Dependency and the Destruction of American Virtues

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
This will rub the libs the wrong way, but so be it...

November 25, 2010

Dependency and the Destruction of American Virtues

By Daniel Fitzgerald
American Thinker: Dependency and the Destruction of American Virtues

My oldest son, Keith (not his real name), is an adult. He lives with our family at home, and he probably will for the rest of his life.


As a child, Keith was extraordinary. He was extremely verbal at an early age, immensely creative, and astonishingly literate.


Keith's senior year in high school was remarkable for the range of activities in which he was engaged and the energy that he invested in them. He was an active member of our church youth group, showed promising acting talent as he participated in a drama club, earned a brown belt in karate, and completed his third Easter week mission trip with our church. He was working steadily, paying for his car, gas, cell phone service, and auto insurance. My son received the "employee of the month" award the first month at his job. He excelled in Latin and linguistics, the latter being a hobby that he pursued vigorously. He had many friends who loved him. Other than a few rough spots that we chalked up to normal teen rebellion, my son's future seemed bright.


Keith naturally scored high on his SAT, and college offers started pouring in. He chose a small Christian liberal arts college close to home from which he received a generous scholarship. The school was forming a classics program, and the department head saw our son as a cornerstone of the newly developing major. Four years ago, we tearfully sent him off to the campus dorms, anticipating good things ahead.


And then the nightmare began.


We later learned that major life changes, even positive ones, could trigger the onset of a psychological breakdown in people predisposed to mental illnesses. We also learned that such disorders often have a genetic component. On my side of the family was depression, going back at least to my grandmother. On my wife's side, bipolar disorder was suspected in her grandfather and an aunt.


This is not a story about my son, but rather about how our society responds to affliction, so I'll keep this brief. It took almost a year to get the correct diagnosis, but finally, after going to mental health professionals who did more harm than good, a psychiatrist determined that Keith had bipolar disorder, complicated by extreme chronic anxiety and obsessive-compulsive tendencies. By the time our son received his diagnosis, his college career was destroyed, he had lost his job, and he was penniless and in legal trouble.


Keith now takes medication to control his hallucinations, two drugs to keep him from slipping into catatonic depression, another to keep the destructive mania at bay, and occasionally a fifth that is supposed to help his anxiety. However, despite the symptoms being more or less under control, our son is still not able to function. He hasn't worked for years and has flunked out of the local city college.


What has been interesting is people's response to our problem. Before he was properly diagnosed, the first psychologist Keith saw immediately wanted to help our son obtain government disability payments. Without even giving Keith a correct diagnosis, the doctor almost reflexively thought that the solution to my son's problems was to go on the government dole. After three sessions, we stopped seeing him.


My wife and I attended some educational support groups, sponsored by a mental health advocacy organization, in hopes of finding some answers. People there were amazed that we hadn't applied for Social Security or disability payments for our son. When we responded that we thought we would be able to handle things financially, they shook their heads and told us that we'd change our minds eventually, and they actually implied that we were being negligent in not seeking such aid.


Keith was dropped from our health insurance when he left school, so we embarked on what some told us was an impossible mission: finding insurance for a young man with a preexisting mental condition. It was difficult. But thanks to the free-market system, we were grateful to discover an HMO that accepted Keith and has provided him with excellent psychiatric care. The premiums are affordable for now; I can't imagine what will happen if and when ObamaCare kicks in.


It occurred to me in the midst of this painful journey that people today automatically default to the government for answers. My wife and I are not wealthy, but for the time being, we have the means to provide for our son. We are his parents. Now that we know he can't handle adult responsibilities, we firmly believe that it is incumbent upon us, not other taxpayers, to support him. We are well aware that without us, he would be homeless, wandering the streets and obeying the dictates of his diseased mind. But it is our responsibility, not that of our neighbors, to see to it that he has a home, support, and supervision of his medical needs.


At the support group, I found it disturbing that everyone there seemed to believe that demanding more housing, food stamps, and mental health and medical services from the government was the answer to the problems of their ill relatives. I don't mean to pass judgment on these people; perhaps they had tried everything else and had no other recourse. However, there is something terribly wrong in our culture when we begin to view the incompetent and substandard services provided by government agencies as the only reasonable solution.


This is just one example of the massive shift in thinking that has plagued our society for many years. It started with the New Deal and has been accelerating since the 1960s. Instead of a nation of people reliant upon our own resources, our families, and our local communities, we look to Big Brother to meet our needs. Instead of taking care of our own, we depend on a cold, unfeeling, and bureaucratic government to provide us or our dependents with food, money, housing, medical care, jobs, and any number of other services.


I believe that this change in the American character is fundamental. It is what prompted people to vote for Obama, the man who has brought an aggressive projection of government intrusion into our lives that is both tyrannical and subversive. This degradation of character has made crybabies out of college students, who protest tuition hikes at taxpayer-funded universities because they feel they are owed an education. It has eroded self-reliance so much that union members demand job guarantees, as well as unreasonable and unsustainable benefits which lead to the destruction of businesses and local economies. It has corrupted people to the point that they feel entitled to any number of things that were once their own responsibility to provide. Instead of being a shameful last resort, the government is, for huge numbers of people, the first place they look to when they have a need.


We have paid dearly for this, and we will suffer for it greatly in the future. This kind of dependence enervates a nation, leading to passivity and to spiritual and economic bankruptcy.

Daniel Fitzgerald is the pen name of an author who prefers anonymity.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Notice how the story starts off with a firm foundation in Christianity, and quickly denigrates into the den of mental health professionals? There ya go. From the frying pan into the deep fat fryer. No wonder the kid's FUBARED.
 

Pilgrim

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I seriously doubt that the kid's Christian upbringing has anything to do with his mental illness. This type of illness sometimes may not manifest itself until the individual reaches a certain age; in the author's situation it sounds like his son started having problems when he left the structured environment of home and family and was faced with the pressures of college life and the level of independance that goes with it. Although it's not mentioned in the article, there might also have been the factor of illegal drug use by the kid while he was away from home - but that's just speculation on my part because of the experiences of my niece.

Her story was very similar to the one described by the article - it just took longer to develop. She did well in high school and graduated with honors from UNC, followed by a job with one of the Fortune 100 companies. She did very well with this company for her first couple of years, but somewhere along the way she was introduced by one of her new friends to Adderall as an easy way to keep her weight down and stay alert and energetic during the day. Evidently, it soon took a higher dosage to get the desired effect and the downward spiral began. To make a long story short, after about four years of drug abuse and two years of rehab she's now 33 years old and suffers from bipolar disorder that we suspect was triggered by the drug abuse. However, bipolar disorder often manifests itself in young women around 30 years old with or without the catalyst of drugs. Bottom line is, Adderall is bad news and is chronically over-prescribed by incompetent doctors of this day and age. Thanks to this poison, my niece now lives with her parents and is unable to function without medication to control the bipolar disorder. There's no telling whether or not she'll ever be able to hold a meaningful job again and be able to support herself. Maybe Barack Hussein Obama or some other political hack will take care of her after her parents are no longer able. After all, that would be only "fair" since government regulation of drugs like adderall is practically non-existant, resulting in an epidemic of prescription drug abuse - but I guess that's a topic for another thread.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Destruction of what? American virtues?

Oh come on.

Maybe there is some truth in this because the mind is a weird place and not all doctors can get it right the first time and it sometimes takes a lot of time. BUT I can't blame the medical profession outside of lowering the bar to include a lot of symptoms as diseases. The same goes for parents who expect some cure that ails a lot of their kids to happen right away.

ONE thing that is never mentioned in these stories is the use of prescription drugs when they were kids. For example a lot of anti-depressants (zoloft is one) has been prescribed to kids as young as 10, and it wasn't meant to go into a kid younger than 21. A lot of times parents will insist on giving it to the kid to shut them up or slow them down but we do not know the long term affects to their screwed up mind, no one has yet done a study or forced GPs from prescribing it.
 
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