Friday, February 13, 2009















I don’t know; maybe it’s just me. I read in today’s Detroit Free Press about a mom who shoved her 4-year old daughter in the oven. “I’m sick,” she told the 31st District Court.

And rightfully so: She’d been cut off from her expensive antipsychotic medication and, in her daughter’s words, “tried to bake me like a turkey.”

As sad as this is, I don’t want to prejudge anyone. Instead, I want to talk about the controlled environment I work in called PRISON.

I had my first full week dealing with mentally disturbed inmates. I’m not sure exactly how us academic teachers are supposed to react, but given the circumstances, I think we coped fairly well.

Maybe it’s just me, but I’m not sure placing these inmates into our classrooms before their files arrived, before they’d had their orientation (if they’ll have one at all), was such a great idea. Maybe it’s just me, but I think I would’ve waited to make a more informed decision about enrolling them in school.

When my new students arrived, we were cautious. One student in a short-sleeved shirt, obviously a cutter, displayed his self-inflicted wounds, and smiling, pulled his skin taut with 10-inches of stitching along his rightside cheek. He lasted one day. Since I’m responsible for my students’ whereabouts and he never showed for Day 2, I wrote his name on the absence list. Here’s what I got back: Needs to be re-evaluated. Upon further investigation I found out that he kept pulling those stitches out of his face.

On my third day of class one of my heavily medicated new students fell out of his chair and had a seizure. My students made sure the tables and chairs were cleared away while I rolled him onto his side and made sure he had a pulse and could breathe. When the nurse showed up she asked me if he’d been known to have seizures. I’m sure you already know how I wanted to respond—Fuck if I know, he just got here—but I said nothing.

I could go on, but I won’t. It is was it is and I do get paid.

13 comments:

Ruth W. said...

I have asked it once before and I'll ask it again, why do you stay there??

Just curious

Celticspirit said...

I'm sure it's very rewarding but I wonder how you deal with it all every day. Is it hard to put your work aside when you go home and just live your normal life?

Donnetta Lee said...

As I have said before, it reminds me so much of the school I work in. I've learned to dummy down real well. Hey, police escorted a man in a car off campus last week. They asked him what he was doing on the campus and he said he was there to pick up a little girl from the elementary. Police asked him who the girl was and he didn't know her name! They escorted him off campus promptly. D

the walking man said...

I wonder if the state now is going to count the classroom hours as a part of court ordered treatment for the offenders. Seems to me to be an unreasonable burden to place on staff not acquainted with even the barest of information or training in dealing with psychiatric issues.

Beth said...

"It is was it is" - but it still seems wrong - for all concerned.

Charles Gramlich said...

Many years ago I had a student have a seizure just outside my classroom. It was shocking and it took way too long for the medics to get there. Fortunately she didn't have a really big one.

I think it's rather criminal to put them in your classes with not discussion or warning about what you might have to expect.

Anonymous said...

JR. Unfortunately they are protected by the privacy act-insane bureaucracy/ it will only get worse. I believe our facility is slated to become the new "Huron Valley". Hey, free fishing weekend...Gotta try the mouth of the spillway before I go back to the nut house. MW :)

The Preacherman said...

But do you get paid enough?

Buggered if I'd be around nutters without some serious danger money and some very thick safety glass!!

jodi said...

Please be careful, JR. Without taking the time to evaluate and stabilze meds, you could be seriously hurt.

Lana Gramlich said...

Just be careful, whatever you do.
I'm glad the students moved the tables & chairs for the person w/the seizure. I would have expected much less empathy than that.

Whitenoise said...

Yes, I hope you're earning some sort of hazard pay- something for the increased responsibility and personal danger.

Amber said...

When I worked with handicapped people, the company was really shady and secretive and never told us details of anyone's conditions - they said it was a "need to know basis" but I later found out through various experiences and from the home-caregivers of the patients that some of them infectious diseases and seizures among other problems - which if you ask me I NEED TO KNOW. Stupid jobs.

bluesugarpoet said...

Wow. While that situation is insanely ridiculous (pun intended), I'll bet teaching the criminally insane would spawn some crazy fiction (pun also intended). (It seems wrong for me to joke like that, I know, but in my family, we always make light of the terrible in order to keep ourselves from running away and screaming like little girls).

But is it worth your life to have great writing material?