Showing posts with label non-adoption drama. Show all posts.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Happy Holidays! And a mini-update.

I have a lot of stuff to catch up on. 

Summing up: my cousin had another really bad breakdown, which we think is exacerbated by involvement in a particular local 12-step group that has mutated into something secretive, hierarchical and cultlike. Then we had an extended-family dispute over Thanksgiving that was very depressing to me, but I'm not going to talk about it any more.

I received some documentation on BB that states he was meth-exposed, which I half expected.  I did not expect that learning about BB's medical issues would give me so much insight into Sunny's issues. Really, it's like a lightbulb went off in my head. We don't have much medical info on Sunny beyond basic hospital stuff, because he didn't come into foster care until he was almost three.  But by all accounts, he had almost exactly the same issues as an infant that BB is having now.

On advice from Tubaville, I'm going to make an appointment with a neurologist ASAP.  This makes me really sad for Sunny. Much of his behavior must come from the fact that his brain was literally damaged by  destructive chemicals. Again, it's a possibility that was always in the back of mind, but I never really brought it to the front.  It's up there in the front right now, for sure. And unlike ADHD, which I feel confident about discussing widely, meth-exposure has a greater stigma, and so that raises huge privacy issues for me.  If this blog goes private for a while, that will probably be the reason why. On the other hand, this is really, incredibly important stuff for other parents to know about, and we stay ignorant when we don't listen AND talk... it's hard to say.

We're also halfway through a med change for Sunny.  We're switching from an atypical antipsychotic to an anticonvulsive. It's supposed to have less potential side effects, but Sunny has already been complaining of stomach pain, which is really worrying me. We're going to keep it up because so far the pains have been intermittent, haven't affected his appetite at all and there's a chance they'll go away as his body adjusts to the new medication.  He has a new diagnosis -- IED -- and if you know what that stands for, it's sort of a baloney diagnosis, but then again I take all these diagnoses with a grain of salt.

I'm mostly keeping up with my fitness plan. I'm getting burned out on Debbie Siebers but I still do Burn It Up a couple times a week and I'm exercising at least 5 days a week. 

So far Christmas is going OK.  I IMed my dad in Hawaii the other day and wished him a Mele Kalikimaka (Hawaiian for Merry Christmas).  I expected him to IM back something like "I don't believe in that garbage" or "you will burn in hellfire forever".  Instead, he wished me a Mele Kalikimaka right back!  He really has mellowed a lot in his old age.  Maybe one day he'll even buy me a present on Christmas, or let me buy one for him.

We're going to have a small Christmas, and my cousin is getting a day pass from her clinic to join us.  Sunny has been tracking Santa and making calculations about the chimney size.  I'm a bit stressed but staying in good spirits.

I'd also like to congratulate Thorn, who has a special visitor this season.

Monday, November 30, 2009

ARGH!

Non-adoption family drama is peaking. I'm extremely angry and upset about certain developments involving certain family members. I'll have to wait until things settle down a bit before posting a blog update, because I need some distance.

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

I Suck at Support

I thought I'd mention this in relation to the last post.

My cousin (here's my last long post about her) has been up and down. She hasn't had a major attack in a while. Her disability checks finally started coming in, so her financial situation is better.

My mother went to therapy with her earlier this week. My cousin mentioned that she was very intimidated by me, and I often made her feel insecure, even though she said she knew it wasn't my fault.

For example, recently my cousin told my mother and me that the therapist did a budget with her, and she felt like it was a really great step. I said, "Awesome! Now all you have to do is stick to it."

In light of the fact that I'd made her a budget last year that she never followed, apparently my words really hurt her.

From my perspective, it's hard to know what to do about things like that. I'm a straightforward person, and I'm not good at reading other people's emotions and predicting their reactions. I thought I was doing well because I never once nagged her about not sticking to my original budget. In that original financial advising session I told her she should cut out all salon expenses, and then a few months later I saw she got a new weave, and I never said anything. Using a budget is 10% formulation and 90% follow-through... that's all I wanted to stress to her.

She doesn't blame me, I don't blame her, but our relationship is not what it could be.

I tend to think she's a lot more secure than she really is. That's a common issue with her. She used to be a high-powered saleswoman; she cracks jokes all the time and appears to be totally confident. I used to be a bit envious of her confidence and social ease, in the sense that I sometimes wondered, "Would I have grown up to be that way if I hadn't been through so much social trauma as a kid? Is that a genetic inheritance that should have been mine as well?" But my mother explained how it's all just a front she had to put on in order to survive her toxic family environment. It's even self-defeating, because people assume she doesn't need the help that she really needs. I don't have that insecure core because I was raised in a healthy family structure.

It's almost impossible for me to act in a way that I don't feel. I'm kind of an anti-actor. I can be diplomatic, I can choose words carefully, I can put on a very detached front, I can slip into a teaching persona if I speak in front of a crowd... but that's about it. I'm incapable of manipulating people. I'm even incapable of flirting. It's been both a blessing and a curse. It's hard for me to understand the behavior of people who are presenting with a "false front" because I can't put myself in their shoes.

I want to make a positive difference in people's lives, and I think I've succeeded in some ways. I have to work within my limitations. For example, I'd make a terrible therapist. If I know something that can help someone, and they're interested in learning it, I can teach it to them pretty well. But other than that, it seems like it's better for me to step aside and just listen.

Sigh... anyway, I've offered to go into the next therapy session with my mother and cousin. This is with the understanding that it's totally for the benefit of my cousin, and is not all about me. I just want to know the best way to support her. My mother let my cousin know about my offer, so I'll wait and see if she wants me to come.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

My Cousin Has Taken a Turn for the Worse

My cousin (full back story here) has been doing really well. This Sunday she helped out with Sunny and seemed in a great mood.

Last night, she did not have dinner with us (and thus missed seeing Sunny's episode) because she had an "episode" at her friend's house. I don't want to go into any detail about it, but her episodes are not violent in any way or harmful to anyone except herself.

We could sort of see it coming. She'd been talking with her father. My mother and I have told her many times she has got to stop talking to her father.

There were some tickets for a sports team she really liked, playing in Atlanta. He was going with her brother (who doesn't care about sports) and an Industry buddy. Oh, but he just remembered she was a fan of that team. So did she want to go? He could tell the Industry buddy he was disinvited.

Typical evil manipulation. It might sound innocuous at first, but if you know him, it's all a scheme designed to make her feel like crap. First, that he didn't think enough of her to invite her in the first place... she was third in line behind his son and the Industry buddy (I happen to know this guy as well, and he's a total dickhead). Second, that he wanted to make her responsible for disinviting the Industry buddy. I doubt he would have even followed through with that promise, anyway. He's in love with playing power games and making his family jockey for positions in his favor.

One of her medications ran out recently, and since she's in between insurance, she has to pay out of pocket, then get reimbursed, but she didn't have the money. She asked her father for the money even though I begged her not to. He said he would pay, made her crawl for a bit, then forgot about the whole thing. My mother ended up loaning her the medication money.

It's hard for me to understand why my cousin still depends on him so much.

My mother says it's because their father -- our grandfather -- was such a very good and loving father. Everyone loved him and respected him and trusted him to do the right thing. And that my cousin thinks her own father should be the same way, but he's really the polar opposite.

But I never had a problem understanding that my father wasn't my grandfather. I realized from an early age that my father wasn't going to give me the emotional support I wanted from him, so I lowered my expectations. I tell my cousin she has to do the same, although her expectations need to go waaaaaay lower than I lowered mine. "You can have a relationship with your father later on when you get better, but right now, it's destroying you. You have got to stop talking to him. You have got to stop asking him for anything."

By the way, my cousin's mother is very sweet, very passive, very-Southern-very-lady, and long ago chose her husband over her children. My mother and I are friendly with her and, privately, have absolutely no respect for her.

My cousin is not a helpless victim in all this. She's made a lot of bad choices, especially in finances. When she moved in with my mother, we sat down together, I organized all her accounts, applied for a disability student loan deferment, told her to sell her car and cash in her 401(k), reallocated credit card limits, created a budget for her and forecast her disability income for several months in advance. She only followed about half of my written financial plan, and is badly in the hole now.

I can help her out but I can't live her life for her. On a few occasions when she starts getting depressed and talks about what a big disappointment she is to herself and everyone else, I just tell her to think about the future and work on the things that she can control and accommodate the things she can't control. Plan A didn't work? Go to Plan B. Plan B didn't work? Go to Plan C. I'd hoped to save her credit rating but that looks like it's impossible, so we need a different financial goal now.

I think the part of herself that's engaging in sabotage is the part that wants to be a princess. Princesses get everything they need financially handed to them, princesses get all the attention... all they have to do is submit to the arbitrary laws of some horrible narcissistic alpha male figure.

I'm so glad my mother is a feminist and raised me that way. This whole princess complex is inseparable from my cousin's mental illness. She screws up her finances, calls her dad for help she knows she's not going to get, he makes her crawl and rejects her, she has an episode.

Anyway, after the episode last night, she went for evaluation at the same institution that got her back on her feet. Of course they didn't admit her, because her insurance ran out. She'll be back at my mom's house later today.

The worst that could happen is that she kills herself. My mother has raised that possibility, although it's still unlikely. I'd be horribly upset, but I'd get over it. That sounds really callous, but I'm being honest. I know from experience that I'm tough in crisis situations. I've had a couple really traumatic incidents happen when I was younger, so terrible I have never even talked about them on this blog, and I know how I tend to react. I deal with them the way I have to deal with them.

What worried me now is how Sunny would react. He sees my cousin a couple times a week and really loves her.

I can't tell her "I'll kill you if you kill yourself because of how Sunny would feel" because that's just ridiculous. I know she already knows she has a lot of people that would be hurt.

There's not much we can do. I'm just going to keep offering the same advice without beating her over the head with it. I'll go over her finances again with her if she asks me to. I'm not going to ask her to babysit Sunny again (alone, that is). But I'm not going to cut them off, either.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Throwing Up, and Money Worries

Sunny did not have a good day yesterday. He had an upset tummy through most of the morning, then ended up projectile vomiting in Nana's car. I had just remarked to my mother, "Sunny is awfully quiet..." when a fountain of liquid came from his mouth and hit the side of the car, followed by a cough, and then another fountain.

We cleaned up and babied him for a while. I gave him a long bath with all his dinosaur toys, he got to drink a 7-Up (this normally NEVER happens, because we don't drink soda and never have any in the house), then he got a PBJ sandwich and a banana while sitting on the couch watching a DVD of his choice. After an hour or so he was totally recovered and ready to go outside and ride his bicycle. I'm not sure what happened; he didn't eat anything out of the ordinary for breakfast. His foster mother once mentioned him having to stay home from school because of throwing up. I don't think it was anything serious.

Sunny has been kind of cranky and oppositional ever since, including this morning.

Guy is very stressed out about money right now, and he said that Sunny might be picking up on that. We really need to control that. Personally, I feel fine. I think as a family we're in a pretty good position. My job is stable, although like any other non-union non-government job, I could be laid off at any time for any reason. If I did get laid off tomorrow, it would suck, and I couldn't easily get another job for anywhere near what I make now, but I'd find something. However, Guy is spoiled because he's been working at what he loves for the last 15 years and he has his own business. He's consumed by what would happen if it goes south. He has hardly any business debt, but his field is very vulnerable to a bad economy.

To me it's simple. Just hold tight, maybe get a part-time job you hate for a bit until things turn around. As long as I have my job, we'd be OK, and if we didn't have my job, we'd still figure out a way to be OK.

I feel very little connection between my job and my worth as a human being. That's easy to say because I'm employed, of course... but back when I was younger and bouncing around, I felt that way. I always went for the jobs that paid the most money, even though they were often the least prestigious ones. And for what I really wanted to do, I never expected to be paid much money for.

My husband is lucky to be doing what he loves and doing it for himself, unlike 99% of the people out there. His many years of hard work and natural skill have a lot to do with it, of course, but landing in the field he landed was the lucky part. The danger is that there's no wall between work and life and worth. He has got to develop that. We've talked a lot about this before.

There's one positive step... we're thinking about renting out a room in our house. We both decided that would be a good idea, as long as we know the person beforehand. There's a friend of my cousin who'd be a good candidate. Of course, we'd have to clear it with Sunny's worker and the roommate might need to be fingerprinted.

Monday, August 18, 2008

August Update with Special Non-Adoption Family Drama

This is the longest I've ever gone without a post! I think I needed to recharge for a while. Also, a lot of things came up that I want to blog about, but I'm not sure how to.

The main thing is that my cousin is now living with my mother. There's a lot of family drama going on. Here it comes...

My mother and her brother were never very close. My uncle must have had undiagnosed ADHD, but besides that, he's a jerk. My other (male) cousin has ADHD too but has a much, much sweeter personality. In fact, my cousin has decided her dad has ASPD which stands for Anti-Social Personality Disorder. I'm a little skeptical about all these labels, but whether you call it ASPD or a**holism, it sucks for the other people in his family.

My uncle has a lot of money and a high position in what I'll call "The Industry". Since the 1960s, our family has been involved in The Industry, starting with my grandfather. I grew up in The Industry, so I never thought it was anything unusual. But your average American has some negative associations with it. It's supposed to be lower class and a bit shady -- which isn't fair, because without The Industry, our civilization would collapse! Think something like waste management (although it's not waste management).

My grandparents never had a lot of money as adults. They came from the old West Virginia upper class, but their family money ran out before they left West Virginia. My uncle and my mother both went into The Industry and became prominent figures within it. My uncle had a sales position in an existing company, while my mother started her own company out of our house with my grandfather, with me as a little kid stuffing envelopes, built it up into a thriving business, then lost it all in the recession of the 90s.

Shortly after, my grandmother started dying of emphysema. My grandparents had downsized into a tiny apartment. I'd gone off to college but came back to sit by my grandmother's bedside with my mother. Seeing someone die of emphysema is pretty rough. All the energy in your body goes to breathing. You can't get enough calories to replace that energy so you lose weight rapidly. Since the end was so near, my grandmother decided she didn't want to prolong it with feeding tubes. Around the time she died, she probably weighed 50 pounds. My uncle didn't bother to visit her. He showed up a few days after she died and took the nicest heirlooms, since my mother didn't feel like arguing about them. A few years later my grandfather died, and he also didn't visit much either.

According to my mother, he'd always been the golden boy in the family. Not that they neglected her, but they gave him a lot of latitude. My grandparents had lived somewhat according to their old status in West Virginia... they always paid their country club and private school fees, even if the electricity was about to get cut off. My uncle was kicked out of a long succession of private schools and each time they found him a new one. My mother's explanation of her childhood is internally consistent, sociologically appropriate and independently verifiable. My uncle's is something else... apparently my mother ruined his childhood somehow (maybe because she did so well in school) and he had a hardscrabble life growing up on a farm. Instead of moving from higher to lower class, he invented a life where they went from lower to higher: a redneck made good. He developed a strong Southern accent, too, which my grandparents never had. Basically, he flipped the script from William Faulkner to Horatio Alger. According to his new story he made a lot of money in the 1970s as a cattle trader. I happen to know he was a cowboy, alright -- a COCAINE COWBOY. Not only that, he endangered my grandparents with his dealing! My mother was also involved with some common (but very illegal) stuff back in the 70s but she was responsible enough not to involve her parents!

So aside from just generally being a jerk, he's also ungrateful to his parents, refused the duty and privilege of sitting by their deathbeds, a narcissist self-mythologizer, an intermittent alcoholic and a terrible father. His little son, who couldn't help being hyperactive, was constantly yelled at. One day when his son wouldn't sit still during a yelling session, my uncle picked him up and hung him on a coathook from the back of his pajamas so he could yell at him some more. There was a replication of his own childhood: he had a very competent, responsible older daughter and a difficult son with special needs. The son got all the attention. He had the family first name. He was going to be a Big Person in The Industry.

The month before she went off to college his daughter did something unforgivably evil and defiant. She got a nose piercing. He retaliated by handing her a FAFSA. She had to pay for college herself now, and of course, since their family was wealthy she had no hope of a scholarship and had to take out loans for the entire amount. He could have afforded to pay for it all, but spent the money on a boat instead.

His son wasn't ready for college; he gave it a try but after a few months it didn't work out. From what I've read, my cousin's ADHD means his brain is not going to fully mature until he hits his late 20s, so I have every confidence he's going to succeed later in his second try. Anyway, the son got an entry-level, manual labor position at his dad's Industry company. The daughter, after she graduated with honors and a four-year career of leadership, starting working for the company in the highest sales position. It looked like she was going to be the heir. She loved The Industry and worshiped her father. When she graduated, she had "The Industry" Princess written on the back of her cap.

She was a natural salesperson and initially did well at the job. However, the reason I never had the slightest desire for a career in The Industry is that it always seemed like a white man's realm. If you want to get into it otherwise, you have to be tough as nails. I'm not. I don't have the social skills. I don't want to make things hard for myself; I need a more even playing field. Any woman who goes into it has to be twice as strong and tough and smart as a man. I don't hate The Industry, it's not worse than many others, but it's not for me. My cousin thought she could handle it, but it started getting to her. She had to wine and dine clients who talked about shooting interracial couples with a shotgun. Enemies spread rumors she'd made a big sale by sleeping with a client's son. People at the company sucked up to her because she was her father's daughter, then tried to stab her in the back. She started telling us she felt like she was walking into a snakepit. She was transferred to another city, and thought that would help a bit.

She started showing symptoms of a strange illness.

Several months ago, she collapsed. She went home to her mother and father and brother. She couldn't leave the house. After many doctors, she finally got a diagnosis. It's a very rare mental illness. It's nothing like schizophrenia, but it's comparable in terms of the effects on someone's life.

She was in an institution for a while and got a lot of good help there. Now she's living with my mother and I think things are going to turn around. Sunny loves her, and she's teaching him how to play chess! There's some medication that seems to be working. She's on seven prescriptions and one of them is even the same medication Sunny's taking. The most positive development is that she's finally made a break with The Company, The Industry and her father. When they had family therapy, his children honestly told him how he had failed them, and he responded by saying he was never coming back to therapy. He told his daughter that if she didn't come back to The Company (the same place that caused her complete mental breakdown) she would be a failure in life, and even worse, responsible for HIM looking like a failure. What a dick!

It's great having her around. She's like me in many ways, even though she's so white I'm always terrified she'll get sunburn when we go outside. We're both tall and broad-shouldered and throw our bodies around in the same way. We have similar noses. She's honest and straightforward and blunt the same way I am. I always thought that in social skills she was superior to me in that she inherited my grandfather and my mother's amazing social genius, the ability to have conversations with anyone, to be the life of the party... natural extroverts. But now I understand rather sadly that she always had problems that were parallel to mine.

Anyway, that's the story. I'm so glad she's finally cutting some ties to her family. I mean, I'm very close to my family. My life revolves around my family. But when I was in my teens and her age, I was very independent. I'm close because I want to be, not because I need to be. I hope she gets to that stage eventually.

In other family news, my father is visiting from Japan. I knew he would find something to complain about in his new guest bedroom, even though it's the most Japanese room in East Dekalb. It even smells like tatami! The complaint was "It's too big. I can barely see the opposite wall." He's been teaching Sunny to use chopsticks, although he makes everyone call them o-hashi, of course.

We've discontinued TV and are trying to get by just on Netflix DVDs and Roku. It's removed a source of contention. Sunny was always complaining about not being allowed to watch his favorite shows, some of which I thought were horrible. I think The Fairly Oddparents is designed to give adults seizures, it's so loud. When we stopped using the TV, he just totally forgot about his programs. He can still watch the stuff he really wants to watch and specifically asks for.

Sunny went through a week of bad pouty behavior when school started up. He's on the upswing now. He's still especially clingy and attention-seeking. For example, he'll ask me to stand by the door while he's brushing his teeth! We'd gone to a behavior chart system where he would get a star every day for "No Complaining" but that was too challenging. We're starting a new system where every time he doesn't pout when I say "No" he gets a circle, five circles equal a star and seven stars means a Pokemon deck.

Sunny's learning a lot in so many areas. Yesterday he rode his new bike. He'd convinced Guy (the new blog name for my husband) that he already knew how to ride a bike, but he really wasn't that good at it yet. He fell down a lot and scraped his shoulder, but he's getting better. His swimming is also a lot better, and he might graduate from Polliwog to Guppy soon. And he's learning how to play chess! This is another thing he claimed he already knew how to do (by the way, he also says he can play golf at the PGA level... lack of confidence is not a problem for Sunny!). He really didn't know how, but with tutoring from me, my cousin and Ojiichan, he's getting the hang of it. Sunny has a very competitive nature so he loves these games, although he needs a lot of reinforcement that it's OK to lose and you don't have to win to have fun.

He's in tutoring once a week for reading. The tutor is great and has a lot of experience with ADHD kids. She can tell when he's getting frustrated the very second before he actually gets frustrated, and knows how distract and then redirect.

Ojiichan is not giving me as much obnoxious parenting advice as I'd feared. He did once mention at table that he wasn't too tough on me when I didn't eat all my food. Ha ha ha. He also told me I shouldn't be worried that Sunny wasn't reading on his own yet (and I'm not worried, I just want to give him lots of extra support) because he didn't learn how to read until he was at least 10. This is a really weird thing to say, because he's incredibly well-educated and knows perfectly well that reading Japanese with kanji takes much longer than English. A lot of Japanese can't even fully read a newspaper until 9th grade, so his timeline is totally irrelevant.

Otherwise, it's great having him around. He cooks a lot and plays games with Sunny. We all went swimming together once, and Sunny got to practice his cannonball and belly flop dives. The belly flop looks horribly painful, but Sunny loves doing it.

I temporarily discontinued Sunny's gym class for a dance class. He just has too much stuff going on right now to do both at the same time. I told him after he finishes his dance class, he could decide whether he prefers one over the other.

We also went to a nice birthday party this weekend for another agency family. They adopted three siblings earlier this year. Two of them are black/white fraternal twins. There are occasional news articles about these kinds of twins, but apparently it's much, much more common than people think. One twin has brown skin and curly black hair, the other has golden skin, blond hair and blue eyes.

The house is still kind of a mess and we need to do a few more things before we can finally have a housewarming party.

That's it for now. I hope to resume more regular updates and commentary.