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I am her voice.
I have many problems, but like spokes on the wheel of a 1988 Oldsmobile Cutlass Sierra, they all meet at the same point. Jani (or Janni). The spelling of her name has changed during her time in UCLA. (How did that happen?) At any length (sic), my life is a series of spokes that always return to her. (Why, exactly? Is that good for her? Or for you?)
I have committed myself to telling Jani's story, or is it our story? (You tell us. But the answer is obvious.) That is the first question to answer. Jani obviously cannot narrate her own story (Yes she can, but you won't let her.) , although I hope one day she will. In every story, though, there must (??) be a surrogate for the reader, a character for whom the reader projects himself/herself onto. (The author of these bizarre lines describes himself elsewhere as a college lecturer in English.) If as a writer I tried to project you as the reader into Jani, the story would fail. First, because Jani is/has been psychotic (sic) through much of it and second because I am not that good of a writer. No, this is our story, Susan and my own. (Now he is his wife's voice too.) As the reader, you will project yourself onto us. You will feel what we felt, because I can describe that. I cannot describe what Jani feels and neither can medical science. So Susan and I are the main characters and so my job is to allow you to project yourself into me and feel all the fear I have felt and still feel, even as I write this.
So we got that squared away. This is our story. (I.e., his and his wife's.) Jani is the driving force, but the story will told through my eyes. ...
We tried everything. Positive reinforcement. Negative reinforcement. Hitting her back (I won't tell you how many people told us that all she needed was a good beating). We took all her toys away. We gave her toys away. We tried starving her. We did EVERYTHING we could to try and break her. Nothing worked.
JoseFreitas wrote:
The child may also have some contact with a different reality, but most children do and grow out of it. Not all children can become shaman! It is a phase, and although I admit that it's hard to tell (and I'm not trained to do it in any case), children who will become "shaman" seem to be somewhat more functional than this girl. Note also that it is possible to have contact with the "spirit world" and still be mentally ill, so....
Many little points call my attention in this story to the fact that the parents are probaly also not capable of seeing alternatives, many of which can be pursued at the same time as the conventional drug treatments. It is not normal (at least not in my book) for a six year child to eat at Burger King's every day. My sister had tremendous results with diet, herbs and vitamins. Certainly not enough to be taken off drugs, but still, great results. I am the first to dislike drugs, but I have to say that in the end, my sister is a lot better with them than without. But it took 10 years to find the good combo and dosage.
This article simply does not say enough about the case for us to make informed guesses, so we should just "talk for talk's sake" rather than discuss it directly. I still feel there's something wrong with the parents, though. But this doesn't say much. I think there's something wrong with most parents I meet, anyway, so....
MacCruiskeen wrote:January's father Michael Schofield has a weblog that can only be called frighteningly crazy.
agitprop wrote: She needs a whole team of specialists, theologians, sleep disorder specialists, and an exorcist or two thrown in for good measure.
agitprop wrote:MacCruiskeen wrote:January's father Michael Schofield has a weblog that can only be called frighteningly crazy.
Sounds like a couple of very desperate parents with a violent crazy kid to me. Think you could do better?
Ever lived with a violent mentally ill person?
Dude, if this kid was born to just about anyone else she'd be institutionalized permanently or pitched off a cliff.
Maddy wrote:So her father, a failed teacher out of work, and more than likely (like many teachers) an aspiring writer, is blogging this horror story possibly in hopes of making some money some where down the road, at his daughter's expense (possibly after these people have destroyed her)? Am I reading this correctly?
Sorry I can't read the blog. Can't. Literally. I'd just start crying. You can't read through blurred vision. I'm already so angry I can't see straight.
Also, nashvillebrook, you're a very strong person. Thank you for sharing your personal insight into something so traumatic.
Maddy wrote:Sorry, agitprop, I can't hear people who support abusers with my fingers in my ears.
MacCruiskeen wrote:
Sounds like a couple of very desperate parents with a violent crazy kid to me. Think you could do better?
Yes. So could anyone sane.Ever lived with a violent mentally ill person?
No. (What do you want, just a medal? Or unquestioning obedience?)
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