Thanks for the Denver article. In reading it I came across this quip, on page 2:
Given that Bearden is 33 years old, she has every right to drop off the map if that's her wish. But her loved ones want to make sure she's okay, as is noted in the most recent post on the Facebook page.
When my daughter went missing at age 31 which I wrote about on Kindle in a book, this
is exactly what her husband said to her dad, knowing full well that our daughter was mentally ill. Severely so. Just thought it was ironic to read this and brings back old sad memories to do so.
The only ones looking for her were her two sisters (and one was out of state), and my husband and myself. When the detective finally found her, she told him she was fine.
She wasn't.
She killed herself within 24 hrs of that find.
This is the problem with mental illness and subtle ones (complicated ones beyond the old standard of bi-polar disease) There are hallucinations, and mental issues that break down the brain apparently as though in small boxes which they cannot handle. I'm not a psychiatrist, and she was never given the necessary help that she crucially needed in the end. Instead, they went to marriage counseling.
Amazon.com: A Daughter's Tragic Descent Into Mental Illness eBook: D. M. Hoover: Books
I thought I would mention this irony, because it must be uttered so often when young women vanish who are mentally ill and "of age".
Both her husband said this and the detective we were in touch with.
After we found out she killed herself, I left a message on the detective's voice mail because it was now the weekend, and told him, "Just wanted to let you know, my husband asked you to check on her often over the weekend, and now she's dead and I wouldn't want this to happen to another family ". She told him she would not harm herself and that was good enough for him.
These are the realities for the mentally ill in this country. It's horrible.