St.Maybe
Silver Member
Hi guys.
This is more off the topic of PTSD than on it, but I would deeply appreciate any advice from folks with experience being hospitalized for mental health reasons- I've been asked to speak to a case worker to give a statement that would amount to getting someone who doesn't want to be there out of the hospital.
My lover was recently hospitalized and he's been in quite a state about how his rights were violated... he's a control freak and it wasn't easy for him to be ECO'd. He's a bad addict, and some of his symptoms are delusions and paranoia. He can rarely identify this behavior- to him, "the universe is f*cking with him."
He's pushed everyone else away... his lifelong friends remain in spirit but at a distance. His father is a bit of a religious fanatic who behaves questionably and is at the center of a lot of his paranoia. So that leaves me.
I'm the woman who fell in love with him before he addled his brain and who broke off our engagement because he wasn't working toward healing and I was.
My question is, do you think I should essentially lie and say he has a support system to get him out? That's the condition of his release and they only have release hearings once a week.
He is in deep denial about his real reasons for being there. And he feels he has a right to be free. I don't want him locked up, but the truth is he has no support system. I told him when we broke up that I would no longer be there to support him with his addiction problems until he was actively getting professional help for them.
He's in the process of signing release papers and the case worker will be calling me later.
I don't know what to do. I want to help him and I'm fundamentally against people being held against their will... I also don't trust the medical system any farther than I can throw it.
Ugh. I want to avoid overstepping, but I want to be honest and I want him to get help. I'm afraid of him coming back and coming by and bringing his chaos to me during a time when I need it least. I'm afraid his addiction will only lead back to some form of institutionalization or his death.
This is more off the topic of PTSD than on it, but I would deeply appreciate any advice from folks with experience being hospitalized for mental health reasons- I've been asked to speak to a case worker to give a statement that would amount to getting someone who doesn't want to be there out of the hospital.
My lover was recently hospitalized and he's been in quite a state about how his rights were violated... he's a control freak and it wasn't easy for him to be ECO'd. He's a bad addict, and some of his symptoms are delusions and paranoia. He can rarely identify this behavior- to him, "the universe is f*cking with him."
He's pushed everyone else away... his lifelong friends remain in spirit but at a distance. His father is a bit of a religious fanatic who behaves questionably and is at the center of a lot of his paranoia. So that leaves me.
I'm the woman who fell in love with him before he addled his brain and who broke off our engagement because he wasn't working toward healing and I was.
My question is, do you think I should essentially lie and say he has a support system to get him out? That's the condition of his release and they only have release hearings once a week.
He is in deep denial about his real reasons for being there. And he feels he has a right to be free. I don't want him locked up, but the truth is he has no support system. I told him when we broke up that I would no longer be there to support him with his addiction problems until he was actively getting professional help for them.
He's in the process of signing release papers and the case worker will be calling me later.
I don't know what to do. I want to help him and I'm fundamentally against people being held against their will... I also don't trust the medical system any farther than I can throw it.
Ugh. I want to avoid overstepping, but I want to be honest and I want him to get help. I'm afraid of him coming back and coming by and bringing his chaos to me during a time when I need it least. I'm afraid his addiction will only lead back to some form of institutionalization or his death.