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
Sounds like mom had a plan and knew what she needed to do to get her daughter the (health) care she needed.
you should link this story with the quotes from the abortion story - american women are pressured into having children they can't care for and this is the result -yep I feel for her but she should never have been in the situation in the first place, a country that has socialised health care wouldn't let this happen
I have a son the same age-19 yrs who is non-verbal, in a wheelchair, and developmental disability and will always need 24/7 care. I shake reading this-I shake because I cry for how scared the young woman (19 yr old) must be. I shake because the young woman-where are the services? why are they not in place? Did the mother try to put the services in place? I shake because it is hard-to fight with trying to get the services and did this mom not know who to call or has she called? I shake because sometimes it is so so frustrating and unbearable navigating through the system and I know it pretty well--I shake and cry out for many families--
We don't have enough services and supports but we have a lot more than others because I am not quite --I know how to navigate through the jungle and I keep going--
I do question dropping off at the bar-
This really hit home--I never do this--but it is hard, it is challenging and it seems it is getting worse and worse to navigate through the system with silly laws but yet throw out the good programs and services--
This article makes me shake with saddness for the 19 yr old young woman, for the situation in whole--
Oh my!!! this is so sad --just all of it-so sad!!
This is sad, & I can't imagine doing this, but I know how desperate things can get. I first worked w/people w/disabilities for 15 years, until my own disabilities made it impossible. I know that it's possible to get on a waiting list for help, & to fight for medicaid & SSI, but that can last years! There are some things that help during an emergency. I also know if she is old enough to be abandoned, she likely would have qualified for living & work help. She didn't need to be left, also I'd think the other child may benefit enough to move together.
I wouldn't have a lot of problems I have, had I been able to get insurance, & therefor the treatment needed. I'd still be working. As things are, I'd have been homeless w/out my mom. I really get what she's saying, & there's not adequate or quick help, w/out emergency, but it doesn't seem as though she knew other possibilities, or didn't care?
As someone with who both lives in Illinois and has a developmentally disabled relative, I don't think a bar was the wisest decision, but I do think I get where she was coming from. Among all of our other "accomplishments" Illinois ranks last in aide and assistance for people with disabilities. In fact, we are getting ready to close down a couple of the major assisted living facilities here. Illinois government and Illinois in general is so far down the shithole there's probably no coming back. And we are basically trying to dig our way out on the backs of people who need our support the most-elderly, kids, and disabled.
how many of you have really even spent a day an hour with a real disabled child ? not just your cousin jimmy who s a little strange or heard about so and so ?
I do feel for this woman. I am a mum to a disabled little boy and thankfully i now get the help i need
but i have thogut about doing almost the exact same thing or even worse things ( throw him of a bridge throw him in a river) till you have been there till you know the heart ache of having to decied who eats to night and how much longer yo can take your child not sleeping/screaming /crying /any of the other hundred things we go thew daily even hourly stop and shut up
think of it this way at least it was a bar she didn't make her stand in front of the car and run her over she didn't slip sleeping pills in to her food ......at least it was a bar and not an open field if you dont know what she is going thew SHUT UP
if you want to help us the mothers and the children stop judging us and talk yo your goverment you have representatives use them!
I agree with the comment stating that she went about it the wrong way. A church would have been a safer place. If a church was not open at the time she could have dropped her off at a near by hospital. A bar full of drunk people. She could have been raped and how would a person with a disability handle that?