Название: Holy Warrior Trojan Horses
Автор: Sheldon Cohen
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Биология
isbn: 9781456607319
isbn:
“It sounds confusing, Dr. Levine,” said an alarmed Lois.
“Yes, I agree. Adolescents who develop one of these illnesses show the same depression and withdrawal and sometimes hopelessness as adults do, but they also can show extreme agitation and irritability, or they can demonstrate severe rage, use profanity, and have long lasting tantrums. The good news is that many of these people are highly intelligent, and if they can learn to stabilize their emotions, they can become very valuable citizens. One thing I spotted in your son is that he is a very intelligent youngster, even a genius perhaps. His teachers all said the same thing and had no doubt about his intellectual potential.”
“What should we do?” asked Lois.
“I would first recommend a psychiatrist to confirm one of these diagnoses. Then treatment can start if he or she concurs. It may well be that medication would be helpful. As a psychologist, I can’t prescribe them in this state.”
Hari, who had been slumping in the chair, leaned forwarded stiff-backed and said, “Treatment with medicine?”
The way that he responded told Mrs. Levine that the thought of medicine was anathema to Hari, but she dealt with the problem directly, and in an authoritative a voice as possible, she exclaimed, “Yes. The two mainstays of therapy are medication and psychotherapy. Medicine can deal with the medical aspects of the illness, and psychotherapy, or talk therapy, helps the patients to understand their illness and develop the proper approaches to lessen the effects and reduce the hills and valleys.”
“You say talk therapy?” asked Hari with wide opened eyes and a creased forehead.
“Yes, very important.”
“May I ask a question, Mrs. Levine?”
“Of course, anything.”
“What do you feel about just the use of talk therapy without medicine?”
“I understand your concern, Dr. Marzan. There is no such thing as a risk-free medicine, that’s true. Either talk or medication, or both talk and medication, can be used separate or together as therapy. That is a decision best left to a professional in the field.”
“Thank you, Dr. Levine. We appreciate the time you spent with our son.” Hari delivered this last remark with a finality that told Dr. Levine, and his wife, the interview was over.
“You’re welcome. If there’s anything more I can do, please don’t hesitate to ask,” Dr. Levine said with a nagging fear that Ben, now clearly left to the devices of a domineering parent, could be heading for difficulty.
CHAPTER 5
Decision
Hari and Lois drove home in silence. Lois noted her husband’s expression and knew he was deep in thought. This meant she would hear his opinion soon—and she was right. They sat down at the kitchen table. “I know what we must do,” said Hari.
With an anxiety based upon many years of experience learning to read her husband’s tone of voice, all she could muster was a fearful, “What?”
“I was thinking of this even before Ben saw Dr. Levine. I agree with you that it wouldn’t be wise to send Ben to college now; he’s too young. He’s never adjusted well in school. He stays bored because everything is so easy for him. He has not found his true destiny because he does not know Allah. It all must be changed.”
Lois looked at her husband with fear and trepidation. “How?” she murmured.
“He will go to the Imam for a year. He is not ready for college. He must learn that there is peace and contentment in knowing Allah. We will save our son.”
“Oh my God; the Imam. You’re talking Pakistan. You can’t mean it.” The last four words were delivered in a pleading voice, but Lois knew her husband’s voice was spoken with the inflection that suggested an order—not anything to discuss.
“I mean it. You heard Dr. Levine. Talk therapy is what he needs. Twenty-five years ago in Pakistan, the Imam turned my life around. We were both young then. I was floundering like Ben. The Imam took me in tow and led me into math. I never knew I had an aptitude. Even though he was not much older than I was, he had the reputation of a Koran genius far beyond his young years. When the old Imam died, he stepped in and filled his shoes. His knowledge is beyond that of psychiatrists. God whispers in his ear. Where could Ben get better talk therapy than from the Imam? It is settled. I’ll talk to Ben.”
Lois responded, “What about medicine that Dr. Levine recommended?”
“The Imam will know. Medicines can be dangerous. What is wrong with a trial of talk therapy first? I believe that would make the use of medicines unnecessary. What are medicines? They are all poisons. Taken in a small dose they might help a person, but you never know. In big, enough doses…they kill, or they maim. Believe me I have studied the issue. Some of the psychiatric medicines leave permanent physical effects. Some of them lead to suicide. Medicine to me is a last resort.”
“But you are acting as his doctor now. You are making the decision as to what he will or will not do. How could you do this? The medical professionals have a tough enough time trying to make therapy decisions, and you are trying to do that…and for your own son. That is reckless. What if, God forbid, something should happen to Ben. How would you feel? Don’t do this, Hari.”
Lois had never seen her husband get angry. He had a flat affect, but as his wife spoke in opposition to his thinking, his voice became louder…calm, but louder. Lois knew that this was his way of letting her know that his position was final and he would brook no opposition. What could she do? She feared for her son.
“My dear wife, Allah is the only tried and true medicine. Ben needs Allah. He will find him with the Imam.”
“But you haven’t spoken to the Imam for many years. How do you know what he thinks now? What if he’s changed?”
“Changed? What do you mean? The Koran does not change. The Koran is the word of God. Allah does not rewrite his commandments. They’re good for the duration of the universe.”
“But there are those who interpret the Koran in different ways. They believe in the theory that the end justifies the means, and you know what kind of thinking that can lead to.”
He spoke again as if he did not even hear her pleading and picked up his point from where he left off. “Think my dear wife. How would the world be if everybody in it adopted the Koran? If all rules were followed and penalties were so harsh that the rules would dare not be broken? There would be no sexually transmitted diseases. There would be no wars. There would be no crime. There would be no mental illness. We would have paradise on earth.”
Not yet allayed of her fears, Lois said again, this time with emphasis, “But I’m talking about the kind of thinking that leads to violence and terrorism. How do you know if the Imam hasn’t changed? What if he has adopted a violent approach. What kind of a man is he now? We have to know.”
Surprised at this unusual show of СКАЧАТЬ