college, and to get out of the house! We craved all that adulting stuff, of course, we also regretted some of it when we got it. These kids are in no hurry at all. Asa has absolutely no idea what to do with himself for the future or even a starting point from which to launch.

I am an intelligent woman with two college degrees. Their father is a PhD in English. Both sides of our families were educated. How did I end up with kids who weren't interested in college? Ethan kind of has an excuse. Had things gone differently, I think he would have been happy to go and now that he is older and clean, he would like to give it a try when he's released. But Asa? How did I raise two kids who really don't know how to do basic things even though I made great efforts to teach them? Where did these children come from?

I do believe that an overriding factor in my failed parenting is the fact that I didn't provide them with a good male role model. Should I feel guilty because my ex-husband was rather a disappointment in this department, or is it on him? Well, I feel guilty. I feel like I should have done more to provide them with someone to fill that "dad" role after our divorce when it was clear that their father wasn't going to do it. Instead, I tried to fill both the mom and dad roles as much as possible. In some ways, it was kind of fun, but I was enormously inadequate at being a dad. I had the sex talks with them, I primarily did the Scouts stuff with them, I tried to do some sports with them. But, I wasn't a dad. I know many women who remarry for lots of good reasons, one of them to fill that role. I wouldn't have really wanted to go about it that way, but I should have done something. We tried Big Brothers with Ethan and that was a disaster. Essentially, either through death or divorce, every male role model in their lives has left them. I do realize this isn't necessarily my failure, but sometimes it sure feels like it.

Should I have been harder on them about some things? Easier on them about other things? How badly have I damaged their future relationships by my actions? Parent guilt . . . .

So, while you all are often so quick to offer positive words about how I've been as a mom, I fight all this other stuff in my head. Believe it or not though, I am much better. Now that things with Ethan have settled some (hopefully for a very long time) and Asa made it out of high school, it really is pretty much on them, so there's not a whole lot more I can do or fix. I wish I had provided them with the same parents/steady home nuclear family, but I didn't. I wish I had provided them with male role models, but I didn't. I wish I had known what was going on with Ethan, but I didn't. I wish I knew how to motivate Asa, but I don't. And now, it's down to to them, so I pray . . . . a lot. I pray that some things I did were good. I pray that I gave them enough skills to do better than I did. I pray that they won't one day feel the amount of failure I feel. I pray that I did well enough. I love those men I've tried so hard to raise on my own for the last 14 years. When I step back and look at it all, we did accomplish something really important . . . we're here, we've made it this far, and most importantly, they have NEVER doubted my love for them. Even though some days feel terrible, I guess I haven't been a complete failure after all. I love them and they know it.

"If you give people light, they will find their own way."
---  Dante

Friday, June 29, 2018

Post-Travel Depression: It's a real thing . . . .

Just returned from a wonderful vacation! Happy to be in my own bed, my own shower, air conditioning, and the regular use of such novelties as ice. All good, right? Not so fast for some of us.

I love to travel. I'll travel just about anywhere but I really love traveling in Europe. Last week I returned from 10 days in Eastern Europe with two friends and ten of the best high school students I could have ever traveled with. We went to Berlin, Prague, Krakow, Budapest, and even to Auschwitz-Birkenau. It was a pretty much perfect trip. We walked so much my 54 year old feet thoroughly hated me by the time they were given a reprieve, but I could have done more. I could have happily remained traveling for much longer. At 10 days, you're really just hitting your stride, right?  But alas, the day comes and it's time to go home. Traveling home is always unpleasant because it doesn't have the anticipation of beginning a trip but instead the realization that it is back to reality. Yes, I miss my bed, but do I really have to go home? Yes, I miss my A/C and ceiling fans, but I'm adjusting; can't I just stay a little longer?

For me, the depression (and I don't use the word lightly here) begins on the journey back but then really hits about a day later. It's not that I don't want to come back at all, it's the lack of new stimulation, of seeing beautiful and exotic things, of learning about other parts of the world, and no longer being a part of the traveling tribe. When you're traveling in groups, the dissolution of the tribe is much more obvious, but it even happens if you've been traveling alone. In that case, the tribe is the people you've met along the way, the friends you've seen, or even the nice person in the train station who helped navigate you in the right direction when you were lost. The camaraderie of traveling with others is unique. Anyway, I miss all of that.

Although the melancholy is different between group and solo travel, the solo travel is almost harder to recover from for me. In the course of daily life, I often lose sight of my confidence in various things. When I travel alone, I have to navigate everything myself. It can be frustrating, but once done, I always feel confident that I've done so. Most of my individual travel overseas has been in the British Isles, so there hasn't been much of a language barrier. However, one year I decided to go to Italy for a week by myself. Everyone kept asking if I could speak Italian. No. How are you going to get around? I'll figure it out, and I did. I went to Perugia, Florence, and Rome. One slight error along the way though . . . . if you ever go to the amazing little town of Perugia, be sure NOT to get off the train at the first Perugia stop. Wait until you get into the city! I had fallen asleep on the train from Rome and woke up when I heard "Perugia." Naturally, I got off, only to find myself at a small, one building stop in the middle of nowhere with nobody able to speak English and the next train not coming for hours. Well, let's just say that I made it to the city, but it was really stupid of me all the way around. Didn't make that mistake again. Lol. In 1987, the summer after my first year of teaching, I went to England for a month, bought a BritRail pass and just hopped on and off the train wherever I felt like going. It was wonderful! But, I'm getting lost in the adventure again . . . .

My point is, for those of us who really love traveling, whether it's a big trip or a small one, you'll probably experience some post-trip depression, and it's perfectly normal. It means you had a good time. It means you are reliving experiences and people. It means you want to do more. It also means you're now back in reality. It will subside . . . . . as you start planning the next adventure.

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Life is Jenga . . .

The past 12 months have been a bit stressful. New job at a new school, new classes, new colleagues, the day-to-day life struggle of my oldest son, his arrival back in Texas, his almost immediate arrest and 4 months in Tarrant Co. Jail, his release and almost immediate arrest again, now in Denton Co. Jail awaiting a few years in prison, my father's death in November, etc. Then school got out and I thought, "Ok, the year went well, I don't have to worry as much about Ethan's potential death, Asa is good and now going to be a senior. Ok. I can relax now." I was wrong. Nothing else bad happened, it just all hit. The last year, the last 8 years, the last 14 years, it all hit.

In June, I was in Salt Lake City reading AP exams and got altitude sickness. The shortness of breath threw me into an anxiety spin. I've never experienced this before, at least not that I've actually identified. I was afraid I was having another heart attack. I was afraid to go to sleep because I couldn't breathe. I was afraid. Long story short, it was time to get my head back straight with a little help from anti-depressants again.

So, I was telling this story to a friend the other day and the best analogy I could come up with was playing Jenga. We all start out like that firm, sturdy block tower at the beginning of the game. When you first begin to remove and replace the pieces, most people will remove a piece from somewhere in the middle. You choose one that isn't going to dramatically shift the balance because if the tower becomes too unbalanced, it will fall down. So, you very carefully remove a block, place it on the top, and hold your breath for a minute in hopes that the tower remains upright. Whew! Ok, a shift, but still standing. All players continue this routine of removing a piece and placing it on the top of the tower. Each time, there's a little more fear that the tower will fall, which is fine, as long as it's someone else's turn. Lol. In thinking of this analogy, those first, easy to remove blocks are the normal slings and arrows of life which we face every day. They can knock the balance a little, but not enough to knock us all the way over. However, there comes a time in the Jenga game where it's harder to find a piece to remove and when we do find one, it leaves a bigger gap and when placed on top of the tower, the tower sways just a little more. There is still a core of strength, but that strength has been stretched to a height which makes it much more unsound. The problems, the bigger ones are now disintegrating the stability. Yet, still standing, just harder. Eventually, there is no choice but to start pulling blocks from the bottom of the tower. This is the riskiest stage of the game. Every slight finger tap and movement can send it falling. As we go through life, we take hit after hit, problem after problem, sadness after sadness, each time chipping away at the strength of our tower. We get through, we keep going, we don't topple until those bottom pieces bring it all down. Finally, one too many blocks are pulled, and the tower falls. 

In June, my tower had one too many pieces moved and it fell. We all hit that point at times. We all have our gaps of strength and they're all relative. What is a big empty gap for me is someone else's easily moved piece and vice versa. What is important though is what you do with that toppled tower. Just as in the Jenga game itself, you set the tower back up, carefully replacing the pieces, and rebuild the sturdy tower. Then you start playing again. Isn't that life? That center core is the key and if you have a strong one, you can stretch farther, but eventually, the core needs repair. The tower needs a reset. Don't ever just leave your pieces on the floor. If they fall, stack them back up and keep going. Life is Jenga.



Monday, March 20, 2017

A Cautionary Tale . . . .

This is a cautionary tale about raising a child . . . . .

When Ethan was born, it was the most amazing thing to look into his eyes, those "old soul" eyes. I was in love and mesmerized. I saw in him none of the trouble I went through having him; all of that didn't matter anymore. I had the perfect little boy, the child I had always dreamed of. He was an only child for the first four years and it was so much fun watching him grow. He was busy, creative, smart, and had an enormous heart. In many ways, it was just the two of us and we were very bonded. My heart melted even more when I saw the love and attention he gave his little brother when he arrived. This little guy just brought me joy.
Fast forward to age 14. The boys and I had been through some things, divorce, financial struggle, moving across the country, etc., but there was so much potential for our futures. New path, new road, new life,  . . . . and then it all fell apart. As parents, we like to think we know what's going on in the lives of our children, especially the big things. The truth is, there are many things we never know anything about and that are kept well hidden intentionally. Think about it though, most of us had some serious things going on that our parents didn't have a clue about either. What Ethan had hidden though was HUGE! It was all bigger and crazier than I could have ever dreamed up and I was clueless. I was so clueless that it had been going on for two years and I totally missed it. I chalked things up to adolescent male emotions. I just didn't see. If you have known me through the last 8 years, you know most of the story. I've been open and honest about the ugliness of dealing with and loving a child who is a drug addict. I've done it because what happened to Ethan, my beautiful child, can happen in similar ways to anyone. Addiction is the plague of our time, but it has helped me to think I could help any other parent by being open and honest. You already know that though. 

The thing is that sometimes, especially in the last year, some things have just been so ugly that it gets harder to share. Every disappointment and fall is harder to share with everyone who has loved and supported us along the way. Everyone was so happy to see the beautiful picture of Ethan and Asa after Ethan's most recent four months in jail. It was a wonderful few hours with us all together, something I hadn't had in years, and I treasure it. I thought just maybe he was on the right path this time. How many times have I said that in the last 8 years? Too many, but this time . . . .  I knew 3 years of probation was going to be a monumental task for him, but . . . . 
. . . . I expected more than two weeks. Two damn weeks. The first week was good, but I saw him quickly losing focus with all the distractions of a phone, social media, girls, etc. It went so much faster than I expected, and then he was shooting meth again. That was it. Once he used, there was going to be no stopping until he was forced to, and even though part of him rationally got the fact that he was violating probation and that meant back to jail, the switch had already flipped. Because he used, he had to leave where he was staying and there was nowhere else for him to go. There were meth rages on the phone, through Messenger, and even showing up at my house in the middle of the night in a rage that was pretty damn scary. It just all went bad, really bad. He ended up with someone he met that first time he went to juvenile detention at the age of 14. He did things he knew he didn't want to do but did anyway. He knew he couldn't stop . . . . and then he was stopped. He is now safely back in jail, but there's more than just the probation violation now. He's added charges of burglary of a habitation and (this is one that I have the hardest time with) attempted robbery. Fortunately he didn't have a gun when he went into the convenience store, otherwise, this would be a very different scenario. However, I keep thinking of the fear the poor store clerk must have felt when he passed her his note. He took off when a customer came in and didn't get anything. He said he was actually relieved that it was all over. Instead of a few months for a probation violation, there is now no way around doing years.

Who knows how many at this point. It could be a year before he is done with court in both Denton and Tarrant counties, and then we'll find out how many years. So, my beautiful, loving son is going to prison. I hesitated to put this picture here because it is so hard to see, but I find myself looking at it a lot, just letting it sink in. That is my son.

I was relieved when he was arrested because I was no longer waiting for the phone call to say he was dead. But, his life is forever changed in a new way. On one level, I ironically gain freedom while he is locked up. I know there can maybe be a few years of the level part of this damn roller coaster we've been riding. It's not like he can't get drugs in jail or get into trouble, but it's going to be less likely. We will all settle into the new norm. He will hopefully do his time the right way, and if he does, maybe he'll get another chance. Asa will no longer have to worry about his brother showing up and causing chaos and won't feel like he has to protect me. By the time Ethan is out again, Asa will be graduated and on to the next part of his life. I will accept what has become of the son I still love deeply and dearly, just as much as the first day I looked in his eyes, because I know there is so much more to him still. I will also try to ply my way out of the corner I've been shrinking into in the last couple of years as it's all gotten harder and harder. Life goes on and I'll still have hope that it can one day be different. 

Friday, January 27, 2017

Probation

Sitting in the courtroom this morning waiting for Ethan's case to be heard . . . I had flashbacks to all of the hearings back when he was in juvenile detention. It has always amazed me how unlike the TV courtrooms an actual courtroom can be. On the other side of the bar, it is like a busy beehive. Court officials, 20-30 lawyers coming and going, papers being printed and signed, deals being made, and frightened defendants waiting to learn their fate. It's busy and noisy and chaotic.

The first person up is sentenced to 15 years in prison. All I could hear was something about forgery and theft. The next one up got probation, first offence. Next, 2 years, next 5 years. I was having a hard time reading the judge but he spent time talking with each of them, the DUI case, the drug offence, the assault case, etc. He was thoughtful, but I couldn't get any impression of how he might rule on Ethan.

Two hours later, it was finally Ethan's turn. As he came in, I marveled at how good he looks now that he's not on drugs anymore. He's taller, has gained weight, his coloring is good, and his eyes are no longer blank and sad. He's respectful, standing up straight. He looks more humble than pissed off at the world. The judge asks him about his guilty plea and he confirms. The judge asks him how long he's been using drugs and Ethan answers, "8 years, your honor." The judge looks at Ethan's information and responds, questioning the fact that he's only 21 and been using drugs for 8 years. It's still hard to see him in court, before a judge, and facing the things he's done. The judge says that the plea agreement is for 3 years probation, and he asks, "Son, can you do 3 years probation?" That's the million dollar question, isn't it?

So, 3 years probation. If he violates probation, he will get 2-10 years. He will also have to deal with Denton County on those warrants from 2 years ago. They have 10 days to come get him before he's released from Tarrant County, but if they don't come get him, he is committed to turning himself in and taking care of that for a few months if needed. That should just be a matter of sitting time because they weren't felony charges like this one. This is the biggie.

As I've told people what the verdict was today, the question has repeatedly been, "How do you feel about it?" Well . . . . ambivalent. I'm ambivalent. Every time he gets another chance to do it right, I get hopeful, cautiously hopeful. However, we all know the history of those chances. What I can say about each of those times though is that with each one, he was a little older and a little more mature. This time especially, he's even better though. For the first time in 8 years, he's made it 90 days clean!! He is no longer self-medicated or over medicated. He's on one medication for seizures, and that's it. He's discovered he's not bipolar or any of the other million things every place has diagnosed him with and then put him on multiple high dosed medications. I've always argued that he needed to get off of everything to be properly diagnosed, but that's not the way such places work, even when he was in juvie for those years. Anyway . . . . as his mother, I always want to believe that there's another chance and that it'll work. I can't get myself to wish for prison, even if it sometimes seemed like the best thing. But, I'm also scared of him not being able to do the probation. I told him the other night that the even though it's been through glass or over the phone, the last few months with him have been the best in years. He's been the REAL Ethan, and I'm scared of losing that, but I don't want him to go to prison, but I'm scared, but I'm happy, but I'm scared, but I don't want him to go to prison . . . . . hence, ambivalent. I keep randomly crying and I don't know if it's because of the relief or the fear, or maybe it's just the exhaustion of this 8 year battle we've been fighting, a release at the idea that maybe this time this nightmare will end . . . . or fear.

So, here's what I'm going to do. I'm going to think optimistically (even if always a little cautiously) and pray that THIS is the time it all works. The reality is that I'll have that fear for the rest of my life because that's addiction. It will never go away and is a part of us now. But, I'm praying that he continues to grow and that he will learn how to have the life I know he wants and I want for him, as every mother wants for her child. The consequences this time are bigger, and he's aware. So I'll be watching and supporting him, and as always, hoping for the best and loving him.

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Thoughts on my 2016. . . . .

So, here we are at the end of another year. It's the time when we look back and examine our lives, at least the last year. I'm always conflicted by this process though. For the last several years I've been so happy to see the year end in hopes that the next would be better, but on the flip-side, I hate the fact that I'm having to put another year behind me. I'd like to have some of those years back, thank you very much. It's weird when you know there are more years behind than ahead.

Anyway, I can't say that I'm sorry to leave 2016 behind me. It started with sadness, ended with sadness, and had a whole lot of sadness in between. It's been a sad year. We all know that there have been quite a few deeply felt celebrity passings this year, but I can honestly say that starting off the year with the loss of David Bowie really hurt. I think for people my age, it's been hard to lose those who have been such a staple in our lives, and it reminds of our own mortality. Wait, so-and-so was only X number of years older than me? What? It's like our youth and illusions about our age are pulled out from under us, the band-aid is quickly and painfully ripped off. After Bowie died, I played nothing but my Bowie collection on my iPod until I went through all of it. It took exactly a month. In the process, I said silent thank yous for all of the memories the music brought me. Of all those celebrity passings, aside from Bowie, Gene Wilder and John Glenn hit me the hardest. Gene Wilder is such a part of my youth, and I NEVER tire of watching Young Frankenstein or Willy Wonka ( or Blazing Saddles, or . . . ) And then John Glenn, well, a life-long hero who was priceless to me in many ways. I'm glad I lived in John Glenn land (aka New Concor, OH) for so many years and that I had the enormous pleasure of meeting him on several occasions. All my dreams of space were tied up in him from such an early age. However, he did teach me that if he can go to space at the age of 77, I still have time to get up there, and I will.

2016 also continued to have its share of sadness in relation to Ethan. We saw some of the darkest times yet. So many young lives cut short by addiction, and I felt each alongside him both by knowing these sweet souls and by watching Ethan hurt. At the same time, always wondering how HE managed to survive. There is a certain survivor's guilt that plays here as I've come to know these parents who have lost their precious children. The last few months with his longest near death overdose, the loss of Kindle, of Alison, and his eventual arrest and time in jail have been harder than I can explain. But here he is, in jail, but alive. He has turned some corners in the last couple of months and I pray constantly that he will be able to stay on new paths. I pray, I love him, and I keep faith.

This was also a year of ugliness. We saw one of the most disgusting election cycles ever, certainly of my lifetime. The whole thing, all of it, was a terrible example of what we're capable of in the ugliest ways. We are so much better than we showed ourselves to be. We also saw ugliness through many examples of violence: Orlando, France, Dallas, Baton Rouge, etc. We can be such horrible creatures sometimes, but then out of such tragedies, we also saw some great love. I wish the great love stayed around longer. We have got to stop being offended by everything though! If we ever want to see brighter days, we have to learn how to listen to differences without taking offense, without belittling, without confrontation, without yelling, without seeing everything as right or wrong, and without the horrible habit of insult which has plagued our society.

2016 was a year of change. I spent the first part of the year more miserable than ever at work. I called or emailed the lawyers at TCTA (teacher's "union") at least once a week. I seriously contemplated leaving teaching altogether. Some were convincing me that I was no longer good at it and didn't have much to offer anymore. I'm sad to say that I let them convince me of it. But then I decided to give it one more effort, and it worked. I found a new job, got away from the toxicity, and spent the last half of the year feeling like maybe I still have some to offer. It's been a good change! Other changes include a new car, Asa getting his driver's license, and Ethan turning 21. Change is a challenge sometimes, but these were good changes and worth the challenge.

I'm trying really hard to bring something positive in here so it isn't just an endless stream of downers, but it's a struggle for me. I will readily admit that I'm pretty deeply depressed these days. The biggest blow to my already fragile heart this year was the loss of my father a week before Thanksgiving. I'm not sad for him because he's fine now. I'm wallowing in my own sadness. It's been too much this year, I think, and with each hit I've retreated a little farther into a corner of isolation. My corner has become very small and very far away. I've kept to myself more, which is unusual for me in some ways. I tire of the pity others sometimes feel for me, even if it really is genuine sympathy. I'm tired of feeling like the only things I have to say are sad, so I don't say much at all. I don't want to get into the dark place in which I'm currently residing, but I won't leave you on that sad note. In the end, I know this period is temporary. I will somehow manage to pull myself out of it, but it's a deeper hole so it might take a little longer. In the meantime, as I hang my new calendar for 2017, I will look at it as a new start, as I always do. Things will change, I'll get glimmers of hope and renewed faith. Maybe I'll get back to New Orleans for a recharging since it's been well over a year now. I'll force myself to do some things differently, to go on some new adventures, even if it's something as exciting as driving to Lincoln, NE last March just because that would cap off my list of visiting all of the 48 contiguous states. I'll think of something. I'll make an effort to get out more, to find some joy again. I'll work on focusing on the positives. I'll try to do all those things, and mostly, I'll have hope that 2017 is going to be a better year for me, for my family and friends, and for this world.

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Visitation . . .

This time, it's a complex of former warehouses which have been converted. I enter the heavy metal door, approach the little basket with 1x4 inch strips of paper and begin to fill in his name, his CID number, and birthdate. From behind the thick glass window, I am motioned to slide the paper and my ID through the invisible slot at the bottom of the glass. There actually is a slit there, but it's not visible to the naked eye. He types in my information and then says slot 21 and gestures to my right. . . . .

 . . . .  At the last place, I filled out the same little slip of paper but there was no window, then was sent around the corner to get a thickly laminated sign with a number on it. I approach the elevator and show my sign with the #7 to the camera above my head. The elevator opens and I show the sign again to the camera in the elevator. When the elevator opens I go to the booth with the corresponding letter, also on my sign. I sit on the metal stool and wait for him to come through the door to the booth on the opposite side of the glass. He comes in, we pick up our telephone handsets, and begin. . . .

 . . . . at the new place, I find slot 21, sit on the metal stool, and wait. It takes almost 20 minutes before he arrives. As I sit there, my ears are ringing from the noise of the group down the way. If I didn't know better, I'd think they were at a party having a great time. Perhaps this is all too commonplace for them, but it still isn't for me, even after all these times. Instead of the noise, I focus on the surroundings. This time, there is no phone handset. By watching the people next to me, I realize that there are built in speakers on both sides of the windows. I say speakers, but it's really just an amplification, kind of like when we used to tie two paper cups to a string and talk to each other. Then I notice the gooey swatch of orange stuff on the window in front of me. I don't even want to know, I'll just avoid that spot. Across the glass from me are the thick cage bars you expect to see. As I watch them come and go in and out of the barred openings to meet with their visitors, I see all kinds of men, all colors, all ages, all various stages of tough appearance.

I'm listening to the people next to me. A grandmother with a little girl, little boy, and an adult daughter. They are there to visit her son, the father of the two kids. The tattooed young man behind the glass can't be more than 25 years old. The little boy says, "Daddy, can we come visit you some other place next time? It's boring coming here." Brings tears to my eyes. I'm fragile already because I know I'll have to tell Ethan about the loss of yet another one of his friends, but I suck it up because I don't want to greet him with tears. When he finally arrives, he knows I've got bad news, and I tell him. His tears come immediately, his face turns red, and he sobs into his elbow, but he can't allow himself to do it for long. He can't show that sign of "weakness" in there.

 . . . . As we visit, I think of all the times I've had to visit Ethan in the last 7 or so years. I've been visiting him for a third of his life in some secured environment. The first time was at the short-term "care" (and I use the term very loosely) facility when he first asked for help at the age of 14. Asa was only 10 then, and when I couldn't find someone to keep him during visitation, I had to leave him in the waiting room with his Gameboy while I went back because he was too young to visit. Of course, he was too young to be left up front, and they called me on it a couple of times. Were there options? Then, traveling up to the state hospital in Wichita Falls, entering through the security gate, the tall fence with barbed wire, all the metal lock-ups, etc. Visitation at the juvenile detention center here in town. Metal doors, jumpsuits, shackles, cuffs, etc, etc, etc. Visitation at a couple of other adolescent rehab centers. Visitation at the state hospital in Vernon. An attempted visit at one of the first adult rehabs in Florida before he took off again. Visitation a month ago in another rehab in Florida. Most parents look forward to visiting their kids at college or in their first apartment. I haven't had that luxury yet. Hopefully one day. But for now . . . .

 . . . . He tells me that the noise we're trying to talk over, from the group down the way, is constant in there. The large space consists of something like six giant cages, or pods. In each pod, there are 24 men. I have no idea how many of the warehouse buildings are full of these. It's always noisy and the lights are always on. He says he is spending a lot of time reading, especially the Bible again. (Jail tends to bring him to that, the ideas just need to stick.) He says that he begins his day with a 54-year-old heroin addict who leads him in Bible study. He ponders all of the poison noise he's put into his brain over the years along with all the poison substance he's put in his body. He also spends a lot of time reading other things, mainly history books.

 . . . He thinks about his friend again and the tears roll down his cheeks for a minute. He asks the inevitable and constant question, "Why are all of them dead and I'm still here, Mom?" I answer as I always do that this is what he's supposed to figure out. He suffers from survivor's guilt, and I too suffer from parental survivors guilt. It is haunting sometimes. I've met too many parents who have lost their children to addiction, yet mine is one of the worst addicts I know, and he's still here. I know that it's not "right." Somehow, he always survives. I have no idea how.

, , , Our time is up and the guard unlocks the bars for him to leave. We do the classic hand touch through the glass and say our I love yous. He puts his hands behind his back and is escorted back to his cell. I leave the facility, but before I can head back home, I have to go to downtown Ft. Worth to the main jail to put some money on his books. Each time I've been there I've been astonished at the number of homeless who appear to live there on the sidewalks and just outside the doors. I suppose it's a safe place for them, or perhaps they simply have nowhere to go. I fill out another little slip of paper for the deposit, make the payment, and head back home. I'm not sad that Ethan is in jail. It's saving his life right now. I am sad though that it has taken him so many times of being locked up in an institution, in a rehab, and in his own addiction to buy him this clean time and another opportunity to make a life for himself. Maybe someday I'll still get to visit him in his grown-up apartment. As long as he's alive, there is that chance.