Hi everyone and welcome to my letter I post in the #AtoZChallenge. Today I want to talk about trauma that I for one didn’t experience in childhood: trauma and particularly abuse experienced in the care system. I’m struggling majorly with this, as just this evening I had an aggressive meltdown that led to me being thrown to the ground by one staff and another staff admitting that the only reason I’m not being locked up or physically restrained is the fact that I’m not strong enough.
I want to say here that my choice of words is a bit tricky. Is it “abuse” if the client was themself aggressive, even if it was “just” verbally? I am struggling intensely with the fact that, on the one hand, my wife never locked me into a room or threw me to the ground even though I was quite a nasty person to her at times when we were living together, but on the other, there are just two staff to ten clients here. I try to understand that staff are people too and not necessarily worse people than others are. My wife sometimes said that the staff at the intensive support home were ill-intentioned at best, but I doubt it. My point is, people are part of a system. When that system is purposefully created to oppress some people, yes, the “low-key” oppressors are to blame too, but that doesn’t make them personally bad people. Many unfortunately don’t realize how much they’re accustomed to using (and abusing) their power. In fact, where it comes to care staff, most don’t even have a clue that they’re higher up in the pecking order than us clients are.
That doesn’t mean that the (ab)use of power doesn’t affect us. I mean, I was once, at the intensive support home, told that if I were dragged to my room, I had probably asked for it with my behavior. The thing is, even if I had, that doesn’t make being physically dragged not traumatic. Similarly, I can totally understand why the staff this evening threw me to the ground (I’m not even 100% sure he intended on me landing on my head), but that doesn’t mean my head doesn’t hurt.
One last thing I want to discuss, is the fact that institutional abuse may technically be a staff’s action (or inaction), but it is the result of a long line of decisions made by management, the Care Office or other funding agency and ultimately the government. It is not the client “choosing” to be restrained/locked up/drugged/etc. with their behavior and, like I said, the staff are the ones doing it, but if the government chooses a lock or shot is cheaper than support, they are the ones ultimately responsible.
So I am a bit confused. Were you thrown to the ground for only words? You said it was an aggressive meltdown, but that implies action. I was taught a very simple equation for use of force. Words = no force. Action = force. This is not the standard by which most institutions go by, but it is what local institutions follow.
I know when I was younger and had meltdowns, I had to learn to keep to myself so people didn’t think they were in danger and would attack me when I didn’t touch them. In school they had a pretty simple rule that they taught my classmates. Just don’t touch her. She will yell and scream…but usually that’s it. But if you touch her…well that usually landed me in the office, ISS, detention or worse.
Eventually as I got through puberty, I learned to keep from having full on meltdowns. First going to a trusted staff member, usually the nurse, to relax, drink tea and eat popcorn. Then going to the bathroom just to give myself a minute to calm myself. Then eventually being able to keep from having a full on meltdown unless someone died or something. I still got mouthy as a young adult, but the worst of my meltdowns had passed. That doesn’t mean I was super calm! I just managed to keep from the worst of my behaviour because I realized people I cared about got really scared when I did that and it made me feel like crap. Also in the grand scheme of things, does it really matter?
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I’m really sorry that staff threw you to the ground! That is not cool what if you got badly hurt! A meltdown shouldn’t be treated with force! X
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Being thrown to the ground isn’t right and wouldn’t be nice in anyway having a meltdown shouldn’t be handled in such a manner
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I am sorry you were treated this way. I hope your head feels better soon ❤️
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You’re right about the hierarchy of institutional power. As long as higher ups keep places short staffed, everyone is more likely to overreact.
sorry you got bounced on your head.
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