Any mother who would send her 19-year-old mentally disabled daughter into a bar more than a state away from her and then take off, returning home, is clearly a poor mom, right? There could be no extenuating circumstances by which we might be able to muster a bit of empathy for the poor woman, right?
Unfortunately, this story is true. According to police, Eva Cameron pulled her car over by the Big Orange Bar last week when her daughter, Lynn, needed to use the restroom. She then abandoned her there. Lynn didn't know her name or any identifying details. They only discovered who she was after an anonymous tip.
By any account, this story is awful. No one could imagine abandoning their vulnerable child at a roadside bar for a second, naturally, and what this mom did was wrong and irresponsible and possibly highly dangerous. And yet I feel for her.
Cameron has another disabled child at home. She specifically chose Tennessee (and Caryville, in particular) because of its concentration of Baptists and because Tennessee has the "No. 1 health care system in the United States of America."
It's a pathetic (and untrue) excuse, to be sure. But Cameron also said something profound when she complained about the Illinois government. "The way the laws are set up, they don’t have enough for families with multiple disabled children," she told a local paper.
With that statement, I feel for her. It's easy to sit in judgement and say what we would or wouldn't do in Cameron's case. No doubt it WAS wrong and dangerous to drop off a vulnerable young woman at a roadside bar. It's a tragedy for everyone. It's a tragedy for young Lynn who can't help herself. But it's also a tragedy for her mother who likely did the best she could for 19 years with little support in place.
I don't know a lot about the laws in place to help parents who are struggling to raise children with disabilities. But I do know that even one child with special needs requires enormous amounts of energy and time and mental resources. No parent should have to deal with that alone. There should be systems in place to help mothers care for and raise children with disabilities to help make it easier.
Look, maybe Cameron is an awful person and she hated her daughter and no longer cared what happened to her. But I doubt it. She raised her for 19 years. She left her at a place she thought was safe. It's easy to sit in judgement when you haven't walked in a person's shoes, but I am the first to admit I can't imagine the toll that caring for two teenage children with disabilities would take on my mental health. Did she make a bad, tragic, awful choice? Yes. But maybe she -- and others like her -- was pushed there.
Cameron won't be charged with a crime because she wasn't her daughter's legal guardian (Lynn is over 18), but maybe, rather than consider punishing the mother, the finger of blame might be turned back around at the government itself. Maybe, for once, rather than blasting someone for not being able to "bootstrap it," maybe we ought to question a government that failed to provide enough support to a struggling mother of two mentally disabled children.
Do you have any sympathy for moms like Cameron?
Image via psigrist/Flickr


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Comments 54
This is incredibly sad to me. Why not drop her off at a church or a hospital with a note in her pocket giving her name, date of birth, medical conditions, allergies, medications, etc...? Just leaving her somewhere (a bar, no less) where she knows no one, no one knows she's been abandonded for an extended length of time and where she probably felt very frightened and alone seems very cold to me. I understand why the mom was overwhelmed and I don't think there's anything wrong with her signing her daughter over to the state but the way she did it was wrong. If the wrong people had been at that bar the daughter may have wound up being abused.
No, I have no sympathy for that Mom! Her daughter could have been raped and/or murdered in that bar!!!
There could have been a better place, but look. We see Mothers or Dad's abusing and killing their children all the time. If she just couldn't handle it anymore and felt herself losing control and was scared to what she could do, good for her for putting the little girl first over her selfishness and blindfold of emotions.
why a bar, of all places? maybe i would have more sympathy for the woman if she'd chosen a hospital instead (mayve).
Plenty of sympathy for anyone that tries to get help for a child that is in need of support---because in Illinois, it doesn't happen. There are group homes with waiting lists...and QMRP's have to "botch the paperwork" to even make these individuals qualify for the support they so desparately need. These funds are going to be cut even more later this year, to mentally and developmentally disabled and medically fragile. No parent is prepared to handle MOST of these, but the most mild cases. You can't stay up 24 hours a day and take them to work with you, and nobody will care for them...what was mom supposed to do? Honestly? Read the article and see how many years she had been trying to get placement!
For those that judge, just don't. You haven't been there. Chances are good there's "something wrong mentally" with this mother too, making it even more essential that the whole family gets help, but of course, Illinois lets them fall through the cracks.
No, I don't have sympathy for her at all. She left someone without any way to help or defend herself at a fucking BAR in the middle of nowhere in Tennessee. There are a lot of dangerous people out there who would just love to find some young girl incapable of defending herself or telling anyone what happened if she got hurt. Why now? Why at 19 years old did she decide to drop her daughter off 2 states away at a bar of all places?? Nope...sorry...no sympathy from me. She needs to have her other kid taken away from her as well. Obviously, she can't handle the responsibility. There is no excuse for this. None. Oh and way to go on blaming the government for your problems. Yep...it is all their fault. They made you have and keep these kids. STFU. Seriously, this makes me angry.
I have a very mentally ill child myself and know how unbeliveably hard it is to raise him. He is only 12 now but as he gets older it will only get more challanging. He has schitzoaffective disorder and gets very violent. I have other children at home that need me too. I could never abandon him though. If her daughter needed more than she could give then she should have taken her to a hospital or church, not a bar. I won't judge her though. Maybe the stress of it all caused her to have a mental breakdown.