Loving Dylan
By J. Marie
()
About this ebook
J. Marie invites you into her journey dealing with her son's drug addiction and her inability to control the chaos. It starts with two priests and three therapists and ends in a Target parking lot, but the efforts in between are too often useless and frequently comical. As she learns the difference between parenting and codependency, which looks similar to the naked eye, she wonders if she will survive loving Dylan.
Grieving the loss of her dreams for Dylan's future, she realizes that when she told her son, "You can be anything you want to be." She never considered the option of drug addict. She was thinking an astronaut, teacher, police officer, or father. As she struggles to stay connected to Dylan, she needs to redefine love and self-respect.
For years, she declined to talk about the fact that her son is a drug addict because she worried that people would label her as a failed parent. More importantly, she worried that they were right. Things did not change until she stopped hiding in the shadows. Dylan was not her problem; he was her solution. She did not want her son to be an addict, but as long as he was, she would use the situation to resolve issues she has lived with her whole life. Her love for her son would be the catalyst to heal the wounds that held her hostage.
J. Marie
Julia is originally from New Zealand. However in March 2012, she moved to Australia where she currently resides. She has family all around the world (Tasmania, England and USA) with the majority of her immediate family remaining in New Zealand. Julia has a passion for the arts and she has been writing for over fifteen years. She has continued to branch out, broadening her horizons not only writing novels, but also dabbling in scripts, short stories, among other literary works. Pathway to Devastation Trilogy is her first published achievement which she is very proud of and hopes her readers will enjoy it as much as she did.
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Loving Dylan - J. Marie
Loving Dylan
J. Marie
Copyright © 2020 J. Marie
All rights reserved
First Edition
PAGE PUBLISHING
Conneaut Lake, PA
First originally published by Page Publishing 2020
ISBN 978-1-64584-216-3 (pbk)
ISBN 978-1-64584-217-0 (digital)
Printed in the United States of America
Table of Contents
Dear Reader
The Word of God on Fire
Two Priests and Two Therapists April 2010
I Am Not Afraid to Kill a Cowboy
Man on Fire
I Learn Geometry
Wuz Up?
Discovery June of 2011
I Would Rather Sleep in the Dirt
I Want My Money Back
What a Weird Way to Say Hello
The Lone Ranger Rides
Fighting the Wind June 2017
Payback, Sucker! Feb 2012
Zany Days
I Have a Way with Animals
No One Is Safe
Answer the Phone June 2016
Social Security
Where's the Bottom?
Death by a Thousand Cuts
The Daffodil and the Condom
Hope Springs Eternal
Can You Hear the Music?
Finally
Dead Cat Syndrome
What Am I Seeing?
Just Punch Me in the Face
On Target June of 2017
Broken Stories
About the Author
Dear Reader,
Originally, this was started as my fourth step; I was trying to find my part. Then it turned into a letter to my son in order that he might understand that I deeply love him and the actions I took only served this love. It occurred to me that he is not as interested in my point of view as you might be. To be clear, I still don't know what I am doing. This project started in earnest during lunch with four women, three of us have sons that are chronic drug users. All of us were feeling inadequate for the task at hand and confused by our situation.
The question is, how did I get here? I tried so hard. I read every parenting magazine and paid top real estate prices for the right neighborhood and, more importantly, the right schools. Our family went to church every Sunday and ate dinner as a family on most nights. My hope is that by sharing my experience, strength, and hope, you find your power.
Our family uses four-letter words, including the word love, but I will not offend you with unnecessary profanity; except when the words are part of the storyline. So when you read the words golly gee whiz or heck, please understand that these are the least offensive version of heated discussions. Take comfort, though, this has a happy ending. This is less about the ending and more about the journey getting there. Thank you for taking this journey with me.
The Word of God on Fire
Why would loving parents drug their son to drive him across state lines so that he could be held hostage by people they had never met? It was March 16, 2011. I woke up at 4:30 a.m. to start work so that I could go to school with my oldest son, Dylan. It generally took three hours to go over his homework and get his new assignments. I had to make the work day up on the front end; there was a general sense of fatigue at all times. I was at my desk when Dylan told me he was leaving the house and would be back in a few hours. We were due at the high school in one hour, so I was trying to finish the appraisal report due that day before we left.
This started an argument because he had already missed two sessions, and he was going to be kicked out of the home school program if he missed another week. His teacher was nice, but not a pushover. Dylan and I were yelling loudly at each other when Craig interrupted us. Dylan was insisting that he had to leave to pay people off and that if he didn't he would be hurt.
Part of my brain was amused that he was making the wrong argument. What was I supposed to say to the school when I called in his absence? Sorry my kid missed school today. He had to finish his drug dealing so that people won't hurt him.
We were both frantic and loud when, Dylan's father and my husband, Craig walked into the argument and tried to separate us. Craig's method was consistent. He typically chose the one that he felt was not in their reptilian brain. In this instance, it was me. He felt like I was the one that could be reasoned with.
His form of reasoning was to argue the other's point in a calm voice. He started with shame by telling me that I need to act like an adult.
Of course, to prove him wrong, I calmed down immediately; his methods were effective momentarily. Dylan looked victorious as Craig was explaining to me that we could excuse the absence and reschedule the class. I would not be surprised if my head exploded at this point. The assumption that I didn't think of the obvious infuriated me. In my thinking, Craig thought I was one of two things. The first being that; I am stupid and can't solve a simple problem. The other is that I am a control freak and picking a fight with Dylan to prove a point.
After explaining to Craig that the reality is that we could not do that because we had already done that for the last two weeks. Like a broken record, I spelled out that we were in danger of losing his spot in the program and didn't have a pocketful of options. It is not like the teacher has a whole classroom. The class was a one-on-one session.
I lost my temper and started yelling when Craig said that we would just find a new school and Dylan announced, I told you she's a crazy bitch.
My hysteria was crazy looking. I was angry that I had worked so hard with no result, and I hated being in this triangle of two against one. The more I tried, the more Dylan pushed back. He was using the words cunt, bitch, and, weirdly, slut at me regularly. I didn't understand the word slut because I had never cheated on Craig. I never even gave the impression of impropriety. It was a point with me because Craig has his own set of insecurities with our twenty-year age difference, and I dated people I had no business dating in my drinking days. Craig's insecurities were deepened with his diagnosis of Parkinson's four years prior. I understood crazy and bitch because I was fierce in my determination.
Craig must have been as exhausted as I was because he grabbed Dylan by the shirt and told him he was leaving the house today for the school in Nevada. He went to the hall closet where we kept the bag packed with the items the school listed for admission. I don't know how Craig planned to get him to the school. The school was eleven hours away, and I don't drive because I have a vision impairment that prohibits me from driving. Driving him by himself seemed dangerous; we couldn't even be in the same office without an altercation.
Dylan had removed my Bible in the closet. It was the only Bible in the house, given to me in a moment of despair in my youth. I was in the office calling 911 when he turned the gas stove on and caught the Bible on fire. The dispatcher had trouble understanding me as I was describing the events in the household. She repeatedly told me to calm down, but I couldn't. The wall of containment I had built over the last year to keep myself upright and functioning crumbled. The fear and sorrow overwhelmed me. I was worried that one of us would not live through this experience. My anger with Craig was replaced with pity. He was shaking uncontrollably when the police arrived.
The house was filled with smoke, but the Bible was in the kitchen sink, soaked in water. The fire truck left once they figured out they weren't needed. The ambulance was parked in the driveway, and the two police cars were blocking the road. Betty and Virgil, our neighbors across the street, were standing on their fresh-mowed lawn in their slippers, talking to their neighbor who had sat in their lawn chairs to watch the action. All we could do was wave and cheerfully yell, Everything's okay. No worries.
I asked the officers if they could turn the lights off so we didn't attract even more neighbors.
Officer Cooper was so calm. He sent Dylan out to talk to the other police officers who emptied his pockets and listened to his side of the story with great interest and compassion. As Dylan was leaving in an ambulance to be held for seventy-two hours in a psychiatric hold, I went back to the office to make sure we had a bed in the school in Nevada. I asked Craig to lie down so he could rest before his trip, but he was too stimulated to lie down. He made me a cup of coffee instead.
With the cup of coffee, he hugged me. I am sorry for losing control.
I stopped my phone calls to accept his apology and issue my own.
I am sorry too. This is a crazy situation. There's no rule book in how to deal with this crap. What do you do when your flesh and blood acts like that?
I had to control my voice when I answered the phone. Appraisals.
Between phone calls, we continued the conversation, I thought things were going to be so different. I would be a dead person if I spoke to my parents like that. There would be an imprint on the wall of my face.
He seemed relieved we were talking. I know. My dad never hit me, but I knew the danger was there, and I never wanted to see it.
The hospital wanted Dylan to go home within an hour of arrival. They didn't have a bed for a teenage boy on the adult psychiatric unit, and the teen unit is in the next county. I told them we were not picking him up right away, and they would have to hold him there for a few more hours while I arranged for transport to Nevada. The big goons that professionally transport charge $2,000 that I didn't have. Our friend Scott, a retired probation officer, called Rick, and they agreed to drive the eleven hours, each way, to transport Dylan with Craig. Rick even used his own car.
When Craig picked Dylan up with Scott and Rick, he gave Dylan two prescription sleeping pills even though it was three in the afternoon. He could sleep through California. I didn't go to the hospital. I stayed behind to shower and wash the chaos off so I could pick up our youngest son, Robbie, from school. Robbie cried when I told him that Dylan would be living in Nevada for a while. Just before we walked in the front door, he slipped his hand in mine and told me, It's okay, Mom. I love you.
I needed to hear that right at that moment.
According to the blow-by-blow reporting during the drive, Dylan vacillated between anger and fear. He was so angry that he was swearing at all the grown men in the car and, at one point, sprayed root beer all over the car. I hate being sticky, so I am glad I wasn't there. Just before crossing into Nevada, Craig called and told me that Dylan promised that he would behave if he was given another chance. Dylan was crying on the phone while begging me to reconsider. He promised he would go to school and never do drugs. He told me how much he loved me and that he was sorry that he had called me terrible names.
I had already prepared myself for this moment. When I told him no, he called me a bitch and hung up the phone. I was actually grateful for the bitch word because it confirmed my response. I knew that I might not get another opportunity. Rick and Scott weren't ever going to come back again. I knew that Dylan's promises were instantly well intended, but he would be back to the behavior within a few days. This was a familiar dance. I needed to think about our family as a whole.
Dylan was brave going into the school. He told his dad he loved him and gave him a hug. Craig cried for several hundred miles going home. I was angry when he called crying because I wondered if we would be in this situation if he was less involved in poker and more involved in the family. He wouldn't even regularly attend the STEP classes that I had arranged to be taught at our church. STEP stands for Systematic Training for Effective Parenting. I was angry that now he cries; I had cried for the previous year. I had asked the men to stay in a hotel, but Craig had to get back to a fundraiser poker tournament, so they drove the entire trip, stopping only for gas and snacks.
Two Priests and Two Therapists
April 2010
Our journey started on a sunny April day in Dylan's 8th grade year. I didn't mean to slam the car door; my legs were simply eager to climb the hill. They were digging through every step with the muscle memory of the twice a week for the past six months. As I stood at the top, looking at the valley spread before me, I hoped to get a minute to calm down before Craig arrived. He was ten minutes behind me, which isn't bad for an old man with Parkinson's disease. His silly dog was trying to keep up with him with her short little legs.
Sorry, I didn't mean to slam the door.
The front of his shirt was wet with sweat. Can we start over?
Sure.
His voice was still curt, but the fact that he was standing there said everything. What do you think we should do?
I don't know. What did your parents do?
This seemed a reasonable start. I waited with irritation for him to catch his breath.
They didn't know until the night my mom found me in the front yard. She screamed because she thought I was dead. I was just drunk and passed out.
He was still panting. I was already married with a pregnant wife, so what were they going to do?
Lily, the Cavalier King Charles spaniel he paid too much money for, finally arrived. What did your parents do?
Are you kidding?
I was trying to regulate my tone. My stepmom beat the heck out of me when she found my birth control pills. I was seventeen years old, but the next year, she would hand me a garbage bag and tell me that I was old enough to start paying my own rent. There was no way I was going to get caught drinking. They had no idea.
What do you think we should do?
he asked again. I could feel the anger rising again.
I don't know. They changed the parenting rules. You can't beat them anymore or even hurt their feelings.
Now I was just venting, but he was getting charged out of this familiar tangent.
What did Bruce and Stephen say?
He was referring to the phone call to our priests an hour earlier.
They said not to overreact. It's perfectly normal, and they gave the stats of kids that try drugs and alcohol in their youth, but I can't remember the stats. I was too busy spinning out.
He was bent over giving Lily water. "They told me not to overreact three times. It kind of hurt my feelings, like