In late August of 2008 I received a
copy of Mary's Forest Ridge discharge plan in the mail, and I was
surprised to discover there had been some talk about discharging her.
I didn't know anything about this. There hadn't been any discharge
plans from the other group homes at this point — at least none that
I was aware of. I was even more surprised when I found out that her
discharge plan was for her to go to her mom's house and not to my
house. This is what the plan said — that she was not to go
to her father's house when she came home. I couldn't believe this and at first I wondered if it might be a mistake. I immediately called Forest
Ridge and talked to the director, Chad, and asked him why this was in
Mary's discharge plan and who had put it there. He told me Mary's corrections officer and social worker had told him this was their plan
for Mary because they said Mary's problems were caused by the tension
between her parents and that "Mary played her parents against
each other." He said their solution was to have Mary live
only with her mother.
My mind start racing. Yes, there
had been tension in our family — we were a divorced family with
joint custody of our children and we had been through a difficult
custody battle. But that was years ago. And Mary wasn't playing us
against each other. This would be admitting that her mother and I had
been oblivious to the heavy-duty manipulation of a teenager for
years, and I know I don't allow the girls to do this — to talk
badly about their mother — and my girls don't allow me to do this
either. This is divorce-101 stuff. I don't know if their mother
allows Mary to "play me against her" or not, but if
she does, then the problem isn't Mary's.
But it didn't matter if any of this
were true or not. It was my problem now, and it was going to present
a big problem for the girls if I didn't act quickly. I was extremely
distressed at the prospect of having to go to court again to keep
someone from taking my children. Were the kids and I going to have to
go through another long drawn-out custody battle, only now against
the County? We were all more than tired of this sort of thing, but it
looked like it wasn't over. All I wanted was to be left alone to
parent my children without having to worry someone was going to take them.
I told Chad I was never asked, nor
told, about any plan like this and only found out about it when I
received it in the mail. And as far as I knew, the plan had always
been for Mary to live with both parents, as she always had — the
status quo. He said he kind-of wondered what this was all about and
told me he would change it back to the way it was, and send me a new
copy. And he did.
I was troubled when I realized the
County was planning on taking Mary from me, and I wrote the following
in my journal that evening.
After this happened, Mary's lawyer called me one evening to boost my spirits, feeling a little sorry for what I had been going through with Mary's workers. I wrote what she said on the back of an envelope and kept it next to my desk for the remainder of Mary's group home experience. She told me not to concern myself with what the corrections officer or social worker thought and to not let this stop me from trying to help Mary.
My Journal - August 14, 2008
First I can tell you that Mary's behavior has about as much to do with the tension between us or Mary playing us against each other as it has to do with phases of the moon. If Karen and I were a happily married couple we would still have these problems with Mary. To suggest that this is a solution to Mary's problems is typical of the short-sighted solutions her social worker and corrections officer have been offering ever since Mary has been in placement and which have resulted in this girl being moved to over fifteen different homes with no plan in mind, with little or no input from her parents, or at least her dad.
There has already been a huge loss of contact between Mary and her parents. Now it would be making this worse and removing from her life the last and only person she is close to — stripping her away from the only person she has in her life that she has an emotional bond with — me, and will put her parents through another custody battle.
If anything these people should be promoting the relationships with both parents rather than restricting them. Their discharge plan is to remove dad from Mary's life, to reduce me to the status of a visitor in her life.
After this happened, Mary's lawyer called me one evening to boost my spirits, feeling a little sorry for what I had been going through with Mary's workers. I wrote what she said on the back of an envelope and kept it next to my desk for the remainder of Mary's group home experience. She told me not to concern myself with what the corrections officer or social worker thought and to not let this stop me from trying to help Mary.
"You're the only one who's
trying to do anything positive for her and move this thing along, and
they know this, and Mary especially knows this. Don't give up, John."
Mary's lawyer kept me sane when I
thought I was going insane. I don't know what I would have done
without her. I don't what Mary would have done without her.
3 comments:
Don't give up John! thanks for sharing your story ... Jacqueline X, Founder of Family Solution Center.
I hope Mary is at least home now... or soon to be.... let me know!
Thanks for the comment. Mary did come home. I got her out, raised her by myself, and she did better than she had in years. But then things happened. Her social worker, from before, contacted her without my knowledge, convinced her (threatened her I think) to turn on me suddenly without reason, and wouldn't tell me what happened to her. I haven't had any contact with her for over two years. That's one of the reasons I'm writing this, and I explain all of this in the next part of the story.
"Equal Custody Between Parents Should Be the Legal Norm" by Fred Silberberg from the Huffington Post
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