|
|
|
|
|
by earl
5101 days ago
|
|
Did you read the article? Before the first hospitalization, the father had already repeatedly assaulted the mother. Convinced that nameless people were trying to kill him, he slept
no more than an hour or two a night and started drinking after
five years of sobriety. When his suspicions grew to include his
immediate family, he became violent and threatened suicide. At
one point, he tried to jump out of the car as my mother was driving
down the highway on the way to the doctor’s office. On another day,
he poured motor oil over her windshield as she was pulling out of
the garage. More than once, he hit her. More than once, he
threatened to burn the house down.
The author also pointed out her father is a 250lb man who presumably is significantly physically stronger than her mother. So it's quite clear why they didn't want him going home. Further, in the emergency room In the emergency room, he grew belligerent, shoving a doctor and
nearly punching an orderly. That’s when he was injected with Haldol
and sent to PESS.
etc etc. And it isn't hard to see the author's torment at being forced to do this to her father. |
|
That guilt, torment, and second guessing of yourself is one of the terrible things that result when trying to take care of a mentally ill person. Unless you've actually been there, and been there, and been there, and been there again you can't understand how the experience wears you down.
I'm a empathetic and patient person, and I have had to make the same sorts of decisions the author describes. There are no good answers - only less terrible ones, and even those you are not sure of.