My daughter Shelby turns 17 this month. We have been through some hard times with her over the last few years. Shelby has read this and is fine with me telling you about what has happened. The name of her second grade teacher has been changed in this account.
My wife says that our middle daughter Shelby came into this world anxious and has been anxious ever since. She was a colicky baby who cried constantly. As a small child she was fearful of many things and hesitant to try anything new. She was most comfortable when she was alone and often played by herself. She spent hours in her room talking to her toys and creating her own magical worlds of imagination. Sometimes I would stand at the door and listen with a big smile on my face.
She was delightfully creative and smart as well. She asked all sorts of interesting questions about God and death and the meaning of life. She was fascinated by graveyards and tombstones, loved horses, and was afraid of just about everything else. I adored her. She was different from a lot of kids, but I liked that about her.
Many children cry a bit when they go off to kindergarten. Shelby sobbed for two weeks. She tried everything possible to avoid going to school. When we finally got her there, she went to the nurses office with stomach aches and various ailments almost every day. But she finally settled in and got used to school. Things seemed to be fine. She made good grades and scored very highly on various standardized tests.
When Shelby was in second grade, her teacher called my wife and said, “Shelby has a severe problem. She obviously has Attention Deficit Disorder and needs to be medicated. You need to take her to the doctor and fix this.” When she got the call, Jeanene was devastated and frantic. We hadn’t heard anything like this from her kindergarten or first grade teachers. And her grades were pretty good too, all As and Bs. We met with her teacher and a school counselor who told us that Shelby wasn’t paying attention at school. She was smart enough to make good grades in those days without paying attention. But she was constantly drifting away into her own world.
I suppose that shouldn’t have been surprising, given her personality. Maybe I should have known that she was going to have a hard time fitting into the standard model of public school education. After discussing things with her doctor we chose not to medicate her because her grades were okay. This irritated her teacher, who responded by calling Shelby down when her attention drifted. Shelby would be staring off into space or doodling. Her teacher would tap her on the shoulder to get her attention. Then she would say, “Class, is Shelby paying attention?”
“No, Mrs. Anderson,” they would respond in unison.
We didn’t find out about these episodes until a year or so later. What we knew at the time was that Shelby began to dread going to school. She felt very different from the other kids. I found a picture she drew on a piece of paper that was folded in half. On the outside was a drawing of a girl who was frowning. Under it was written:
The other kids think I’m stupid.
On the inside of the folded picture was another drawing of a girl. This girl was smiling and under her Shelby had written:
But I’m not.
In 5th grade Shelby became a target of ridicule for the other girls in her class, who found her behavior to be a little strange. Most girls wanted clothing for their birthdays. Shelby asked for a lemon tree. We thought that was charming, but the girls at school were not as forgiving. She was teased and tormented and bullied. This increased her already deeply felt anxiety exponentially. Just the idea of going to school was enough to make her feel nauseous. Her grades began to slip, and by the time she was in 6th grade, she was in a crisis. She scored very highly on standardized tests, but she couldn’t keep up with her work. She would do her homework but lose it before she could turn it in. She made good grades on exams and excelled in written essays, but she would have three or four zeros in every subject at the end of the grading periods.
We tried everything we could think of. On her physician’s recommendation we started her on various medications for Attention Deficit Disorder. None of them worked. We took her out of public school and put her in a smaller, private school, hoping the change of setting would give her a fresh start. Her grades worsened. She failed 6th grade and had to go to summer school. The same thing happened the following year. And yet, somehow, her achievement scores continued to be very high. And when she did an assignment, it was always good work. Anyone who talked to Shelby knew that she was a bright, curious, and intelligent child. She just could not function at school.
When Shelby was 14 she sank into a deep depression. The little girl we had known seemed to be gone. She moved through life with no reactions, no emotions, and no desires. Her lack of motivation, combined with her continuing organizational problems and the fact that she was behind in many subjects added to her problems at school. Her doctor prescribed a variety of anti-depressant medications with mixed results. That year she began cutting herself. She covered her wounds with long sleeves and managed to keep this a secret for a long time. Somehow, in the middle of such emotional pain, cutting herself provided some comfort. I remember the two of us talking about it. I wanted to understand, but she had a hard time explaining why she was doing it.
Jeanene and I felt so helpless in those days. We kept thinking there must be something we could do to help Shelby be happy and well-adjusted and successful. But whatever interventions we tried didn’t seem to work. The only thing we could do was love her and stay engaged. Sometimes the only thing we could share with her was her sorrow.
I thought things had gotten about as bad as they could get. Then I got a phone call from the assistant principle who told me that Shelby had tried to commit suicide at school.
How can any father describe his thoughts and feelings after receiving a phone call like that? It was like our whole world exploded. Shelby had to leave school and spend some time in a psychiatric hospital. That experience was terribly difficult for her, but in the end it was a good thing. A team of psychiatrists and therapists told us that Shelby had a mental illness that could be controlled with specialized medications. She began taking those medications when she was 15.
Shelby’s suicide attempt and hospitalization changed Jeanene and me in some important ways. I admit that I had been a rather smug parent. We’ve always been very close to our kids and have good relationships with them. While I would never have admitted it openly, I thought that parents with “problem children,” were just not very good parents. Certainly any child who tried to hurt herself must have very terrible parents indeed. Probably even abusive parents.
When your child is in a crisis, many things die, your own prejudices among them. I also lost the need to make any claims for myself. Easily stated categories like good and bad parents or functional and dysfunctional families suddenly became unimportant to me. I only wanted Shelby to be healthy and happy and well. I know that our experiences with Shelby have made Jeanene and I more grace-full people when we meet parents with children who are struggling and not making their way in this world.
When it comes to children in crisis there are no easy answers, no convenient categories, and, as we found out, no quick fixes.
Coming next week: We help Shelby re-enter the world of public education.






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Gordon, it takes a lot of courage for you (and Shelby) to talk about this. All of us have greater or lesser degrees of similar struggles. Know that what you’ve written here is a great encouragement.
our beautiful children sure do teach us a lot about ourselves and God.
much thanks to God and to your family, especially shelby, for sharing this experience here.
Parents who love like you, who don’t tell the Christmas Letter version of life are my heros. The encouragement goes deep, wide, high and long! I loved Shelby at the first word.
Kathleen it’s so ironic cause this morning my husband asked me if we should do a Christmas letter this year (we never have) and I said, “Yeah only if we can write about the hard stuff too.” I can’t stand those Christmas letters that reinforce a two dimensional view on someones life.
Dear Gordon,
Thank you for sharing these terribly real moments in your lives. As a parent of a non-conforming special needs child I pray you will be blessed for your honesty and that Shelby will find the path before her to be lit with your patient love of who God has designed her to be for her (and your good) and His glory. Blessings.
Thanks guys. I really thought long and hard about this one. Shelby and I first spoke about me writing this story about a year ago. She read this last night and gave it her approval.
As a writer, I’m always fearful of using my kids as material. Billy Coffey and I have spoken about this at length. I don’t think our conversations have led me to any clear answers. I guess you trust your instincts and try to be keep the issue in mind.
In this case there is a good ending, as will come out next week. Shelby is doing fine emotionally. So it’s not a train wreck at the end. If it was, I probably wouldn’t have been able to write about it. So, it felt right. I wrote it. I’ll write the conclusion next week.
Wow dude… AMAZING story! I really appreciate your heart to drop labels and just focus on helping your daughter get better and be happy. I’m also challenged by the trteatment that other people gave her for being different than them… actually, more like disturbed. I really look forward to hearing the rest of the story! Thank you for being so transparent!
What a wonderful story Gordon. I volunteer for an organization that assists families with children like Shelby and I too learned it isn’t always about the parent, sometimes it is the child. Albertina Kerr Centers is a 101 year old organization that works with society’s most vulnerable, children and adults with mental and physical challenges who struggle to live within what society has deemed “normal” situations. It’s hard when you have a loved one who deals with life so differently. I commend you and Jeanene for supporting and encouraging Shelby. She sounds like a resilient young lady. Thank you all for sharing her story.
Hugs for you, Shelby, and Jeanene. Living through such an experience takes enormous courage, and writing about it even more.
Thank you for telling your story. I think telling it can be freeing, and a gift to others, particularly those parents who have been deep in crises with their children. You told your story from your perspective, with tenderness, and showed great respect for your daughter to ask her before publishing your essay. Your love for her is obvious.
When my son was in middle school, his best friend hanged himself at home one night. He had given no indication of having trouble with anything. He was doing well in school, had close friends, was part of a loving family. To this day, his story is unknown. There are no lessons from untold stories. Just an enormous hole that cannot be filled except through faith and abiding love. A story that can be told makes way for healing.
Though I (thankfully) didn’t get to those depths, I can see so much of myself in what Shelby went through in elementary and middle school. There HAS to be some middle ground between one-on-one homeschooling and public ridicule. And, of course, being told to react that way to someone who is “different” doesn’t help either. Who cares if she’s too smart for them? If she’s not sitting in her seat, or getting every homework assignment in, there’s something wrong.
I know that there were a lot of people trying to do the best they could, but I don’t know if I’ll ever understand why this had to be the way.
You have such a thoughtful way of writing. I really enjoy the amount of care you put into what you say. You may not be certain of some things, but the way you talk about them is such a blessing to people who are just looking for a compassionate reaction to life.
Gordon – so much of your angst and concern reminds me of my concern and desire to help my son who was finally diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder. I found out about the bullying he endured long after it happened.
I was grateful to have found a small Christian school for him where, while the diversity and quality of education may have been not as great as that available in the public system, he felt safe and was able to find a place to use his not inconsiderable intellect and succeed at learning.
In hind sight, I am so grateful to have given him this opportunity, because his mental illness has meant that he has been unable to cope with university studies, but at least he knows that he was in the top 2% in the SAT scores.
Having a child with a mental illness is very challenging on a parent’s self image. I was a single mother during part of this time, and then remarried a wonderful husband, but my son struggled to relate to him positively. I had no smugness to hang onto to about my parenting. But I had friends and family who were constantly encouraging about how I struggled through the challenges we faced. Thank God for these friends.
I can understand Shelby giving you permission to write her story, as my son talks about how he would do anything to help other people not suffer as he did with this horrible illness.
Good on you Shelby. May you continue to find your unique place in this world where being different – and different in a way much of the world does not view positively – means that you have a special place in the heart of the people in your life and a unique way of making their lives richer. May you find some of this richness in your life also. Bless you
Thanks to you and your family for telling this story. I, too, battled personal “demons” at Shelby’s age, and reading this story makes me feel much less alone. It sounds like you and Jeanne are dealing with it far better than my parents did, though. Shelby’s as fortunate to have you as you are to have her.
Gordon, I really, really needed this today. Please tell Shelby thank you from a parent who needed her story to begin to move forward.
Oh how it would still leave me tormented , knowing what your daughter had gone through, and your family.
You give us the story as a gift, and that leaves me so humbled.
Thanks everyone. I appreciate your kind words.
Your story is also the worst possible scenario for those of us in youth ministry. We want desperately to help the parents and the youth. We lack any answers beyond just being there for everyone, hoping and praying that having one more caring heart near them all will tip the scale some tiny bit in the right direction.
Blessings on you and Shelby.
Peace
JP
Shelby sounds like a truly wonderful person who has been afflicted with people being narrow-minded assholes. This makes me tremendously angry and sad.
I have always thought all of your girls are amazing! I love them all, but I have always felt a little tug of “something” about Shelby.. now I understand. Give them all a special hug, but please.. one big extra one for Shelby for her strength and bravery. Thanks for sharing Gordon…
Gordon, you never cease to amaze me. Thanks for being who you are.
Gordon,
I love that you never gave up on her. I love that you always shared, even if it was only in the sorrow.
My husband and I watched a Frontline special on PBS last night about treating childhood mental illness. We cringed at much of what we saw, and felt very overwhelmed for these families in the end. I am so thankful that your story has a happy ending. So many kids are misdiagnosed and over medicated. As a mental health professional, I know how difficult it can be to pinpoint the true problem with children. It sounds like you had some good advice from professionals along the way, painful as it was. Grateful for this, too.
I can’t wait to read the next chapter in Shelby’s story.
For what its worth, I can think of 6 or 7 people I’ll pass this along to, right now. Parents and their adult children.
I think it will help. Like those pieces you wrote about depression a few years back. They helped a lot of people.
So thanks to you and to Shelby. Some wisdom is awfully hard won. Thanks for sharing it.
Gordon, what I’ve always appreciated about your writing is the way you paint with words in such a way that we know exactly what your experience has been. Deep sorrow and great joy leap off the page when you write. This is just one more example of your ability as a storyteller – a vocation that is far too rare in this world. Thank you. Now, if you don’t mind, I’m going to go hug my own daughters, and I pray that my Beloved and I are half the parents you and Jeanene have been.
I particularly want to thank Shelby for sharing these important experiences. So often, people cover up the deep struggles, creating the illusion that we’re all alone in our difficulties. It is so freeing and uplifting to everyone involved, when we simply tell our truth. Thank you, Shelby.
Thank you for being human and allowing it to show. I have read your blog for several years but have never responded. Please thank your wonderful daughter for me for taking this risk with you. Having walked a similar path (still walking it) I am less ashamed as a parent.
Phil
Gordon,
What burdens we bear, all for love. Prayer your way today of thanks for your bravery and honesty.
I am currently homeschooling my children, dropping out of the ‘nets and tuning in more to the big why with my kids.
May you be blessed on this journey.
I resonate deeply with your feelings as a parent. I used to believe that kids with problems came from horrible parents, but after this past year, I see that isn’t always the case. I also understand this new place of grace you have arrived at, that is just one of the many ways Shelby has blessed you. I appreciate her allowing you to share this story and cheer her strength and resolve. Thank you all.
As a public school teacher, I hurt for students like Shelby AND their parents. Your (and Shelby’s) willingness to share this openly will encourage me to be more sensitive to them. Thank you.
Gordon, I would be interested in you taking a look at a blog I started about a month ago. Our situations aren’t identical, but I feel like I am only four years behind you in this process. We are having issues with our son, and I started this blog to help me work through the struggles I am having as a parent and hopefully help others going through similar situations. I would be interested in any feedback that you have. Thanks to you, your wife, and most especially Shelby for sharing this story. http://www.josephofnazareth.wordpress.com
It is the terrible reality of the Web… that we cannot let you know we are here just listening unless we speak. If I were with you, I would simply lean in.
“The only thing we could do was love her and stay engaged. Sometimes the only thing we could share with her was her sorrow”
Thank you so much for sharing this story. For some years now I have seen my dear brother struggling with his own “demons”. It seems sometimes that the only thing I can do is listen close, and hold him when he needs me to. Your story gives me hope that eventually we’ll come through this, and things will be fine.
My best wishes for you and your family.
Shelby: what a brave, good thing to allow your “writer dad” to share this glimpse. i hope in the years to come you will also consider re-telling your story (stories) through your art as well.
When we share our stories, we not only make ourselves more real, more whole, more human, but we also make the listeners of the story more whole, more human, more real.
Jeanene & Gordon: thanks for being just who you are. and i don’t mean that in a trite mister rogers sort of way.
I had a very similar experience myself Gordon. I was a bright kid, but my grades where terrible in middle school.
I was teased mercilessly by my classmates, and would feel physically ill before school every day. About a year ago (I am 21 now) I went back and visited my old middle school, I felt tense just being there.
My parents took me out of that school and I went to a priate Christian school. Even though the theology of the school was very legalistic, the people there where kind to me, and I made friends in my class that are still close friends today, four years after graduating high school.
My old roommate cuts herself and I always assumed it was because of the severe abuse she experienced as a young child and adolescent. Your writings helped shift the perspective in my mind that mental illness comes only from a tragic or difficult upbringing.
It was inspiring to read about how your wife and you just had to love on her in and through her sorrow and sufferings.
I’m looking forward to the next part of your story. Thank you Shelby, for trusting your Dad to tell this publically. My heart has gone out to the Shelby’s in our corner of the world as we have a small school that really tries to accept people for the unique way God has made them– it ’s not always easy, but, I believe, the right way to do things. It takes nearly as much patience working with the youngster that is different as it does with the peers who “don’t get it”.
This is why we have our school. Shame on our public school system that requires everyone to “fit” like square pegs in round holes. When will this craziness ever end?
Wow! – too powerful for words. I once attempted suicide also – my school years were the worst years of my life also – but i think i have adjusted now.
Great to have you back Shelby!
Tim: Your note above about Shelby touched me. I agree, it’s great that she’s come through some of the stuff she dealt with. Also, on your own situation, keep in mind that people care for you, too. And don’t ever think help is not available. If you begin to feel those urges again, don’t hesitate to to ask for help.
I admire your courage and commitment. For a while I worked trying to help the parents of autistic children, and saw some of the suffering and frustration they felt. Like you, they struggled to understand and to find some way to help. My admiration for them grew and I consider my efforts as media liaison and fund-raiser to be some of the most important of my life. My sentiments are pretty much the same as those of your readers as expressed above. Rest assured that your intelligent, compassionate sharing of Selby’s story will be a source of inspiration for many who pass this way. ~donkimrey
I’m not sure if I should share my experience, if it fits or is helpful at all, but I have a freind and a brother who are both very creative. One spent his early years being vauge and staring into space, and not wanting to do any writing. He has grown up into a very confident insightful person. Another friend did the same, but after bullying pulled away from those around him and was put on various meds for depression, dropping out of school. As his freinds we worked with him, showed him the love of God and put up with a lot of weirdness. A few years later he went back into school, learned all his stuff and has grown into a creative dynamic and even confident person. My brother might be classed as well adjusted, fitting into the normal social things, my freind is just not, but is happy and freindly and has been able to cut his own path.
My experiences of these two suggest something to me, and it may be totally wrong, totally without relevence, but some people just need to be odd. Maybe it helped my freind for a time to be on his meds, but he moved through it, and we noticed so much more of him on the other side. My brother never had anything to help him concentrate, just a lot of patience (I’m so glad of the amazing primary he went to), and encouragement to imagine. He actually turned that imaginativeness into something that helped him do subjects from maths to science, as well as the obvious english. My freind can do what he does brilliantly, so much so I won’t mention what it is in case he becomes famous for it, and has never really got the hang of the other stuff.
Am I just saying drugs don’t work? Not really, just that artistic people can find it hard, but even when they do they can come out the other side well. Ah, well not just that, I suppose your honesty encouraged me to share! I wish Selby finds a similar niche.
(Shelby that is)
Hey, this seems like the wrong place for controversy, but the last comment made me want to say something.
People have always wondered if creativity goes hand in hand with mental illness. Van Gogh, right? But this has been debunked over and over again. Though sadly, the prevalence of the idea, the romanticism of it– keeps some people from getting the help they need.
Depression didn’t help Van Gogh, and it didn’t help David James Duncan. It often kept them from their art and sadly, it cut short their careers.
If you are in deep pain, don’t wait one minute before getting help. Don’t think it makes you more creative.. . whatever talent and gifts you have for the world will be set free, when you get well. The suffering is . . . needless.
We tell stories about wounded artists, because the stories about wounded auto mechanics just don’t travel so well. But the truth is, depression and other mental illnesses are equal opportunity. Thanks be to God that much of the time they can be healed.
Gordon,
Thank you for telling your story. It took me back seven years to a point where my middle daughter began having problems her first year of middle school. Her teachers were blind to the difficulties she was having with her classmates. Like Shelby my daughter was creative and gentle and just different from many of her peers. When she became depressed and her grades plummeted my wife and I talked with her principal and teachers and ended up taking her out of school until high school. I have no doubts that our decision saved her life. She is now in her senior year (also 17) and relatively happy and well adjusted. She remains creative and gentle but she also suffers from seasonal affective disorder which we have learned to treat. It is my prayer that our nation can change how we approach education to find a way to treat each student individually with love and dignity.
I am a Father of a young child. My child has not faced any kind of difficulty yet. I don’t know why but this post means a lot to me. Thanks.
if this is the Shelby i think it is i just wanted to say i know exactly how you feel! Ive been hospitalized 2 times know and i have had a huge problem with my bipolar. i just really felt a calling to tell you your not the only one ,and people in (are) high school are just so cruel! don’t let them drag you down! you have an amazing voice! (again im not sure if this is the right Shelby) i also wanted to say that i had tried to commit suicide many times before and my mom found these vitamins called empower plus, at first i was skeptical and thought it was a scam. but when i began to take them i felt a immediate difference! i really encourage you’ll to research it because it has done wonders for me and my moms bipolar. i feel normal… well as close as you can get anyways:) GOODLUCK!
P.s now that i take the vitamins i dont need to take any prescription pills!