In February 2021, 42.2% of adults in Iowa reported symptoms of anxiety or depression. 25.4% were unable to get needed counseling or therapy.

https://www.nami.org/NAMI/media/NAMI-Media/StateFactSheets/IowaStateFactSheet.pdf

For the last two years, I have taught freshman composition courses at Iowa Wesleyan University. During this time, I have noticed more and more males who struggle to attend class, who feel uncomfortable speaking and connecting with their classmates, who have shared stories of life trauma, and who visibly appear uneasy. I’ve been teaching for forty-three years now, and I have had all kinds of students. Once I had a student who made me feel uncomfortable, and a few years later after graduating from high school, he brutally murdered his mother because he wanted money for drugs and was suffering from some kind of drug episode due to taking synthetic drugs. As a writing instructor, I have had incredible insights into my students’ lives. I’m digressing a bit, but I’m wanting to establish that I do see a significant change with my male students.

This change highlights an urgent need our society must face, and that is we need mental health facilities. Iowa closed mental health facilities years ago. We used to have a psych ward at our own local hospital. One time my son had an episode and when I took him to the ER rather than giving him the mental health counseling he needed, the doctor said, “Don’t do drugs.” Really! Brilliant! Iowa now wants to establish clinics where women can go to get talked out of having an abortion. Wouldn’t mental health counseling and facilities be more important? I’m continually and increasingly alarmed by my state government officials.

One of Iowa’s biggest problems is drug abuse. Heroine, fentanyl, and meth are corrosive, mind-altering drugs that are at the forefront of this problem. One of my good friend’s son has been able to turn his life around, but that’s due to drug court and counseling. He has bipolar problems and became an addict. Self-medicating through drugs and alcohol is a common behavior I’ve observed throughout my lifetime. It’s understandable, but our Iowa prisons and jails are full of addicts which really brings me to the overall point I want to make today: if we do not provide substantial mental health facilities for people, the drug problem is not going to be solved. I understand the need to protect people, and I’m not saying we should get rid of law enforcement, but is locking someone up a cure?

I’ve been working on a sijo to highlight this problem through poetry. Okay, writing poetry will perhaps not solve the problem either, but it’s a way for me to articulate my personal angst. Thanks for listening to my vent:)

Clanging doors slam behind me;
an icy chill steals my senses.
I'm ashamed, lost, addicted;
voices screaming, spook my demons.
Can I heal or survive a life
trapped inside, no hope in sight.


Barb Edler Avatar

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7 responses to “Locking Up Is not a Cure!”

  1. Denise Krebs Avatar
    Denise Krebs

    Barb, your sijo brings out the tears and angst with much power. Oh, may your rant become real progress and change. We must hope for that. Peace to you and your students.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Glenda Funk Avatar

    Barb,
    I concur w/ all you’ve written here, and I have so many other thoughts, beginning w/ this: Thinking those w/ power and money want a cure for drug addiction and/or mental illness is a false premise. These are social problems that benefit capitalism. They feed both the medical industrial complex and the prison industrial complex. It’s heartbreaking. And another problem is the right-wing narrative to young white men. That narrative tells them they’ve had their American dream stolen, that they are not born to privilege by virtue of their whiteness, that women and POC have done them wrong, that they must protect their whiteness at all costs, including their mental health and their very lives. If you haven’t read “Dying of Whiteness,” do. It’s an enlightening look at four states and how white men support policies that are antithetical to their own well-being.

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  3. Maureen Young Ingram Avatar

    Barb, this is a very insightful post. Addiction issues are rampant in our country and the scourge of fentanyl being used to lace drugs is absolutely terrifying. I have family members and friends who have addiction issues. You are absolutely spot on that we need to increase our mental health services, to help our young people, especially. I am so sad to read, “I have noticed more and more males who struggle to attend class, who feel uncomfortable speaking and connecting with their classmates, who have shared stories of life trauma, and who visibly appear uneasy.” What an important role you have, as their writing professor. I chuckled when you said that writing poetry won’t solve the problem – but it is an important “PSA” – and writing is good healing, yes? Thank you for this!

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  4. kimhaynesjohnson Avatar

    Barb, you are spot on! You know from Ethicalela that I have two of four children who have been caught in the grips of addiction, and it is gutwrenching. Mental Health and Wellness, in my book, is a solution to the prevention and treatment of addiction – – and I can’t agree with you more. I have been to two faith based restoration homes over the past couple of years to visit family in these places, and when the mental health is treated, there is hope. Without that first step, it seems futile. Too many of our young adults today have drifted away from their anchors, and yet our elected officials don’t put enough emphasis here on the necessary factor to improve things in our world on SO many levels!

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    1. Barb Edler Avatar

      Futile is the perfect word. I did not know you’d written a book about this. I will have to get a copy. Thanks for sharing your understanding of a very painful, heart-breaking topic.

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