Got this in last night:
Dear John,
I’m having a spiritual problem right now that I hope you can advise me on.
Through a community services agency, our family does respite care for Tim, a boy with special needs. Respite care means that we take care of Tim so that his mom can work, take a break, and generally do what she needs to. Tim has his own room in our house, equipped with a hospital bed and everything needed for his proper care. For the past ten years Tim has been at our house more often than he has at his mom’s.
My family loves Tim more than I can possibly say. He’s been as much a part of our family, as much my little brother, as if he were my flesh and blood. And there’s no doubt that our care and love for Tim has extended his life. Everyone tells us that it’s because of us that he has lived as long as he has. Tim was expected to die one year after he came into our lives, when he was nine years old. He is now eighteen.
Timmy is such a light, and has taught me so much about love and serving God through serving others. I wish the whole world could learn what we have learned from knowing, caring for, and loving this sweet child. He has taught me the very meaning of unconditional love, and I think it’s as close as I’ll get to seeing Jesus until it’s time for me to go meet Him myself.
John, last Friday Tim became seriously ill, and was taken to the hospital. After high doses of antibiotics he started pulling through, but then his body temperature and blood pressure dropped.
Suddenly his mother decided to stop all medical care for Tim, including his feeding tube and i.v. fluids.
It’s about Tim’s mother that I’m writing you. I don’t know what to do with my anger toward her.
Tim’s mother is an alcoholic who has always neglected Tim. Basically, her main interest in Tim lies in the checks he gets for social security and child support, which she uses to support her habits, which include gambling. (And smoking, which has been the cause of some real grief in our family, because even with all of Tim’s health problems, his mother and her boyfriend smoke in their house, even when Tim is there.)
The bottom line is that we’ve known for years that his mother wants Tim to die. She likes the money he brings, but other than that it’s clear she has no use for him. But Tim has plugged on anyway, thanks to the quality of care he gets at our house and the prayers of so many who love him.
Though for years we’ve begged the social services agency we work with to do something about Tim’s mother’s neglect of him, they’ve always kept their distance, always said they say they can’t get involved, because of a mother’s rights. This has always been so angering to me. What about a child’s right to a decent life? How does that not count for anything?
For the past few months we have pleaded with Tim’s mother to take him to the doctor, since we knew he was getting worse. But all along she refused, until last week, when he finally got so bad he was taken to the hospital, where he was diagnosed with aspiration pneumonia.
And now it seems she’s taken advantage of what’s happened to finally get her wish for Tim’s demise. Because of her decision to cease all efforts to heal him, they’re now only giving Tim “comfort care,” including morphine, which is a respiratory suppressant. Without his tube feedings and fluids, it will only be a few more days before he passes.
My dad is a registered nurse, and after speaking with the doctors and nurses, he knows Tim had a fighting chance if Tim’s mother had continued his feedings and i.v. fluids.
Tim is still alert; he smiles and laughs when my parents or I am there. If once this week while talking about Tim I have used, or thought of, the name Terri Schiavo, I’ve done so twenty times.
On Friday, before he got so sick and his mother made her choice, I told Tim that he and I had a date for the Final Four. (Timmy loves basketball and fusses and quarrels at the TV when his team isn’t winning.) He smiled and laughed. I don’t see how any mother could take such joy from their own child and not fight while her child still has a chance to live.
How does a mother do this to her child? That’s what I’m really struggling with, John. I thought a mother’s love for her child was supposed to be the purest form of love next to the love of God and Christ Jesus.
And how do I keep from judging this woman? I know I’m judging her, and I’m so angry. I want to fight for this child, but there’s nothing I can do because he’s not my flesh and blood. How do I keep from hating his mother?
You’re really the only person I thought I could reach out to for a Christian perspective. I’ve prayed and asked God to either be merciful and take Tim home, or to intervene on Tim’s behalf. Am I praying the right thing? I’d really like to ask God to smite Tim’s mother down in her path, but I doubt He would be really happy with me . . . He’s probably not happy with me for just typing that.
Could you give me some insights, or at least pray for me?
Well, first of all, of course you’re going to judge the poor boy’s mother. Wrong is wrong. You’re not judging her soul; you’re judging her actions. You get to do that: you get to call wrong wrong. You’re supposed to do that. We all are. Why else have a conscience?
And you can right away jettison the weirdly enduring myth that a mother’s love for her child is necessarily sublime and wonderful and cosmically inspired. It’s not. Most mothers love their children in that special, super-intense way, yes. But most is a very long way from all. If I had a nickle for every mother I’ve known who neglected, beat, abandoned, emotionally tortured, or in any other way basically did everything she could to trash the life of her child, I’d buy Disneyland and Disney World—and let every kid in for free forever.
It’s so sweet that you believe that, as you so well put it, “a mother’s love for her child is supposed to be the purest form of love next to the love of God and Christ Jesus.” Sweet, but, alas, also wrong. It’s terrible that your first experience with Deplorable Moms is that of poor Tim. That’s like having the first spider you ever see be a nuked-up tarantula. But, as I’m sure you know, Tim’s won’t be the last reprehensible mother you’ll ever wish you never met.
In so many ways this world really is a vale of tears. And that’s in no small part due to the endless numbers of mothers who are no more suited for motherhood than I am for piloting a space shuttle.
And yes, in praying and asking God to either be merciful and take Tim home, or to intervene on Tim’s behalf, you have prayed exactly the right prayer. What else can you pray for? Those are your two good options. That prayer of yours nails it.
As to your most pressing concern, which is the anger you are now harboring towards Tim’s mother. It’s really good that you’re already focused on the (God knows) sometimes unclear truth that hatred is, in fact, your greatest personal enemy. Hatred kills. And it mostly kills—however slowly, however corrosively—those who hate. So you’re wise to already be thinking of how to process your feelings toward Tim’s mom. No use letting the [expletive deleted] take you out along with her son.
The type of anger this terrible series of events has occasioned in you is the most acute emotional pain there is. Someone you dearly love has become the ultimate victim of someone else—and there is nothing that you can do about it. That’s the worst. If you are the one being victimized, at least you have some control over what’s going on; at least you can in some way control or measure your response to what’s happening: you’re engaged in that way. But when you are forced to do nothing but witness harm being done to a loved one?
Man, that is one difficult place to be.
But look who I’m telling.
So what I think it’s important to understand is that the way the anger that you are now experiencing feels to you is as nothing so much as it is anguish. The root of our word anger is, in fact, the Old Norse word angr, which means anguish, distress, grief, sorrow, affliction. And I wasn’t surprise to discover that’s so, because in its purest, most concentrated form—which is to say when it’s attended by perfect helplessness—that’s what anger is: anguish.
You are angry, yes. But mostly you’re anguished.
And now we come to the part where it’s really, really good that you’re Christian. Because if you believe that the whole point of your life is to as fully as possible identify with Christ—which is to say as fully as possible have your conscientiousness replaced, or inhabited, by Christ’s—then you actually and truly need this pain.
And let me hasten to add that I know that’s a fairly repulsive thing to hear: when you’re suffering, there’s nothing like, “But this is a good thing!” to make you want to punch somebody’s lights out. But for pain as deep and hard and real as yours, it’s … Christ time.
So much of Christianity is about peace, joy, happiness, wholesomeness, love, etc. And we all love that stuff. Bunnies! Sweets! Colored eggs for some reason! All great.
But the other side of that reality—the opposite of all that fulfilling, happy light—is shattered, ugly darkness.
Christ’s life was definitely a heavenly miracle. But just as definitely his death was an earthly horror. And if you want to really know Christ, you’ve got to really know both.
Don’t think of Tim’s mother as an evil murdering witch who needs to die. Think of her as the vehicle by which you’ve been driven directly to the state of knowing more about the pain and suffering of Christ than probably God himself wishes anyone ever had to know.
Bottom line: you can’t know Christ if you don’t know profound, dogged emotional pain. And I’m sure this isn’t the first emotional trauma of your life—I mean, obviously. But I’ll bet it’s as bad as any pain/anger/despair you’ve ever felt; this one is certain to be with you for life. It’s bad enough for you to feel as if you yourself have been rudely forced down onto, and then nailed to, a cross. Like you’ve had great strips of flesh whipped off your bones. Like you’ve had jabbed into your cut and bleeding mouth a fetid rag soaked in vinegar and bile.
Like you’ve been, in a word, massacred. Sacrificed on the unholy temple of animal ignorance.
So my advice is to run toward, and not away, from your infinitely righteous anger. Claim your pain. You’re sad; you’re angry; you’re suffering; you’ve had to stand by and watch someone you love essentially be murdered by the one person on earth who should be most driven to protect them.
You were God to Tim’s Christ.
Get some serious time alone, I say, and close your eyes. In your mind, fall slowly backwards into the darkness. Come to the moment where finally, inevitably, you feel the wooden plank pressed against your spine.
And then spread out your arms. Feel them being attached to the cross beam.
Hold that sacred pose.
And there you will be.
And there, inhabiting every last cell in your body, will be Jesus Christ.
* * * * *
So the deal is, anger is like ignited rocket fuel. If that lit fuel is in a rocket, and it’s going to help that rocket do whatever it’s supposed to, that’s great. But if when ignited that fuel is locked up in storage containers, or in a rocket that’s broken, that’s extremely ungreat.
Your rocket fuel has been lit. And for awhile that’s going to force upon you an implosion—and using Christ’s sacrifice to hold the magnitude of that implosion is real and good. But once that phase of your processing has has passed or waned a bit, you might very well find yourself wanting to do something to balance out the injustice to which you were made an unwilling participant.
Track in yourself that feeling. If after a time—or right away, for that matter—you find yourself thinking in terms of at least attempting to make right what in Tim’s case went so very, very wrong, do. Get busy. Feel the truth of the fact that you are empowered to help change the system. Something broke somewhere, didn’t it? There is deeply embedded in child welfare and related services a resistance to compromising or violating parents’ rights that entirely too often causes utter failure to protect our most vulnerable children. Anyone involved in this sort of work has all kinds of stories about instances in which, out of the fear of being sued, basically, already-strapped-for-funds child welfare people kept their distance while the parents of some poor kid continued to exact upon that kid more harm than any sane person could stand to be aware of.
That [expletive deleted] happens all the time. (And it’s certainly not any particular fault of child welfare agencies, who will get sued, and who are—to what should be our national shame—perpetually working on half a frayed shoestring.) Maybe you can help change that system. You’re in the system, yes? So you have that advantage. Start where you are; go up the food chain; find the weakest or broken link in that chain; and get busy.
Maybe there are care standards that can be defined and qualified in such a way that they can then be codified into some sort of enforceable evaluative processes. Maybe special legal protections can be formulated and then applied to child welfare cases that meet certain conditions and standards. Maybe you can help figure out a way to get child welfare agencies funded in a way that doesn’t make clear to the world that Americans really don’t care about their poorest and most vulnerable children. Talk about doing Jesus’ work in the world.
So, in summary, relative to this unbelievably awful place you’ve found yourself: Go Christ inside, and then go Christ outside.
And know that we’re with you, sister.
Please keep us up. Love to you.

















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Apologies to the writer of this piece , my response, which only came to light today, was meant for another story all together, about a guy who was asking how he could know if he had truly forgiven someone ..in any case this is story is about anger not forgiveness ..I don’t know how it got miss posted, again apologies ..
As a Physician of 34 years practice behind me, I have dealt with death and dying issues more than I can recall. Also, circumstances vary widely, from the terminally ill from incurable illnesses, the ravages of aging which make life intolerable, and even the final days of persons with mental defects (organic – now politically incorrect yo call “retardation”) including autism and Aspergers. It is never easy for the loved ones involved – especially the devoted caregivers, nor should it be the topic of gossip, criticism for those who would judge and condemn them when they decide for the afflicted person – out of love – that life at any cost – without cognizance of it by the suffer – is justified, nor morally, ethically, theologically necessary. We all depart this life when the good Lord chooses to receive our soul into His eternal, loving embrace. Just because a caregiver decides to discontinue life support or extraordinary measures (and yes, feeding, hydrating a person who has no life enjoyment can be extraordinary) and the person continues to “exist” – merely breathing, heart beating longer than expected, is not an indication that the decision was wrong nor “sinful. Our bodies have automatic functions which persist long after basic needs are not provided. It has nothing to do with “Divine” judgement nor should we condemn persons involved – lest we impale our very souls with our un-Christian words. Rather, caregivers/decision makers deserve our support and love more than ever at these times. No decision to stop life support is easy – it is heart/soul wrenching. The adage of “what would Jesus do…WWJD”…comes to mind. He would lovingly embrace those involved with compassion, unconditional love and if sin was involved – He would extend forgiveness not condemnation – just as He NEVER condemned a single person while on Earth – nor does He now or ever will…we condemn ourselves by failing to love all as He loved us…as we wish to be loved. Namaste…David
I don’t suppose you’re the same “JDuck” who often comments on my posts over on HuffPo?
I wanted to give you all an update about our dear Tim. It has been 23 days since Tim last had his tube feedings or i.v. fluids. For some reason, he is still hanging on. It is the longest we have ever seen someone hold on without nourishment or fluids. I don’t know what God’s plan is in all this. I keep praying that the Lord will take him home and end his suffering. A minister told me something so comforting . . . that Jesus is feeding Tim and he is not suffering. I’m really clinging to that right now, as it’s one of the few things that keeps me from falling into a deep depression.
Late last week, the insurance company stopped hospital coverage, and the doctors sent Tim home with hospice care. Now, his mother and her boyfriend have him lying on a couch. They didn’t even want his hospital bed from our home. The agency for which we work chose not to seek legal action, as his mother is Tim’s next-of-kin, and it’s ultimately her decision as to Tim’s care.
I’m mentally, physically, and emotionally exhausted, and we are still in desperate need of your prayers. We also care for a young lady, a full-time placement in our home who has autism. She has also been Tim’s sister for the last seven years that she has lived with us. She doesn’t understand where Tim is, and it’s hard to explain to her. If anyone has suggestions as to how we can help her say goodbye to Tim, I would appreciate them. She’s been in a cycle of tantrums and bad behaviors, as her routine of Tim being at our house has been disrupted. We’re trying not to discuss the situation in front of her, as she cries when we cry (very unusual for most children with autism).
It’s been a long, hard unusual situation, and I will do my best to keep you posted. Please continue to pray for us.
Hi, I think many of us will wonder, is there a reason your family decided not to seek independent legal intervention, sidestepping Tim’s family and the agency which placed Tim in your care?
I had to intervene, legally, when my grandmother had a stroke while visiting a (crazy bitch) aunt, and our aunt decided to use the opportunity to cut my grandmother off from the rest of the family unless we gave them money. Judges take these situations very seriously, and if all is have you explained, I think you’ll find the court sympathetic.
Tim’s options may be limited (although, like someone else said, get an attorney on this). I cannot imagine the kind of pain you’re in (and take John’s advice for meditating on it), but no matter what else you do, you’ve got to change your focus. Yes, that woman is appallingly cruel, but there’s a young man who relies on you, who loves you, and needs you right now. Remember that, remember your love for him. There is no changing what’s happened. All you can do is be with him NOW, in this moment, and give him all the comfort you can. Just BE THERE.
You’ll both be in my prayers.
There are no words.
Call an attorney immediately or bring the hospital social worker in ASAP. Tim is 18 and an adult. If his mother has Power of Attorney and is deemed unfit for such responsibility, then the court must appoint a conservator who is fit. Most hopefully be your dad. Good luck.
This makes me so very sad. One of the absolute worst ways to go. This poor poor child! And how awful for the letter write and their family. My heart breaks.
I am in anguish over this as well.
@Terri Antonovich: it’s actually our job to comfort one another. Feelings are completely relevant, particularly when someone’s been vulnerable enough to share them, asking for support. I’m sure that’s what you meant.
I’ve thought for a long, long time that the place where our system goes the most wrong is that it considers the “property rights” of the parents over the well being of th child. Kids are torn from happy loving foster homes (no, I know some are pure horror too- but there are lovely ones as well) because their serially incarcerated parent is out of prison…and wants the welfare check. Parents like Tim’s mom who are basically given incentive checks to keep custody even though they are known to be neglectful. We would have a lot more happy endings if the happiness of the kids and the hopeful loving homes waiting for them would be considered first.
Yes. I agree with you 100%.
Original letter writer, can we please hear from you if the situation changes or Tim passes? I would like to know how you’re doing; I’m thinking of you and praying for you.
I will definitely let you all know. He’s still holding on, but he’s been without nourishment for over a week now. My dad went to see him on Friday. My mother and I can’t bear to go. Dad said he doubted he would make it through the weekend. Honestly, I prayed that if he has to die that today would be the day because of this significance of this holy day. I thought what a day for Tim to enter the gates of Heaven, the same day that Jesus Christ entered Jerusalem to fulfill his work. I will keep you posted.
powerful response; the part about the underlying relationship of anger with anguish is profound. Over the last several years, have thought often about the relationship of anger to pain. Somebody hits us, we get angry because it hurts. A lover cheats and we get angry becuase it hurts. But I have never gone as far as to think about anguish; will now.
We forgive as we have been forgiven …. A simple decision,feelings are irrelevant . the Lord will bring the comfort
A simple decision? Feelings are irrelevant? Are you KIDDING ?? How dare you trivialize the seriousness of this situation and this woman’s feelings because your head is in the ground. Forgiveness is NOT easy in a situation where a drunken mother has essentially abandoned her son’s life. You are unbelievable and insensitive.
I am not comforted. I am still very angry. It was not a simple decision, in my opinion. If he had truly been shutting down, as the mother says was her excuse, he would have died before now. It’s been a week that he’s been without nourishment. A week…
Wow, Terri. If you indeed would be capable of shutting off your feelings like that, you’re either a saint of barely human. No, that’s a bit harsh. Perhaps you’ve never been in a horrific situation about which you could do nothing? Perhaps you’ve been so fortunate in your life that you’ve never been hurt by anyone? I don’t know, but I do know that forgiveness is a process and it’s a lot of things, but without feeling? Oh, THAT it most certainly is NOT.
@Letter Writer–The only comfort here is being with him in any way you can. I know you can’t bear to see him in this state, but go to him. The regret of not being there in these last days will haunt you, believe me.
Wonderful response to this woman’s anguish in the face of an awful situation. Thank you, John, and God be with this lady to help her “go Christ.”
this is what i wanted to say to the woman who mothered Tim. You just lost a son. You have the right to grieve and to be angry for his neglect and for the fact that no one called you. this is going to take a lot of time. you do not have to forgive her right now. you have to grieve.
Bless you, Sarita.
It ain’t easy.
There are some things that people simply can’t reply to over the range of conflicting emotions something like this creates.
I don’t want to comment on the particular case in the OP because the information we have is limited and naturally one-sided. But I find it disturbing that the trend in the comments seems to be that withdrawing life support is automatically an evil thing. There is a fairly clear ethical line between allowing death to occur, and causing death. And sometimes allowing death is the most christian thing to do. Regardless of the long term potential for recovery, the fact remains that medical care for the very ill is often brutal, and tantamount to torture; to the point where many ICU survivors suffer from PTSD as a result of the “care” they receive. When there are no easy options, and the choice lies between weeks to months of medical torture (and as a physician currently working in an ICU who loves his job, I don’t use that word lightly) vs. a pain free and peaceful death, sometimes the most Christian thing to do is to let God take her child home. Just because we can torture a person and inflict pain and suffering on them in order to keep their heart beating, doesn’t necessarily mean that we should.
Except that, in this particular case, part of the LW’s anger stems from the fact that her family tried for MONTHS to have the boy’s mother seek medical treatment for his *then* relatively minor infection, which has now become a life-threatening condition. If his current condition were the result of a sudden-onset severe illness then your point would be more applicable. It’s the negligence leading up to the current situation that is the most troubling…
I don’t think I have read a more powerful response to the question of what to do with anger. Holy week is coming. I can only pray for everyone involved.
Lord have mercy. Christ have mercy. Lord have mercy.
Christ have mercy.
Ephesians 4:26 talks about not “reacting in sin” to what provokes us. And not letting anger fester w/in us. That’s our path. We’re also supposed to give things to God, because it’s His job to ferret out what’s in everybody’s heart. Easier said, for sure. And you covered the channeling/handling of anger well.
If over the last 10yrs, this family has repeatedly tried to involve DFS, and yet apparently no other involved parties, like MDs or other health providers who have “duty to report”, have found evidence of neglect/abuse….
And while this woman’s father(RN) spoke to the hosp staff, it’s doubtful he was given full medical info. Unless he has been designated by the kid’s mom on a full release, the hospital staff can’t really disclose much w/out running afoul of HIPPA confidentiality mandates.
This is the mother’s responsibility, to make medical decisions for her child. Invoking Terry Schiavo also invokes the years-long battle undertaken by her parents, against her rightful next of kin (her husband, in this case) to fight against TS’s own expressed wishes. In their grief, and admitted anger @ their son-in-law, they believed and hoped for yrs, claiming many things that were–sadly for everyone involved– ultimately determined to be a medical/scientific impossibility all along.
I admit I haven’t read the 79 previous posts, so this may be redundant. First, let me add my condolences. Tim was very fortunate to have you as a care giver.
When I first noticed anger (my Christian training implied women who were good Christians never were angry) I met with mynspiritual director who
pointrd out that God created us with the ability to feel many emotions. We humans judge them as good or bad, but it isn’t the emotion that is good or not, it is how we use those feelings.
Wilberforce was so incensed by the slave trade that he worked for years to have it banned in the British kingdom. Ghandi led peaceful protests. I could go on and on about people who have been ANGRY and channeled that for good. I agree with John that this is a demonstration of the Christ within you.
The other noticing I have is that Tim’s mother was more than likely encouraged by the medical staff to consider cessation of “extreme measures” to keep him alive. This is an ongoing ethical issue. How does one decide when treatment is no longer in the best interest of the person unable to speak for their self? At what point do we recognize that we do not have unlimited financial resources and how do we decide who should recieve those resources? If Tim is still alive, you can take this before the hospital’s ethics committee.
I hope that you will find a spiritual director or soul friend to support you. I will pray for you in these dark days.
I angers me (yep, I get angry over this too!) that our society sees anger as something that is bad. Anger is the emotion that keeps this world in balance. It isn’t anger that is bad, it is how people express their anger through violence…but anger can be so strong that even the most passive person can lash out in violence, verbal or physical. I don’t think that we can experience the fruit of the spirit, love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, and self control, without first figuring out how to turn our anger into change. The key here is that the fruit of the spirit are OF THE SPIRIT and the way that we get to them in this sometimes painful and unfair life is THROUGH the spirit…there is no other way. I makes us seek a better understanding so that our life can have peace.
Sometimes that fruit can only come through compassion. Sometimes the only way that I can remain civil toward people that do utterly evil things is to understand that there is a reason for this mother’s life. Hurt people hurt people. While she has not taken on the responsibility to work out her pain and suffering in her own soul, and everyday she makes her issues the world’s issues, there simply is a very good reason why she is who she is. Her actions, here, are horrible, almost unforgivable from a human standpoint. Deplorable! If this did not anger you, I would ask you to check yourself for a pulse. Your anger shows that you see something terribly wrong and you want it to stop! More people need to care enough to get angry. Thank you for being angry. Thank you for searching high and low to stop this chain of events. This is one of the most important events in your life. You have been trusted to act to save this young man’s life.
The reality, however, because of this fallen world (trite, I know, but I don’t know how else to say it) you probably will not succeed. That should make you even more angry, as it does me. It should spur you on to do good so that this does not happen again. It will change the course of your life and your heart. It may feel like you are raging and out of control and that scares you. Remember, anger was a gift to you from God. It is not bad, what you do with it can be “bad” however. Your lesson in this is to figure out how this deplorable action will make you a better person, more compassionate, more loving, more tolerating. A young man is losing his life and you may or may not be able to stop that (and without your anger, you would not even be trying) but the outcome of this event (because of your anger) will be one person (you) who has survived well through it, and hopefully you will use your anger to make sure that this does not happen to another. You are the only one that you can change, and unfortunately, it will be through the radical acceptance of what is happening. Use your anger! Don’t wish it away, work with in it, and be careful not to cause more pain while you do. And please, do not waste time or energy judging yourself for this righteous anger. It is GOOD!
What brings most of us together on John’s blog is the common denominator of suffering and anger. Each one of us who read John’s blog are on our own path trying to deal with the pain of being abused, neglected, traumatized, bullied, and/or marginalized. The other common denominator with his readers is that we all want to learn how to love better. You can bet that we have all desired to do crazy things to evil people…I know I have. I know you won’t do that. But hopefully you won’t allow this anger to bring out the worst in you, but the best. If it doesn’t hurt, you aren’t doing it right. It is going to hurt, it is going to be hard, and I promise, it will be rewarding. I believe in you! AND, I am so grateful that you are angry.
Things that have worked for me in dealing with this sort of anger is first to get it out. Write this mother a letter and allow yourself to say whatever comes to your mind. If you do it right, it will never leave your hands because it will be so full of vile words and vomit (for lack of a better word) that you will probably be a little embarrassed that you could actually say those things. It is ok. Those feelings and words are already swimming around inside of you and chances are you cannot think a rational thought because of them. Get them out. It is cathartic. This is for you. Once it is all out, you will be able to make room for other healing thoughts.Give yourself an entire day to do this, it is hard, and it is exhausting, AND it is rewarding. Sit in these emotions and notice how getting them out lifts some of the heavy weight on your soul. I believe that when Jesus talks about judgement, he is asking us to allow him to deal with the other person, and he is asking us to deal with ourselves. You can do this. And please, no matter how much you will want to send this letter to that mother, don’t. Don’t do it, don’t do it, don’t do it. You will regret it and NO good will come from it. (That will be the self control Jesus speaks of :O) I believe in you, and I feel you. Thanks for bringing this to the table.
Once again, John, you amaze me with the depth of your compassion and understanding for those in pain…. Such wonderful insight and advice, again. It’s no wonder people turn to you in their darkest despair – you always find a way to shine a light into that darkness (and not in a flippant “there’s a light at the end of the tunnel” kind of way, but in a deeply truthful way).
“Go Christ inside, and then go Christ outside.” – magnificent!
this is a sad story but nothing can be done legally
See, that’s the thing. Maybe this matter is important enough to break the law.
I am not encouraging anyone to do anything *cough cough*, but giving someone a bribe or hiring a shady person to frighten the mother into doing the right thing might, HYPOTHETICALLY, help solve the problem.
Not smart. Ethics aside, if the family goes to jail for doing something illegal they can’t take care of the kid or each other.
Good answer, LSS.
What would really not be smart is not considering every option in a situation like this. Again, I’m not encouraging anything and I don’t think this is a 100% way to go, but I don’t think using a little persuasion force to save a child’s life would be unethical.
Turn it into great grief and cry a river, breathe deeply, and hope you can regain your strength with the help of family and friends.
What a gut-wrenching letter. To the writer, I’m so sorry you and Tim and your family are having to experience this. And I’m sorry that somehow his mother still has parental rights. It is evident how much you love him. I’m sure he knows that too. Prayers and wishes of peace to you all. <3
John, what a nice response of compassion and empathy.
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