Success Stories
One Mother's True Story
Angie readily admits she was worn down. Years of violent
outbursts and restraining holds, the time she sat in the
frozen food section at the grocery store bear hugging her
son who had lost control, crushed her physically and emotionally.
At his worst, Johnny crashed into walls and threatened violence
toward his mother. At 9 years old, Johnny couldn’t
do the things other children did. He didn’t have friends;
the neighbors didn’t want him playing with their children.
He tried but couldn’t participate in team sports.
The causes were complex with several diagnoses, including
oppositional defiant disorder, post-traumatic stress syndrome
and depression. There were times Johnny’s mind wasn’t
his own. The family attended regular counseling, and Johnny
enrolled in a therapeutic day school. Angie met periodically
with local social service agencies to determine if more could
be done.
Johnny would occasionally show improvement, but the family
never was relieved of the burdens they carried when Johnny “left
his body,” as Angie describes the outbursts. “We
were exhausted,” Angie says. “It was like a war
zone in our house all the time.”
Angie resisted residential care because she didn’t
believe that “strangers” could care for Johnny
like she did. She relented because, after trying everything
else, she was tired. Residential care was the last place
to turn.
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On her first visit to the Trillium Children’s Farm
Home Campus, Angie found hope again. She believed that Johnny
would improve there. How much he would improve surprised
even her.
Johnny entered residential care, where treatment staff prescribed
the proper medication and began therapy sessions. They helped
him build his self-esteem and taught him the decision-making
skills he needed to overcome his condition. Family members,
including Johnny’s older sister, attended counseling.
And in-home skills trainers worked with the family, which
practiced what they learned during Johnny’s visits
home.
He completed treatment, and he returned home to stay. The
family continued with outpatient counseling, but after another
four months, they didn’t need ongoing services. The
outbursts had ended. Angie and Johnny knew what to do to
prevent them.
One year later, as Angie says, talk turned to what’s
for dinner tonight rather than what time Johnny’s next
crisis would be. Today, Johnny has friends. He goes to birthday
parties, skates at the park, and attends sleepovers. Angie
holds a regular job, and Johnny is catching up in school.
The household isn’t exactly quiet.
Johnny and his sister are teen-agers now, and the house
bustles with the comings and goings of kids. But these are
sounds of happiness. Trillium Family Services “impacted
every aspect of our life,” Angie says, “right
down to where I’m able to work, where my son goes to
school, who he’s able to associate with, and his opportunities
in the community.”
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