eve
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2004
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Respectively, it does not matter if you have the means, the adult age you are, or if there is help put there for you for the asking. If you cannot see the simple tree save for the forest, you cannot nor will ask for help. That is the difficulty of mental illness. Know it, seen it, and still have family members of an adult that cannot help their daughter because she is of legal age. Stuck between a rock and a hard place, literally. She is prescribed meds that she needs, but when she feels "well" she goes off them and problems arise again. This is unfortunately, typical.
Unless there is some "crime" or a threat to others, the longest a patient can be held is 72 hours. With an incident of "harm" towards others (unless proven true harm to self) it is 30 days max. If the person is over the age of 18, the family cannot do a thing to protect their family member unless well documented...for years. It's not that simple. Sadly.
It is not so easy as many seem to think it is. What my family has gone through over the last several years has been nothing short of heartbreak concern and having absolutely no choice but wait for the last shoe to drop (again and again and again) because she is over the legal age of parental involvement.
I does not matter what your "status" is in life. Insurance or not, family involvement/intervention or not. It BS "thinks" she does not need help (no matter what level), no one can force it on her, no matter their love or commitment towards her.
Mental illness screws up the normal and healthy perspective of life. We cannot blame BS if this is the case nor can we blame her family. This is truly a nightmare for all.
I agree, if Britney is truly bi-polar, for example, or something even more severe, the prognosis is very complex. I think it is just made worse by her means and fame, in fact. Not the other way around.
I had a very close friend from childhood who was eventually diagnosed bi-polar (among other things, I think) after many years of struggle. She happened to be independently well-off as an adult and she had a lot more freedom to escape, in various ways, because of that, during the times she went off meds.
Also, she managed to collect hangers-on who were attracted by her wealth and background, who enabled and hindered her wellness whenever she spiraled. She was very intense, very strong-minded, very impossible.
When she was manic she did absolutely outrageous things. I could hardly recognize her. When she was low, she was so low, so lost, in such a dark place. She tried suicide from about 18 years old on.
When she married, at 40, we held our collective breath. It did not last. It was the beginning of the end. She kicked him out, he tried to hang in but was woefully unable to deal with her.
Three years later, she was dead, at her own hand. She left a note, "I can no longer see any light, anywhere, at the end of anything."
Eve