Culture My Son Was in a Psychiatric Hospital. Why Was I Celebrating? - In the midst of a family crisis, a writer contemplates whether heartache and joy can coexist.

My Son Was in a Psychiatric Hospital. Why Was I Celebrating?

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By Kristina Kuzmič
May 22, 2024, 5:02 a.m. ET

My 40th birthday celebration had been in the works for months. The plan was as follows: On Friday, my husband was throwing a party for me in the private room of a hillside restaurant with gorgeous views of Los Angeles. Our closest friends and family would be there. Philip had hired a D.J., rented a photo booth, ordered a three-tiered chocolate cake and picked out an eclectic menu of my favorite dishes.

Then, from Saturday through Monday, I’d take a road trip to Santa Barbara with three of my closest friends.

But life doesn’t happen in a vacuum where we can focus on just one plotline: The days leading up to my birthday were anything but celebratory.

The Tuesday before my birthday, our family situation reached the point where I called the police on my 15-year-old son Luka. He had been struggling with clinical depression and suicidal ideation, and had been self-medicating with substances for the last few years. The officers took him to the emergency room where, on Wednesday, I saw him before he was transferred to a psychiatric hospital. On Thursday, I was allowed to visit him there.

I’d been excited about turning 40. I love birthdays. When Luka turned 6 months, I decided we should celebrate half birthdays. I baked him half a cake and sang half of the “Happy Birthday” song (every other syllable, because complicating things is one of my gifts).

I kept up the tradition when my daughter Matea was born almost two years later. And after I met and married Philip, and we welcomed our son Ari, Matea and Luka took pride in teaching him our half-birthday song.

But now I was lost at sea with no energy to paddle and no land in sight. I told Philip to call everything off — the party, my girls’ trip.

“We can do whatever you want,” he said. “But I don’t think you should cancel.”

“This feels wrong,” I said. I couldn’t imagine turning my gaze away from Luka.

“Luka is safer than he’s been in months,” Philip said. “He’s with people who are trained to help him. He can’t run away. He can’t hurt himself.”

“And you deserve a break,” he added.

Philip gently convinced me to go through with the entire weekend. But at the party, surrounded by love, I could barely touch my food. I was trying to keep it together, especially for Ari and Matea, who clearly wanted the celebration to be special. Ari had worn his favorite superhero cape, and Matea had bravely decided to give a toast in my honor. Still, I kept wishing Luka were with us. He was supposed to be there too, right next to me.

All of our guests knew Luka had been struggling, and some even knew why he wasn’t present. Still, I felt a responsibility to make sure the party was fun. I felt pressure to reassure everyone that we were fine, so no one felt bad for my son or our family.

I should be researching the best ways to help Luka, I thought while forcing smiles. I should be reading a book on mental health. I should be compiling questions for the doctors and the therapists. I should be a better mother.

Eventually, a friend who could probably see that I was only half there, pulled me onto the dance floor, and I completely let loose. I danced until I had blisters on my feet and sweat dripping down my back. It was as if my body was trying to release the emotions it had collected over the past few years. And it felt good. Really good. Then, right after it felt good, it felt really bad.

Everyone was dancing. Their joy was a reminder that our family was surrounded by people who saw us as more than the heartache of the last few months. Still, my love and worry interrupted the moment: What kind of mom dances while her son is in a hospital?

I left for my road trip the following morning. Luka’s hospital was between our house and Santa Barbara. So each day we were away, I planned to drive there. I let my friends know that I’d be gone for three hours: One hour to drive there, one hour with him (the strict time limit imposed by the hospital), one hour to drive back.

But on our first day my friend Jo beat me to the driver’s seat; my friends Cat and Amy hopped in the back. Instead of lounging by the pool, shopping or exploring Santa Barbara, they drove me to the hospital, dropped me off, and then waited for me while I was with my son.

After each visit, I returned to that car and fell apart, releasing the tears I held back while visiting Luka. I cried and worried and vented and hoped. They listened. They encouraged me. And then, they gently guided me back to laughter and joy.

***

Ten days later, Luka was transferred to a residential treatment center, a move that brought a glimmer of hope and demanded another layer of resolve.

After his intake appointment, I found myself driving straight to my friend Zach’s apartment. I didn’t plan this detour, but Zach was like a brother to me, and our friendship always brought me comfort.

Decompressing with him after visits became a ritual: We’d eat Thai food followed by snacks from the produce drawer in his fridge (which had zero produce in it because it was filled with candy).

Over cold Andes mints and Kit Kats, we’d chat about our week. Sometimes I didn’t want to talk about Luka. Other times I’d unload completely. And on one visit, I admitted that I still felt guilty for celebrating my birthday while Luka was hospitalized.

Zach paused to look at me. “Don’t feel bad,” he said. “You did him a favor.”

“You gave him one less thing to carry,” he said.

With a deep breath, Zach explained that back in high school, when he was struggling with depression, he was awful to his mother. Almost two decades had passed, and their relationship was strong, but the pain he felt was still sharp.

“If she’d canceled her birthday,” he said, still holding my gaze, “I’d have even more to still feel guilty about.”

I sat in silence imaging Luka — not as my baby but as a man looking back. How would he reflect on this time in his life? How did I want to contribute to his memories? Did I want to give him more pain or regret to carry?

Somewhere along the way, I’d learned that if my loved ones were suffering, I, too, needed to suffer. Once Luka was happy, then I’d be happy. Once Luka was healthy, then I could be healthy. Once Luka was able to live his life fully, then I would fully live mine.

But what if my child was never completely healthy? That was a lot of pressure to put on a person.

Life is messy. It keeps moving forward. It doesn’t pause because my son is depressed. His struggles are a big, vital part of the picture. But they are not my entire story. I am allowed more than one emotion at a time. Pain and joy can coexist.

So much has happened to our family in the five years since that milestone birthday. Luka has charted his own path toward healing: He graduated from high school, got his license and a car he bought with money from the job he pursued, interviewed for and landed. He has an amazing girlfriend, and even on his hard days he savors every minute of joy. Matea, too, has graduated, and Ari is becoming a young man. Phillip and I finally feel like we can take more time to enjoy our marriage.

Our family life feels a bit more balanced; Luka is no longer the main character of the most rapidly evolving plotline: We’ve all got room to shine.

Recently, I asked Luka what he thought of my decision to host a birthday party while he was hospitalized. Despite wanting to seem cool, I braced myself for his reaction, whatever it might be. Luka just smiled and told me I deserved it.

He was right.

Kristina Kuzmič is a speaker known for her insights on parenting and family. This essay is adapted from her book “I Can Fix This: And Other Lies I Told Myself While Parenting My Struggling Child” (Penguin Life).

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Source : https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/22/well/mind/family-mental-health-hospital.html
 
Kristina Kuzmič is a speaker known for her insights on parenting and family. This essay is adapted from her book “I Can Fix This: And Other Lies I Told Myself While Parenting My Struggling Child” (Penguin Life).
My 40th birthday celebration had been in the works for months. The plan was as follows: On Friday, my husband was throwing a party for me in the private room of a hillside restaurant with gorgeous views of Los Angeles.
The Tuesday before my birthday, our family situation reached the point where I called the police on my 15-year-old son Luka. He had been struggling with clinical depression and suicidal ideation, and had been self-medicating with substances for the last few years.
40 year old narcissistic Karen + LA = Drug addict ("self-medicating" my ass you cunt) mentally ill child

Its amazing how everyone in LA is incapable of comprehending such a simple formula for disaster.
 
He was right.
You spent an entire article-a great deal of which is liberally embellished and exaggerated, I'm sure-pretending to wrestle with the quandary of celebrating your birthday while your son was in a psych ward just to arrive at this stunning conclusion, you selfish fucking sun-fried Los Angeles cunt. Shove your head up your own ass a little deeper, maybe you'll disappear entirely and make the world a better place.
 
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The Tuesday before my birthday, our family situation reached the point where I called the police on my 15-year-old son Luka. He had been struggling with clinical depression and suicidal ideation, and had been self-medicating with substances for the last few years.
So since age 12.
It can't be since 14, because that's one year.
It can't be since 13, because that's only a couple, not a few.

...How the fuck does a 12-year old buy drugs? Why hasn't someone called CPS on this woman?
 
Searching around for this woman, she has a ton of pictures of herself, with maybe a few of her family. Luka could grow up to be a chad if he ever throws off the influence of his narcissistic mother and finds a father who doesn't look like a total pushover who lets her rule the roost. I can't really discern exactly what she does for a living, I've seen "travel vlogger", "comedian", "motivational speaker"., and "author". I wonder who buys her books.
So since age 12.
It can't be since 14, because that's one year.
It can't be since 13, because that's only a couple, not a few.

...How the fuck does a 12-year old buy drugs? Why hasn't someone called CPS on this woman?
Beat me to it, I was going to point out that he had to be 12 or even younger when he started. As for where and how he gets them, this is southern California we're talking about, there could be a million explanations on how he got the drugs. He could have been medicated legally by doctors for whatever trendy, over-diagnosed mental illness for kids to get them hooked on pharma poisons as early as age 3 (with such a narcissist for a mother, it definitely figures), then switched to whatever drug marketplace connected to any number of social media sites people are getting prescription or street drugs from.
 
this is framed as one of those challenging-your-preconceptions articles, which makes it sound douchier than it is. as somebody who's dealt extensively with a self-destructive sadbrain, that personality type is exhausting in a way that's difficult to understand from the sidelines. trying to keep somebody afloat when they're determined to drown themselves is absolutely torturous, especially when you love them and you have no choice but to continue to suffer their selfish depressive fantasies because the very idea of letting go is unthinkable. it hurts you to see them in pain, so you try desperately to cheer them up or do nice things for them, and it always seems like it's going into a bottomless pit that never fills up. they always find reasons to tear themselves down, to convince themselves that you don't actually care, that the world and life itself is set against them. in my case, it was a (now ex) girlfriend who finally beat me down enough that I managed to disentangle myself from her. if it's your kid, there is no escape. you just have to hope and pray that a day will come when they actually want to get better.

40 year old narcissistic Karen + LA = Drug addict ("self-medicating" my ass you cunt) mentally ill child
If you're celebrating when your child was self medicating with substances for years when he's only 15 you're probably the one that needed to go to the psych ward long before him.
If the hubby wasn't some nutless jellyfish, he should pack up, grab the kids, and get them(himself too) away from the narcissistic/enabling nutjob. Best outcome would be for her to be committed to a mental institute.
Because OP is a psychotic bitch?

sure, maybe. but let me propose an alternate scenario: this kid has had these suicidal tendencies for years, apropos of nothing. nothing works, not trying to reason with him, or sending him to counseling, or whatever else you can try. but then one day he gets some weed from a classmate and it calms him the fuck down. should you let your kid smoke weed when they're that young? well, I wouldn't, but I'm guessing the average rich California lib might have a different view on the matter. or maybe, even though she doesn't like it, she finds it difficult to say no to getting a break from watching her son suffer at his own hands.

stress turns you into a different person. and one of the most stressful things in life is watching somebody you love suffer constantly and being completely unable to do anything to help no matter how hard you try. my ex had suicidal episodes that had me pulling all-nighters during the work week, she would do shit like fly into hysterics and lock herself in the bathroom with a knife, or try to sneak out the front door after I fell asleep. I had to hide the knives, lock the medicine cabinet, keep alcohol out of the house, etc. just in case she had an episode. it broke me down. my brain knew the only way out was dumping her, but even in the worst moments I couldn't endure the thought of it. it took years and years and years of that shit to finally grind me down to the point where I could even realistically consider it. in the meantime, I found myself doing all sorts of shit I never thought I was capable of. I've always passive and soft-spoken IRL, but I found myself getting in screaming fights with her often during the last few years. I always thought myself above hitting a woman, but I had to leave the room to stop myself from slapping the shit out of her on multiple occasions. her bullshit was overpowering me and making me worse.

when you do everything you can to prove to somebody that you love them, only for them to flash you a sad little smile and say you should let them kill themselves because it'll make your life better, totally ignoring the fact that you suffer that shit willingly to help them defeat that feeling and escape their downward spiral... and then you realize that what they really want, more than anything else, is for you to agree with them, insult them, make them feel like shit, stop trying to hold on to them, because their one true love is their depression and all its tragic fantasies, and you can never hope to measure up or surpass it... that's when the madness starts to creep in. all I'm saying is, maybe this lady deserves her vacation.
 
Good theory and all, but her history as a self described "author, comedian, travel vlogger, motivational speaker", with a shit ton of pictures of herself and hardly any of her family reeks of narcissism. When your kid gets into drugs at TWELVE or YOUNGER then at that point you're the person to blame for failing that badly as a parent.
 
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