I’m standing in the darkness; my forearms starting to burn
with fatigue from gripping a doorknob for the last forty-five
minutes, and Samantha is nowhere to be found. Make no mistake,
there’s a child on the other side of the door, but it’s no longer the little
girl I know.
The illness that’s taken hold of her mind has stripped away so much
of who she is. Her athleticism, brilliance, quick wit, and unending desire
to take care of other people are gone. Any semblance of compassion,
confidence, or affection has vanished, and what remains is a violent,
terrified, incoherent creature whose feet and fists have been hammering
at the walls and door of her room for what’s approaching an hour. Every
few minutes, she’ll turn on her light; I’ll open the door to turn it off,
forcefully put her back in bed, and then shut the door before she’s able
to dash through it to escape. She shrieks with fury at this captivity,
but since her mind can’t find words now, most of the sounds I hear are
animalistic distortions of her normally sweet voice. Words can’t describe
the pain I feel during this new nightly routine, but the memory of a
recent night fills my mind in the midst of the shouting.
We don’t have the kind of house where you’ll ever hear the words
“wait until your dad gets home” as it relates to discipline. In fact, for
one Mother’s Day in the past, I made Beth a wooden sign of her favorite
Bible verse from Proverbs 23:13, “Do not withhold discipline from a
child, for if you beat him with a rod, he will not die.” Needless to say,
she can hold her own when it comes to handling the kids. While I go
to great lengths to protect her from the emotional trauma of caring for
Samantha when she’s in this state, Beth feels it’s her responsibility as
a mother and the queen of our humble castle to take an active role in
watching over her daughter. One night, when she insisted on waging the
inevitable war of putting Sam to sleep, I left to work out and returned to
a quiet house an hour and a half later, which I thought was a good sign.
I made my way to our room and found Beth sitting on the bed with
the left side of her face obscured by a hand resting along the underside of
her jaw. I could see that she’d been crying, but when she turned to face
me, I saw that one of her eyes wasn’t just red and puffy from tears; it was
swollen and already growing black underneath. In a muffled voice, she
told me that when she’d gone in to turn off the light for the twenty-fifth
time that night and put Samantha back in bed in the darkness, Sam
kicked violently, and her heel collided with Beth’s left jaw.
When Beth gets hurt, she generally wants to be left alone, so it was a
near-silent night until she fell asleep, and I went to play sentry, sleeping
on my makeshift bed at the top of the stairs. It wasn’t until the next
morning when she attempted to take a bite of breakfast that she heard
an audible pop as her jaw slid back into alignment. Unbeknownst to
me, Sam’s kick landed with enough force to shift Beth’s jaw out of place,
but Beth didn’t want to upset me by sharing that minor detail. And I
think I’m the tough one . . .
I’m brought out of the memory and back into the present when I
feel the full weight of Sam’s body slam into the door again. I hear her
nails raking across it in a primal fashion before she retreats, only to
careen into it again a few seconds later. With her first illness, I’d have
grown increasingly enraged and concerned as the minutes dredged
on, but I now try to guide my mind to a place where I can search for
God’s presence. Like the night we spent in the emergency room in early
January, my perspective of the circumstance changes; instead of seeing
her battling me, I see myself battling Him. I hear and feel her through
the door and think of all the times I’m overtaken by a vehemently
rebellious spirit and lash out as He tries to contain me and prevent me
from harming myself and those around me. In His compassion, He
hems me in and waits for the flame of evil within me to burn out.
If we search the Bible, illnesses of the mind were often attributed to
demonic possession. Saul is seized by a harmful spirit in 1 Samuel 19
when he lashes out at David with inexplicable violence. In Matthew 9
and 12, we see men possessed by demons, whose sight and speech failed
them. Mark 5 describes a man so overcome by unclean spirits that he
walked for years through a graveyard he’d made his home. Because of
the legion within him, he possessed such otherworldly strength that
no chains could bind him; he cried out day and night and cut himself
with stones until Jesus arrived and cleansed him. In reading about the
disease the neurologists believe afflicts Samantha, some connections
have been suggested between historical records of possessions and anti-
NMDA autoimmune encephalitis. Changes in gait, the inability to
speak, hallucinations, paranoia, irrational fears, uncanny strength, vocal
distortions, and many other common threads exist. I’m not suggesting
she’s been overtaken in that way; I don’t have the wisdom to discern
between evil and illness. I only see how far she’s fallen from what she
once was and wonder what the cause may be.
I pray for Samantha to return to us and for a renewal of my patience
as time crawls past. I pray for Beth to be willing to let me carry this
weight so she doesn’t have to and for my son’s peace of mind as he hears
his sister’s screams echo through the house. I try to pray loudly enough
to drown out the sounds of this struggle and wait with hope for the
tranquility of silence to fall over us all.