Posted in Adoption

This Hurting Moms Rant

I sat across the table and couldn’t believe what I was hearing, even though I knew it was what I was going to hear. I have spent the last four years trying everything I could to help my little one, well all three of my littles. I have done therapy, I have done attachment camps, seminars, conferences, books, and all have left me feeling more lost and defeated thinking there is no real help for my child. I have spent the last six years holding off the formal diagnosis not wanting to label her at such a young age, not wanting her to always be seen as her diagnosis but rather as a smart little girl, who has been hurt and deserves the chance to overcome those hurts. Now as I sat across the table at the IEP meeting I have been trying so hard to not to have, with the formal diagnosis I have not wanted to be seen and hear “I am sorry, by Federal law this diagnosis ops her out of an IEP. Our hands are tied.” In the midst of all that has happened in our state in the last week, I am told “We can’t help your family in this way because laws keep us from being able to”. If ever I have wanted to scream profanity in a school setting it was then. My daughter, who not only meets all eight of the criteria (which is rare the school psychologists informs the rest of the group, it is usually only three to four are met) for the diagnosis she is old enough to be given, but meets criteria they can only diagnosis as an adult, and she is unable to receive the help she needs, no we need, because she can control who she shows her behaviors to.

“I am sorry, by Federal law this diagnosis ops her out of an IEP. Our hands are tied.”

I cannot begin to count all of the mothers and fathers out there that are screaming for help for our children. Begging for there to be more help then there is. Crying to teachers, caseworkers, therapists, psychologists, doctors, family members, pastors, anyone who will listen to them, and we are unable to get the help we need. Every news story that hits of a young child who has shot their parents, threatened their school, or killed themselves in the mountains of Colorado after not being able to carry out their plan, I read countless posts of hurting moms asking why can’t we be taken serious before the tragedy that is mental health takes a life!? Mental health is not something that can be helped in the gym, it isn’t a class that can be taught in school, it isn’t something that can be taken care of at a weekend conference. It is a real struggle to those who have it and those who care for them. In most it is more like a disease than a controllable behavior. How do we care for the disease in its early stages? How do we help heal our littles before the tragedy hits? How do we shine a light in the darkness our kids live in? How can schools hands be tied with one of the scariest mental health diagnosis’ a family can receive? Unlike diseases that are acknowledged as such, our children’s disease not only hurts them, it hurts those around them, and not just emotionally. They come after their parents, their siblings, their pets, their neighbors, their teachers, and their classmates. Yet, our hands are tied.

The choices we are given as parents to help our children don’t have private rooms with a bed that pulls out for mom and dad, with Disney characters on the wall, and sweet nurses that smile at them and gently offer their healing medicine. Nope, they have shared rooms of other kids screaming in the night, white walls with nothing in the rooms but their beds, no extra bed for mom and dad because we aren’t allowed to stay with them, and nurses trained in holding them down as they try to hurt all of those around them. We as the parents aren’t spoken to in soft understanding voices by the doctors letting us know the treatment plan and how we are going to do everything we can to kick this diseases butt. No, we are left at home in tears and guilt with no real idea on how we are ever going to help our child heal or even get the disease under control. We don’t have meal chains set up to be dropped off in our time of hurting, we don’t have GoFundMe pages set up by friends in the community to help pay for the places we would send our kids for help if only we could afford it, we don’t have people offering to come sit with our kids while mom and dad go out and take a break (and even when we do they don’t have the training needed to be able to) no we have judgmental eyes on our house because we are that family. The one our neighbors will say “I always knew there was something wrong with that kid.” when the tragedy that is mental health hits. We are a group of hurting parents who long for a real light to shine on the world we live in, praying for those in power to hear our cries and start trying to figure out how to really help our kids, a community tired of lives being taken senselessly. I am a mom of children with mental health issues, I am a mom who just might have some mental health issues because of that and so I write………………