Mary Lu

Cousins

By Gabrielle.

Since I’ve spoken freely about how this move has thrown me for a mental health loop, I’ve received dozens of emails with kind-hearted questions on the topic, with one of the recurring themes being surprise that I feel so open and shameless about what I’m going through. These conversations have left me thinking hard about what has formed my own views on mental health. And predictably, it turns out my views were formed by experience. Two specific experiences really. And I thought I’d write about one today, and one on another day.

The first experience was growing up with my aunt, Mary Lu, who lived with us. If I asked everyone out there who had a Crazy Aunt Mary to raise their hand, I know pretty much everyone would. But some of us had an actual Crazy Aunt Mary. Mary Lu had Paranoid Schizophrenia. She would hear voices constantly. Sometimes the voices said harmlessly crazy things. And other times they said horrible things. These are some of the thoughts and memories that come to mind when I think about her.

When we moved from California to Utah (I was 5 years old at the time), we built a house, and we built an apartment above the garage specifically for Mary Lu. She could live fairly independently, but my family was right there when necessary. She was part of our daily family life. [Side note: Man. I loved that apartment! It was small, but had everything you’d need. Many years later, when Mary Lu moved out, the apartment above the garage would eventually become a newlywed apartment for my sister, then a college apartment for my brother, and then an apartment for the local Mormon missionaries.]

Mary Lu shook. Constantly. Her hands and arms. Kind of her whole body. Her medication made her shake, so I was taught that if she wasn’t shaking, that meant she hadn’t taken her medication and that I should tell my parents. Every Sunday dinner, Mary Lu would join us, and the table shook the whole time. A shaking table was one of the not-normals that was normal for our family.

If you met Mary Lu, you would know immediately something was off. Her condition had no physical earmarks, but if you interacted with her, or even saw her, you would instantly know you weren’t dealing with an average citizen.

Mary Lu didn’t like a big crowd or lots of people, in fact, I’m sure our family of 10 was a challenge for her. But she would still spend time at our house — watching TV with a couple of us kids after school, or visiting with someone in the living room. And she was a fixture during holidays and Sunday dinners. When everyone left the dinner table to chat in the living room, she would find the conversations too intense and would end up back in the kitchen working on the dishes. Of course, everyone felt guilty that she was in there slaving away while the rest of us were enjoying ourselves, so one of us would join her in the kitchen and sometimes she would be up for chatting. But other times she wanted to be alone.

Sometimes her medication would be off, and something would be wrong and she would need to be checked in to a full-time care facility for a couple of weeks. And then she’d move home, to the apartment above the garage.

She wasn’t violent. My only memory of aggression was once when I was practicing hand-stands and it bothered her and she rushed at me to stop me. I was scared and she was strong. But I called out and she didn’t hurt me.

She was a fixture in our neighborhood and church. On the first Sunday of the month, which is sort-of open-mic day at Mormon churches, she would say crazy stuff. Like that she knows she was really adopted (she wasn’t), and that her birth parents were black (they’re not). That she hoped God would forgive her because her brother-in-law saw her in her underwear. (The story there was that My Uncle Pete had knocked on her door and then opened it to say, “Time for Dinner”, catching Mary Lu while she was dressing. But of course, the way Mary Lu told the story over the pulpit had the congregation wondering if my Dad was some sort of peeping tom. Good times!)

Mary Lu always had a bowl of little sugar-free hard candies (I have no idea why they were always sugar free, but they were). And all the neighborhood kids knew they could knock on her door for a treat. Until one Sunday when she innocently mentioned something about candies and poison in the same thought. After that (understandably, but still sadly) kids weren’t allowed to knock on Mary Lu’s door for candy anymore.

One of the things that just stops my heart is that there was no name for her illness when she was young. My grandparents were at a complete loss. And I can’t imagine how terrifying that must have been — not knowing what was wrong or how to help. Just to give you an idea, they lived in L.A., and as a child, Mary Lu once wandered away from school (yes, this was a different era) and walked onto the freeway, and rocked back and forth stopping traffic. But at the same time, she was in mainstream schools with no diagnosis.

Eventually there was a diagnosis. And medication. But the disease was new enough, the reality was that the medication was pretty much an experiment. And it wasn’t necessarily effective. (I’ve heard great strides have been made medication wise in recent years, which is wonderful.)

When I was 16 or 17, I was at my Grandma’s house, and Mary Lu was there. She was really, really, excited  to share some good news. She told me there was a new medication! That it was going to stop the voices!! I shared in her joy, then had to go outside where I wept with a new realization. For some reason, no doubt to comfort myself, I had assumed Mary Lu wasn’t really aware of her situation. She didn’t talk about it. She didn’t talk about being sick. In that conversation, for the first time I understood that she was fully aware of what her life was. And that she wanted it to be different. That she heard voices and she wanted that to stop. She must have been about 50 years old at the time. 50 years of hearing voices. (And sadly, the new medication didn’t work.)

When Mary Lu was stable enough, my grandparents bought her a small home in downtown St. George, where she could walk to the library and shops and live even more independently, and she moved out of the apartment above the garage. I went off to college not long after. But I would still see Mary Lu during the holidays and at family gatherings. Sometimes she would wrap up her half-used groceries — like an open box of rice — and bring them as gifts.

She died a few years ago. And I don’t think I even mentioned it here. I think I’m still processing the idea that she’s gone. And I still have a hard time making sense of what her life was. What it meant. Did she get to experience enough joy to make it worthwhile? Or was it a life of confusion and frustration?

Those of you who have seen sickness like this up close know that it influences everything. Where my grandparents could move. How they handled their finances so Mary Lu could be provided for — she lived till she was almost 70. My aunt, Mary Lu’s sister, went into psychology in college, simply because growing up with a sister who had schizophrenia informed her whole childhood. My mother built an apartment for her. It affects you. It affects life. I remember learning about genetics in school, and asking my mother if there was a high likelihood that my children would have schizophrenia.

At some point, I remember seeing a movie called Benny and Joon, featuring Johnny Depp. It’s about two schizophrenics who fall in love. And I remember being sort of angry afterwards. This wasn’t what schizophrenia looked like! It was not charming! It was not Johnny Depp! There was no falling in love!! I later learned that like most mental illness, schizophrenia falls on a spectrum; that Mary Lu’s case was extreme, and that there are others with paranoid schizophrenia who live more typical lives. [Side note: I recently saw Silver Linings Playbook, another movie about mental illness, in this case, bi-polar disease, and I felt those same angry feelings. Is that really what bi-polar disease looks like? Like Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence?]

That’s a tiny bit about Mary Lu.

Obviously, growing up with Mary Lu informed my view of mental health in lots of ways. For example, I learned the fruitlessness of arguing or reasoning with crazy. And honestly, I still try to apply that knowledge any time I encounter someone who’s not making sense. Don’t argue with crazy. I also learned what an extreme mental illness looked like, so I have a reference when I encounter mental illness around me, and in my own head, and have a better understanding of when it’s serious and when it’s less so.

But maybe what I learned most clearly, was that Mary Lu was blameless for her condition. I know my own mental health issues aren’t even a shadow of what Mary Lu experienced, but I suppose understanding her blamelessness, allows me to experience this depression without blaming myself. Without guilt or shame. No one ever said that Mary Lu simply needed to “pull herself together”. She was sick. She wasn’t at fault. And the topic wasn’t taboo.

I know mental illness touches everyone. I would love to hear what has formed your own thoughts and opinions on the subject. And as I mentioned above, another day I’ll share more on what has formed mine.

P.S. — The photo above is the only photo I have in my possession of Mary Lu. It shows my family and all of the cousins on my mom’s side. She’s the one on the stairs wearing glasses, the second of 5 siblings (my mother was number 3). Mary Lu wasn’t around for the cameras-everywhere-instagram-era. If she was alive today, I wonder if she would let me take her picture?

131 thoughts on “Mary Lu”

  1. Thank you so much for this post. I myself have bipolar. I was diagnosed when I was 20 and breaking under the stress of my new job. I was recently made aware of just how much this all affects my family (I live with my parents – I’m 25 now), so your description of a little kid’s perception cut right to my heart. My younger family members obviously don’t understand when I behave the way I do, and it hurts me to see the fear in their eyes after I’ve had a particularly bad episode.

    But about the portrayal of mental illness in movies – When I watched Silver Linings Playbook, I cried. But I also felt like it wasn’t an accurate depiction, because even though I have a pretty mild case of bipolar, I know others (online, not in real life) who have it worse, and none of us are the way Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper acted the entire time. I might do some of the things they did while I’m depressed or manic, but when I’m stable, I’m just like any other person. But then I realized – in the short amount of time the filmmakers have to tell a story AND show the effects of bipolar, they’d have a hard time inserting stable moments. I know that the wider public is largely ignorant of most of what mental illness is about, and that adds to the stigma – but as much as I can see the problem, I don’t see a real and easy solution.

  2. I really appreciated this telling of an important family story. It struck me that your family’s treatment of your aunt was a truly Christ-like. Thanks for sharing.

  3. What a wonderful post. And I’m so inspired/saddened/amazed when I read all of the comments and you see how prevalent mental illness really is! And I realize that when I talk to people in real life I hear this too-which hopefully is removing the stigma. It’s an illness-not a character defect.

  4. Thank you so much for sharing this part of your life. I have been thinking about it since you first posted, and I so appreciate your perspective and your family’s compassion.

  5. Thank you for sharing your story Gabrielle.

    As someone who has a mother with a milder form of bipolar disorder (she was diagnosed when I was 6, I’m 33 now), I think the movie, Silver Linings Playbook, is barely scratching the surface.

    I also think that it is very important for the general public to learn more about mental illness and how to interact with people who are living with these types of diseases but this movie felt very romanticized compared to my family’s reality. Maybe that is for the best…

  6. Thanks for writing so well about my sister. In spite of her problems she was one of the kindest most loving people I have known. That quality was recognized and cherished by everyone in the care facility where she spent the last couple years of her life. I have learned from talking with others that many with her illness are much more difficult. I miss her and all her crazy ways.

  7. I want to join others in thanking you for this post. I work with mental illness and I need stories like yours to keep my faith in people. I wish all of my patients had a family like yours! Thank you so much for sharing this story of love.

  8. May I comment about the use of the term CRAZY for Angela #32 and Dee #33 and others? I appreciate so much the compassion and concern behind your position and I write only kindly. In my view, part of the strength and genuineness of Gabrielle’s post is her very deliberate use of that terrible word.

    Of course, we hear it almost daily for lesser things: “Work was crazy today!” “This professor will drive me crazy!” Or someone wears a funky outfit and we say, almost as a compliment, “Crazy!” It can be pejorative if someone uses it as an insult: “Are you crazy?!” But I believe these exaggerated, light uses of the term only hint at the REAL use.

    In Designmom’s post we read that this malady was REAL. Using a euphemism would have greatly reduced the impact: “Mary Lu wasn’t quite right.” The power and meaning would be lost.

    I will add that I don’t think depression and bi-polar issues and diabetic mood swings, although grave matters, qualify for the REAL use of the term. I wouldn’t call these people crazy, although again, those with the problems themselves may choose the term, almost as exaggeration in their way of dealing with their difficulties.

  9. “… but I suppose understanding her blamelessness, allows me to experience this depression without blaming myself. Without guilt or shame. No one ever said that Mary Lu simply needed to “pull herself together”. She was sick. She wasn’t at fault. And the topic wasn’t taboo.”

    thank you so much for these few sentences.
    so true
    so needed
    thank you!

  10. Thanks for this. I hope attitudes are slowly changing. I am reading a child with mental illness and a mental health cornucopia amongs my family and friends. I have always felt open and unashamed. healing is the goal– but hate how little the mental health system has to offer. It haunts me to think about what can/will happen in times of crisis. Love the care and love your family showed Mary Lu. We have a similar apartment at our house. :-)

  11. Hi! My husband is bi-polar and thought Silver Lining Playbook was actually a really good interpretation of the disease. Yes – they are beautiful actors, but mental illness doesn’t really care what you look like.

  12. Wow! When I read this post it really resonated with me. This past March my dad, who was an undiagnosed schizophrenic, passed away leaving my four siblings feeling a myriad of emotions: relief, guilt, anger, sadness and most of all regret at our estranged relationship with our dad over the past 20 years. Growing up Latina and LDS, (Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints), I grew up in two cultures that at the time did not confront the issue of mental illness. Thank goodness that is changing. My siblings and I have spent many years going to therapy and reading up on issues dealing with all kinds of mental issues. Each of us have had to struggle with our own degrees of mental illness such as depression, anxiety, and OCD. I have seen significant changes in the LDS church as they counsel their members dealing with these issues. I was happy to hear a wonderful talk by Jeffrey R. Holland, a great Mormon church leader, this past October in General Conference, that talks about his own struggles with mental illness. Your family is a great example of dealing with this very issue and I commend them for it.

    A Francophile, traveler, fledgling writer, and lover of the arts, I was introduced to you and your lovely family, when your search for a perfect home in the French countryside was aired on House Hunter International on HGTV. Since that time you have inspired me to start my blog: beyondlebleu.wordpress.com, in which I talk about issues dealing with mental health, healthy living, and travel. As a fellow Mormon, Nuyorican, gracias y merci beaucoup for creating such a beautiful and inspirational blog and for bringing important issues such as mental illness to the forefront.

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