Friday, August 01, 2008

The Kingpin

We'll just go right to the story.

A few years ago I got a call from a colleague who wanted to refer me a patient. Not just any patient, of course. A really, really difficult patient, a complicated patient (like there are people who aren't difficult, who aren't complicated).

The details and demographics in this post have all been changed, so no, this isn't about you or anyone else that you know; it's fiction, and even if you think you're the colleague, believe me, you're not.

We'll make the identified patient a teenager, a girl of 14 who acts more like a 4-year old with an advanced vocabulary. She's physically violent, verbally abusive, self-centered, infantile, and ALD, A Little Different, although I think my friend's exact words were,
"She's very weird."
Some kids can be a little weird. They're kids. I don't like diagnosing them or making them into outliers* because they're just kids. A little different is much better than a little weird, but we're colleagues, and when we get to talking we might get a little loose, may not always be so p.c.

But we like different. Or we should. Why go into this field if not to meet all kinds of people? Don't tell me it's to help. Help is the process, that's what we do. It's not necessarily our motivation for doing it.

I get these kinds of consults on occasion. The colleague will say,
I've never met anyone like her in my life!
Code for,
Surely you want to take her off my hands!
Sometimes, when I listen to the details of the case, I'll whisper under my breath, Marvelous. I'm not saying the case is marvelous or happy, or good. I'm saying: This is so interesting. And it is.

So I'll listen and then I'll make some suggestions, tell the doc what to try to do differently, maybe even take the case. But I try to avoid kids who are reputedly violent, unless they're under a medical doctor's care, as in a psychiatrist. And I need to know that the kid's been quiet for awhile, has moments of wellness, as this little girl, the one my colleague wants to refer to me, has when she's in school. And I need to know that the family is willing to pop the kid into the hospital if necessary.

Why would I be abused? One lamp flying at a person in a lifetime (by a nine year old, I ducked) in a career is enough. Kids can do that, beat up therapists, both physically and verbally. And they come in with weapons. We live in a violent world. Kids have showed me their weapons. I say, Leave your knives at the door, and they smile, take out knives, leave them at the door.

"Tell me about the case," I say.

The 14 year old has always been different, socially inappropriate, Asperger's-like, angry, sad. Whatever it is, the emotion that's expressed is always extreme. But that's only with family, rarely with peers, and it's escalated, her anger, her mood swings, her attention seeking, her non-stop dependent behavior and whining around her parents.

But in school she's under control. The girls in her class aren't mashugee** for her, but they don't socially ostracize her, either.

Let's say, to make it interesting, that she has four or five other siblings, two with severe developmental delays. One aunt has schizophrenia; her mother OCD, an uncle has bi-polar disorder, and her father has ADHD and depression. It's a vegetable soup of diagnoses, and this is just a phone consult. I've yet to ask a question.

My colleague has seen the patient and her parents in various combinations for over a year. The symptoms have escalated in the past few months. Parents get along with one another well, but they're both overwhelmed with their lot, their children.

"Any recent changes, deaths, perhaps?" I ask.

"No."

"Separations?"

"Uh, uh."

"Who pays for all the therapy?"

"Grandpa. He's loaded."

"And where does Grandpa live?"

She names a wealthy suburb.

"Is he involved in the patient's life?"

"He used to be, but since the kid got really bad, and since he read the psychological tests, he's distanced himself. The tests are packed with ugly diagnoses, a negative prognosis. And the kid insulted Grandpa, literally kicked him. Gramps can't take the disrespect. I understand the two of them were really close when she was a little younger."

"You have to get Grandpa into the therapy."

"They're afraid to stress him, afraid he'll stop paying the bills."

"They are? Or you are?"

"They're afraid of rocking the boat."

"So the kid does it for them. She won't get better without him. And with him, it's likely she will. There's your missing relationship. She needs him. Her parents are busy with the other kids. Sometimes if it looks like a duck, it's a duck. And they already love one another. Include another sib if you can, too. Maybe all of them in different combinations. People spend money on lesser things."

End of consult. I gotta' go.

It's funny. My father-in-law (OBS)*** believed that if you paid the bills, you called the shots. It's not true, though, when you have a sick kid, is it? When your kid or grandkid is sick, you can't will things to get better. You can't make a sick kid behave, make a kid show respect. You can't buy the cure.

But in a case like this one, the person who is paying the bills has some power, some leverage. He's left, he can come back. How hard is this?

He may have to change the way he is with his granddaughter, may have to change the way he talks to her, lower his expectations, add new ones. You're only a family therapist; he's the kid's grandfather. That's what you tell him on the phone. Who knows the kid better than him?

He's pumped up, respected. You tell him you're very sure that he knows how to work this kid, and you're interested in his opinions. People will obviously have to change the way they respond to her behavior, you suggest. Then you ask, Who should change what? How?

He has so much to tell you. He starts the ball rolling. You stop him somewhere in the middle. You say you have another patient. When can he come in? Soon, of course, he wants to continue to help. He makes an appointment.

Then the two of you strategize. He is the kingpin. You are a shlepper,**** a professional who knows nothing about this family system. We professionals are nothing without family input. The family has the answers. He, Grandpa, is your man.

More than likely you'll come up with this plan, or a variation of it.

He should expect to be called names. He should respond with kindness. "I won't reject you if you don't reject me," is his best response. He will need to say this over and over again, say it in different ways.

Everything, everything, depends upon his love. He can't give up on his granddaughter when she needs him the most.

You bring him into the therapy. You yourself, as a therapist, give him the respect he deserves. You engage that person who's paying the bills, who wants to call the shots, and you work the angles you know have to be worked, the relationship angles, the sweetness, the love.

You pull Grampa in and the kid has half a chance.

All that and a nickel, my father-in-law would have said, will get me a cup of coffee, which she owes me, come to think of it, my colleague.

therapydoc

*an outlier in a data set is a score that's Way higher or Way lower than the rest of the distribution.

**mashugee* is Yiddish for out there, but in this case it means, head over heels excited about, or wild about

***OBS is something like, Up in Heaven, or he should go up in peace

****Shlepper literally means someone who shleps, carries things, but here a shlepper is someone who is clearly not an executive.

16 comments:

Wait. What? said...

I like your style of blog and am glad i found you.

Anonymous said...

I love the word Outlier from my research methods class...Someone refered to me as "Outlier" In Life/sex or something like that and I laughed about that and that 10 dollar word from the class hererosysdasity

Leora said...

You got me hooked on this girl and her story. So is this it? We don't get to hear more, just that you pulled Gramps in? Any daughter with an OCD mom would have a hard time, but for her, that sounds like bad recipe.

therapydoc said...

Leo, How's Where there's life, there's hope?

Jack Steiner said...

You yourself, as a therapist, give him the respect he deserves. You engage that person who's paying the bills, who wants to call the shots, and you work the angles you know have to be worked, the relationship angles, the sweetness, the love.

The cynic in me asks why we need to kowtow to those who should do the right thing and help their families.

The realist in me understands that most people like to be stroked and that a little flattery can go a long way.

nashbabe said...

Whomever the person really is, and whatever their story really is, such an approach is gratifying to hear about. Worth considerably more than the starbucks latte to which you allude.

therapydoc said...

And if you want it to work, staying real helps.

porcini66 said...

I'm gonna keep readin' your blogs and, when my kids are ready, I'll give you a call! Sigh..sad when you know it's almost inevitable, isn't it?

Isle Dance said...

I feel like I need to hear more about this. If I were the Grandpa, the grandchild would be my sister. I didn't go to therapy to work it out with her. Because the therapist allowed her to continue lashing out. Abusively. To this day. I would have gone, however, had the therapist pulled me aside and said, "Here's the plan."

Anonymous said...

I liked the way you suggested the family involvement to help the child.
I was teaching theater and had a student with aspergers, and I had to accept that maybe after all the rehearsals he wouldn't be able to go on stage. It was great because he'd tell me what he felt comfortable doing and after a while made suggestions for the play.
K in the Sonoran desert

Cate Subrosa said...

TherapyDoc, I enjoyed this post a lot. What an interesting story. It was the reminder I needed to pop up and say hi, let you know I'm still following you in my reader - even though I rarely comment these days - and I still love your blog :)

A Living Nadneyda said...

I love this post, especially your reminder:

Why go into this field if not to meet all kinds of people? Don't tell me it's to help. Help is the process, that's what we do. It's not necessarily our motivation for doing it.

Great way to put it, and how true. How many of us admit that to ourselves on a regular basis, as we should be doing?

(We just refer to them as "WK's" -- Weird Kids).

Thanks for sharing,

ALN

Anonymous said...

Amazing the power of money, isn't it?

Anonymous said...

Great story. I was chuckling thinking of how many times I have employed the ego boost for positive reasons when working with clients and involved others. Love your blog.

www.illusivejoy.wordpress.com

Anonymous said...

Have you ever written a book for the masses about therapy? You have some good material from your past blogs to get you started....

therapydoc said...

My problem with writing, as you can see from the blog, is that I'm all over the place, have so many things to write about.

And there are so many self-help books for people to choose from.

But you're right. They usually miss the good stuff, the
heart
of the matter.

Still, what does a person even tell an agent?

I write for dry journals, teach dry stuff, and have a nice wet blog that lots of people read? Maybe.

Anyway, ANON, my friend, I'm working on a book about therapy stuff (these things are hard! I'd rather blog!) and when I finish it, you're going to be the first to know.

I'll need someone's shoulder to cry on.

And in the meantime I've got what to do, as my mother would say, and can teach this way without no pressure, and hope to continue to do so for a long, long time.

Your encouragement is exactly what I need to get back to working on it.

Thanks

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