One unremarkable night, Kartar Diamond’s remarkably talented 15-year old son walked into the living room and shouted, “every musician in L.A. is stealing my ideas!” and went back into his room. Minutes later he came back, belt in hand, and began whipping the couch and shouting with escalating paranoia. Little did his mother realize, their journey into hell had begun.As her son crumbles before her eyes, Diamond powers through the endless confusion and ineffectiveness of the modern mental health care system and demands not only a diagnosis, but a way to treat her son and help him live the fullest expression of his life possible. The mental health “system” – emergency rooms, police, counselors, psychiatrists, hospitals, nurses, clinics, mental health administrators and homeless shelters - keep spitting him back out on the streets of Skid Row where predators take his meager belongings, cell phones and money. Street drugs are his only relief. The cycle goes on and on, spiraling downward toward one of two conclusions: death or the slimmest of chances of finding safety.
Diamond’s clear-eyed story-telling brings wisdom and insider information on how to navigate the murky waters of public mental healthcare and its legal ramifications. She takes us through the horror of endless encounters with angry police officers and the deep frustration of unreturned phone calls from doctors and administrators. She refuses to accept there is no place for her son. In addition to running a business, she tracks him through the streets, demanding he be given a bed where he needs to be. She does this for years.
A chance encounter with a retired mental healthcare administrator opens a path forward. Noah is put in a series of locked wards, ensuring he will not hit the streets again. His medications are stabilized and the street drugs withheld.
Kartar joins other families of schizophrenics in a new model of healthcare: A boarding school and hospital designed for them and paid for by their families. She gains conservatorship over her son’s care and, for the first time in years, he shows progress, even playing guitar for other patients.
Noah is returning; he’s coming back to life.
Can you talk about schizophrenia itself?
Schizophrenia is a genetically based neurological brain disease where there is currently no cure. It can be managed with medication and other therapeutic services. It seriously undermines a person’s connection with reality. People with schizophrenia can suffer from hallucinations and set-backs in cognitive function, in spite of most being born with a higher than average IQ.
Why is schizophrenia so mysterious? Have any breakthroughs in treatment come recently?
There are very few physical markers of the disease and it is not understood well, partially because it has been stigmatized for so long. There have been no breakthroughs in treatment in decades and NIMH (National Institute of Mental Health) recently REDUCED funding for research.
How many police interactions did you have when Noah was in and out of facilities and living on the streets?
Noah has had a half dozen interactions with the police. In some cases, he was clearly in need of hospitalization, but the police told me they already knew that no beds were available at nearby hospitals. In other cases, police issued the 72-hour psychiatric hold and he was taken by them to a hospital.
What were those interactions like?
I was not physically present for some of those police interactions, but my son never told me that he was mishandled. In some cases I was grateful to the police for taking my son to the hospital when social workers evaluated him and said he was fine when he wasn’t.
You speak to sheriffs and police from the point of view of a mother of a mentally ill person. Can you tell us what you try to teach them?
Through the Crisis Intervention Training program, my role as a Family Member is to describe the stress, stigma and struggles family members experience and to dispel some of the misconceptions people have about the seriously mentally ill. I am there to put a human face on this tragedy and help evoke more sympathy and give practical tools, which the officers and sheriffs can use when they interact with psychotic people.
Do you believe in special “mental health units” within police departments?
I do hope that the CIT training will continue throughout the nation with all law enforcement. That said, law enforcement is being forced to do this kind of social work because the mental healthcare providers have failed to intervene with many of these preventable crises and there are not even enough mental health professions to handle all the cases. Laws have criminalized mental illness, so it falls in the hands of law enforcement.
As a mother, what were your lowest points in this journey? The highest?
The lowest point certainly came when my son was homeless and had no insight into the seriousness of the situation. He seemed okay with just merging into the homeless population, even though he was having traumatic experiences.
One of the highest points came when he got conserved and I knew he would receive a higher level of care. The highest point came when I managed to get him into a private program in March 2019, where he is stabilized and doing better than he has since he first became ill.
What happens to the mentally ill in America who have no one caring for them?
It is important to distinguish these days between the “mentally ill” and the “seriously mentally ill.” There are some people who are able to cope with their psychological issues and lead fairly normal lives and even very successful lives. But for the 4% of the mentally ill population who are very low-functioning, such as with schizophrenia, the prospects are grim. Half of those with serious mental illness in America receive NO TREATMENT at all.
It is the UN-treated who can be 3 times more violent than the general population. A high percentage of the homeless population is mentally ill and this is a direct result of the “deinstitutionalization” of the mentally ill starting decades ago. Nowadays, the streets and the prisons are filled with mentally ill people who desperately need care and sometimes that means IN-voluntary treatment. Many left to languish are killed or commit suicide.
What are some of the newest models in living for the mentally ill?
Sprinkled across the country there are a handful of genuinely therapeutic housing recovery models, mostly private. Some are very expensive, some are reasonably priced for the amount of services they provide. Unfortunately, there have not been many advances in treatment for the mentally, even in the last 40 years. A truly effective model of recovery takes a highly trained, dedicated staff and an increase in funding which has not been a priority in our national mental healthcare system.
Another hard truth is that some people with SMI do NOT get better. But they deserve to live in a clean, safe, quiet, friendly supervised environment---and not in a noisy, overcrowded, dilapidated building with little supervision, no recreational activities or a crime-ridden area.
Are you, in general, hopeful about the future of care?
I am cautiously optimistic. We are reaching a tipping point now where mental health issues are really prominent and on display in every level of society. It takes a lot of effort and time to change laws and policies. Empowering family members is one of my main goals in writing the memoir.
You do a lot of work with NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness. Is that an organization you would encourage anyone with a mentally ill loved one to join? What kind of resources do they provide to parents?
I encourage anyone with a mentally ill family member to join a local chapter of NAMI, where they can go to family support meetings, get education about the illness and resources for housing and treatment in their area. They may also be able to join other advocacy groups that work directly for the benefit of the seriously mentally ill.
About the Author
Kartar Diamond has a long establish career as a classically trained feng sui consultant,author and educator. She has worked with thousands of clients and students in the area of Chinese metaphysics as well as having a background in yoga practices and meditation.
Based in Southern California, Kartar volunteers as a family member presenter for law enforcement’s Crisis Intervention Training programs, designed to give police and sheriffs tools they need to better serve the mentally ill. She has also been a member of her local NAMI group and intends to use this book as a national advocacy tool to better the lives of those living with schizophrenia. Kartar's website is www.noahsschizophrenia.com.
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