This...hits right close to home. In fact, the reason I poked my head into Rants today was that I was thinking of posting an update on my own situation.
Squirrel Girl:
Obviously I don't know exactly what problem was identified. I'm neither a psychic nor a psychologist. But from my own experiences and from the knowledge I've picked up along the way of trying to find answers for myself, I can read between the lines and make a pretty good guess at the diagnosis. I suspect that your son is dealing with a condition closely related my own, if not the same.
Certainly our experiences and the general pattern of our lives are substantially similar. There is, however, a very crucial difference that I think you need to hear: my mother
did stay at home to take care of my sister and me until I was about 11 years old. It didn't avert this. Disaster was waiting in the wings for me in spite of it. I know that's not exactly a cheerful or reassuring thought under normal circumstances, but you need to understand that, well ... "these things happen". Often enough, they happen with seemingly no reason or rhyme (ex. my sister was OK, but I wasn't). And even where there is rhyme or reason, these emotional disasters are complex, convoluted things. It's never a single cause. You shouldn't be trying to take all of this on yourself.
Alfred Pockran, "Culture, Crisis, and Change wrote:
A crisis is the sum of intuition and blind spots, a blend of facts noted and facts ignored. Yet underlying the uniqueness of each crisis is a disturbing sameness. A characteristic of all crises is their predictability, in retrospect. They seem to have a certain inevitability, they seem predestined.
That sounds like just a fancy way of saying "hindsight is 20/20", but I think it actually says the opposite. Hindsight is blind. With hindsight, you can only see what
was. Your vision is constrained to a single, narrow path. From this side of time, it's easy to look back at your own actions and say, "I caused this!" because the outcome is already fixed and inevitable. Hindsight blinds you to the fluidity of all things. It gives you blind spots: you cannot see what would have happened had you acted differently; you cannot see all of the ways that your actions worked to
avoid the crisis; perhaps most importantly of all, you cannot see all of the
other things that could have prevented it "if only...." And that's the really destructive part of playing the "if only..." game -- it makes you think that you're the only player on the stage.
What's far more important than trying to see where you played a role in the problem is trying to see how you play role in the recovery. I know that right now you don't feel like much of an asset in your son's life, but the fact that you're flogging yourself over this says otherwise. Truly negligent parents don't do that. And the irony of all this is that -- unless I'm sorely mistaken about what your son is going through -- he's probably trying to heap all of the blame on
himself, not you. It's enough just that he knows you don't think he's a terrible person. That he has
anyone in his life who is willing to offer him something other than blame, impatience, and disgust -- much less to offer him understanding, compassion, and encouragement -- is worth far more than I can tell you.
I'm still fighting my way through it all myself, so I may not be able (or qualified
) to offer you anything in the way of sage advice or encouragement. But if there's anything I can say or do to help, feel free to PM me.