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72 HOUR HOLD
By Bebe Moore Campbell
Alfred A. Knopf,
326 Pages, $24.95
A MIDDLE PASSAGE
By Paula L.
Woods, Los Angeles Times, July 3, 2005
Most of us would probably say that our contacts with the
mentally ill are infrequent — the homeless person mumbling
to himself at the beach, the wild-eyed fanatic we pass on
the street who's shouting threats about the end of the
world. We may shake our heads and rail against President
Reagan's mental-health cuts or wonder why these people just
can't get themselves together. But how often do we consider
what it's like to be those lost souls, or someone who loves
them and fears for their safety?
Bebe Moore
Campbell shatters our abstract notions about mental illness
in her fifth novel, "72 Hour Hold." Told from the
perspective of Keri Whitmore, an African American mother,
the novel opens with a sense of impending disaster couched
in the language of slavery: "Preparation wasn't possible.
And what difference would it have made anyhow? Knowing that
the hounds are tracking you doesn't mean you won't get
caught; it means you have to get to the swamp fast."
Keri's
fears are aroused when Trina, her beautiful 18-year-old
daughter, begins to sneak sips of her mother's coffee and
disappears on an outing in downtown L.A.'s Flower District,
only to be found talking to a homeless man and palming
something into her pocket. Though we don't immediately know
what Trina's hiding, we do learn that months earlier she
suffered from a mental illness that required
hospitalizations and delayed her going to college. This
circumstance is at the root of Keri's unease. It's a feeling
the girl's father, Clyde, a conservative talk-radio host,
does not share. "There's nothing wrong with Trina's mind,"
he says, rebuking his ex-wife. "She was smoking too much
weed and she got paranoid…. Then you go and put her in a
psychiatric hospital like she's some crazy person."
Keri can't tolerate Clyde's denial, because — as a series of
heart-wrenching flashbacks make clear — the pair both know
Trina has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, controllable
only with medication, therapy and avoidance of all
stimulants, legal and otherwise. So when Trina begins to
miss her sessions, smoke marijuana and stop taking her
medication, Keri becomes a hostage to abusive outbursts,
bizarre changes in appearance and destructive behavior that
leave her physically battered and her home a shambles.
"I embarked on my own Middle Passage that night," Keri says
after one hair-raising episode, "marching backward, ankles
shackled." Trina's behavior also summons Keri's own demons —
painful memories of her own mother, who suffered from mental
illness during Keri's childhood, and her ongoing anger
toward Clyde, who uses his work to escape from his troubled
family.
During Trina's decline, Keri struggles to maintain some
semblance of a normal life. She manages her couture resale
business while watching an employee deal with her own
troubled past. She attends support group sessions and
commiserates with a group of sisterfriends whose children
all suffer from brain disorders. She reconnects with an
ex-boyfriend and debates how far she should let him and his
engaging son back into her life. These scenes, rich with
surprising humor, keen understanding of emotions and loving
snapshots of Los Angeles, lend an important sense of balance
to the novel and remind us that life goes on even in the
midst of tragedy.
But as the
involuntary three-day mental hospital stays (hence the title
"72 Hour Hold") fail to help Trina, Keri feels forced to
make a bold decision to turn the young woman over to a group
of underground therapists who use radical techniques to
treat those suffering from mental illness. The pair's car
trip with a support-group mother and her schizophrenic
daughter to a secret facility in Northern California is
fraught with tension as Trina tries to escape, the police
are summoned and Keri must face the real possibility of
being accused of aiding in the kidnapping of her own child.
Her back to the wall, Keri must decide whether this
unconventional approach is the only hope for freedom from
the illness that plagues Trina — their one chance to, as the
coded spiritual says, "steal away home."
Slavery and its imagery are a startling yet effective method
to bring home the horrors of mental illness. In choosing
them, Campbell elevates "72 Hour Hold" into something so
powerful that it may make reading the book painful,
especially for those who would like to deny that mental
illnesses such as Trina's exist. Perhaps that's because the
novel draws on Campbell's own experiences in dealing with
the brain disorder of a loved one (see sidebar), but what is
experienced in reading this ultimately hope-filled book is a
writer at the top of her form as storyteller, culture keeper
and astute social critic.
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