We don't make a big thing of Mother's Day in our family. Not for want of me trying, of course... but there is only so much one sulking woman can do. This year Julie made me a nice card, I got some chocolates from Joe, and I considered myself lucky.
I spent most of the day itself playing the "distract Julie from herself" game. It is a bit of a thankless task some days, especially during the doldrums of a change of medication. On Sunday morning, she was particularly disinclined to move or eat. Woebegone is the only description that fits. It took a fair amount of gentle bullying to get her to eat breakfast, and then move around a little bit. Thank heavens for Wii Fit and its slightly surreal choice of games. Might have been a ghost of a smile when I got trashed performing a virtual ski jump (Eddie the Eagle style)? Who knows. Then on to a little bit of art followed by a healthy (and low-calorie) lunch.
After an afternoon spent gently buzzing around the local villages visiting a supermarket here, and a farmer's market there, I towed Julie home. She seemed bored and grumpy, but not visibly distressed. Hanging on in there, I would have said. Joe volunteered to drive her back to the hospital before dinner, as planned.
Julie's present to me for Mother's Day was kept well-hidden until Joe had driven away from the hospital grounds. I got an urgent phone call from the hospital: she had discovered some stashed paracetamol at home and swallowed them just before leaving the house. No wonder she had been so anxious to leave! It was timed, I suppose, to make sure that it was the hospital staff who had to take her to A&E, and not me. A present of sorts, I suppose.
I asked the staff three questions. My first question was "How the hell did she find any paracetamol?" I have been so careful to remove every box from every cupboard that no one in the house can actually find one when a headache strikes. For a while I found it so hard to believe that she could have found some, that I seriously doubted that she had taken any at all. I thought it must be some sort of strange hoax: her idea of a laugh on the staff. But no - apparently one of us had left some tucked down the inside of a bedside drawer, probably left there and forgotten in the small hours after waking to some ache or pain or other, possibly years ago. She must have the eyes of a hawk. The second question was "When on earth did she manage to do it?" I remembered suddenly how anxious she had been for me to stay downstairs while she went upstairs to fetch her bag; it must have been the work of a moment, my punishment for listening to my knees complain about trailing upstairs after her yet again. For the record, my third question was not "Why?" (There is just no point asking.) My third question was actually "How many?". Eight tablets again (about half a pack): the number she managed to metabolise just fine last time she tried this two weeks ago. Fortunately she was lucky again this time.
She phoned me from the A&E department very contrite. I tried to rant a bit - did she know what liver damage looked like? did she think we could go to Paris together if she pulled this sort of stunt? - but my heart wasn't really in it. These overdoses do not seem to have any meaning to them, at least not for me. There is no point me trying to create a meaning for them, by pretending to feel outraged or offended. I just feel a bit disappointed; they are probably the nail in the coffin for our trip to Paris together. The fact is, I'm not sure these overdoses mean that much to Julie either - as teenagers we all did risky or silly things, and they didn't mean very much at the time. She's not herself, she's feeling really depressed because of the change of medication, she can't live with her family, she is under permanent supervision by adults: hell, I think I would probably act out a bit at her age in those circumstances. It's just bad luck for her that she can't do anything in private these days - everything she does is scrutinised and written down.

I'm catching up on your blog Juliesmum and have to admit I'm a bit lost for words which is quite normal for me when I'm touched by what I have read. I hope you take this as a compliment to your writing. I can only reiterate other peoples comments about your dedication to your daughter - it shines through your writing. As for Julie; I really hope that new medication will start to workk and she'll feel better soon.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea what it must be like to parent a child with such severe difficulties though your blog provides a hugely important insight into his rarely discussed area. One of my daughter's friends is an in-patient with mental healt issues (also has aspergers syndrome) so your writing helps me to understand what her mum and dad must be going through.
Thankyou for sharing. Deb at aspieinthefamily.com
Thank you Deb - it's comments like that that help keep me going through some of the rougher patches. I hope the medication works eventually - it would be nice to get back to the point I reached a few months ago where I didn't have that much to write about and wondered if it was time to stop! At the moment, the blog is immensely helpful in sorting out my own responses to each situation as it unfolds.
DeletePs. Always enjoy reading your blog - and find it very inspiring.
Some years back I took smaller overdoses and presented to A&E. I think the most I took in one go was a box of paracetamol (16) but for someone of my weight it never caused me any problems. Looking back now I am not 100% sure why I did it, only that I was in emotional distress and mostly the OD’s were took after a difficult day in therapy, or the day afterwards... I knew such an amount would not harm me per se but of course, if it is done frequently it will cause harm.
ReplyDeleteIt’s sad Julie found the drugs when you thought they were all hidden, but this is not your fault, my form of self harm is food and often I will go to any extreme to obtain food to junk on, it is a case of needs must even if we know it harms us.
Fingers crossed Julie is ok, I shall keep you in my thoughts x
This is interesting to me - I do suspect her ODs are related to self-harm. I notice they're often treated differently by staff - there is a lot of concern about them because of the possibility that they are a suicide attempt - but I'm not sure they are. I have to wonder if part of their appeal is actually the amount of fuss they cause, in a perverse sort of way. And as you point out, there are so many ways of self-harming or self-sabotaging.
DeleteHi, I'm enjoying reading your blog. I decided to comment on the overdosing thing...when I was first mentally unwell, and living on my own I overdosed twice on psych meds and presented to A&E. Since then, if you'd ask me, I'd say I was attempting suicide, but I think it is a little more complex than that. The first time I didn't really do anything to myself, as I took so little, and the second time, though I tried to do damage, I failed to take into account my weight. I suspect, as I was self-harming rather obsessively at the time, that it was at least in part a self harm thing, not just a suicide attempt. More a "I can't deal with this, and I need it to stop somehow" whether that be by A&E staff or fatally I don't know.
ReplyDeleteI am quite glad that I was miles away from my parents at the time, as I can (now) imagine it would have been awful for them.
Sorry to ramble on, but this is an interesting blog, as I only really know mental-ness from the perspective of a sufferer.
Thanks Emma. It's helpful for me to have the insight into how it feels as the sufferer too! Since Julie is quite young and sometimes not that good at putting experiences into words, I can be left quite puzzled by some of these experiences. Thanks for commenting.
DeleteThank you for writing this amazing blog.
ReplyDeleteI hope that you, Julie and the rest of your family are doing as well as possible
Scarlet x
Thanks Scarlet!
Delete