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Mom Who Left Disabled Daughter at a Bar Was Doing Her Best

by Sasha Brown-Worsham on July 11, 2012 at 7:55 AM

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

Filed Under: crime

Comments

54
  • Autum...
    -- Facebook comment from

    Autumn Scott

    July 11, 2012 at 8:15 AM

    I can understand but I think a church would have been maybe a better place, or somewhere with less drunks... Although drunk people sometimes tend to feel more sympathetic. I dont know, she did what she had to do I just dont think she went about it the right way


  • Zamaria
    --

    Zamaria

    July 11, 2012 at 8:25 AM
    Yes, I do have sympathy for moms with disabled children. I work with disabled people, and I see how incredibly hard it is on their parents, especially their mothers because the majority of their care falls to their mothers. I do NOT agree with what she did at all. Abandoning a mentally disabled person is, in many cases, the same as abandoning a child, and if the mother was in a situation that she felt that she needed to leave her daughter somewhere, she definitely should have chosen a hospital or something more appropriate. But she probably wasn't thinking very clearly at the time. The government doesn't provide enough funds for disabled people, and what little they do get is very hard to keep. Yet they fund those who can work by allowing them to collect disability for things that aren't really disabilities, food stamps, ssi, all kinds of things. People like this are the reason that there is no funding for people who are truly disabled. It's sickening. Something needs to be done. And parents who find themselves stressed about caring for their disabled children should look for a support group. There are many out there. You'll be able to connect with others who know what you're going through, possibly find out about funding you didn't know was available, and get ideas as to how to handle stress. 
  • bills...
    --

    billsfan1104

    July 11, 2012 at 8:56 AM
    Instead of funding well abled people of medicare, like the fat welfare cow next door to me, I would rather have my taxes go for funding parents like this one and for the disabled.
  • Desir...
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    Desireesmom2011

    July 11, 2012 at 9:07 AM

    Ok I do feel bad for the mother but only because she has two disabled children and that must be very stressful time consuming and drain your bank account. But really shes just gonna drop her kid off at the bar? That's the best thing she could think of? That's fucked up. 


  • zandh...
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    zandhmom2

    July 11, 2012 at 9:30 AM

    I'm really tired of all the excuses that parents have for not properly taking care of their children.  This was not the only option she had.  If the health care/insurance was better in Tennessee than where she was living, why didn't she just take the time to plan and move there with both of her kids? I find it hard to believe that after 19 years of caring for this child, now she can't handle it? Just excuses...


  • zandh...
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    zandhmom2

    July 11, 2012 at 9:32 AM

    Oh, and in a bar of all places! If that child is that bad that she doesn't even know her name, I can't even begin to think of the things that could've happened to her there! No, I have no sympathy for this mother!


  • Maias...
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    MaiasMommy619

    July 11, 2012 at 9:44 AM
    I feel bad for any parent who has a disabled child or more then one but I don't feel bad for this woman. She picked a bar to abandon her 19 year old disabled daughter at...not a safe place like a hospital or a church etc etc. and really if she was so dissatisfied with the care and laws in Illinois then LEAVE and move to a place that does. There is no way in hell I would leave my child like she did NEVER. She is a sad excuse of a mother and why is she picking the child at home over her 19 yr old child?? So no I don't feel bad for this woman.
  • Jespren
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    Jespren

    July 11, 2012 at 9:57 AM
    I agree with some of the others, if this mom was *really* just at the end of her rope and doing 'all she could' and felt truly forced to simply abandon her no-longer-minor child (which I can feel sympathetic towards), then she certainly could have picked a better spot than a BAR! She loses every ounce of possible sympathy for her choice of abandonment spots. She could have dropped her at a hospital, clinic, DHS office, police station, fire station, church, school, library, heck, even a mall (which has security guards).
  • work4...
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    work4mickey

    July 11, 2012 at 10:44 AM
    Leaving an adult apearing female, who cannot comunicate, in a place where men get drunk and hit on women is a recipie for rape. I get the abandoning part. I do. This child was legally an adult, so what little govt. support the mom had, had dried up. Not a good excuse, but I get it. But a bar. You're setting your daughter up to get hurt, not helped.

    But since the daughter is legally an adult, no one was legally responsible for her. By abandoning her, the mother has forced the govt. to take responsibilty for her.
  • darri...
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    darrielle

    July 11, 2012 at 10:49 AM
    Personally i do not feel sorry for her. At the very least she could have drove one mile up the road and drop her off at the police station. I happen to live where this incident happened and as everyone in this county knows that is the worst place to leave anyone. With the motels there and rent by the week apartments its the worst place in this county for the worst drugs this county is dealing with. I am sorry this child had to put up with her mother for 19 years. One mile up the road was a police station for crying out loud. And tennessee sucks when it comes to insurance. That was a lousy excuse/lie. She could have even put her up for adoption or anything. This was obviously the worst choice she could have made. I feel sorry for the other child of this mother who is probably next :(
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