Something Was Wrong - S2 E8: Season 2: Q + A
Episode Date: October 10, 2019Tee and Tiffany reflect on the season and answer listener questions.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-i...nfo.
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Thank you so much for listening.
Yesterday, a.t. and I met to reflect on the season and discuss the questions submitted
by you guys.
So thank you so much for sending in your questions, your comments, and all of your thoughts, encouragement, and love. You guys are the absolute best,
and I really appreciate everything you do to support the podcast as well as Tee this season.
Here we go. You think you know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don I'm so sad. I'm so sad. I'm so sad.
I'm so sad.
I'm so sad.
I'm so sad.
I'm so sad.
I'm so sad.
I'm so sad.
I'm so sad.
I'm so sad.
I'm so sad.
I'm so sad. I'm really sad. Like, I waited so long and it, yeah, to do it and I got to meet you.
And it was really thrilling, you know,
to have like, you listen to me.
And like, first of all, believe me, listen to me.
And then, agreed to talk to me.
And then, agreed to pick up my story.
And then, best of support and love I got from you.
I'm just like really, I'm a little sad, it's over. I just like really a little sad it's over.
I love you and I'm sad it's over too but when you get back from your trip we have to celebrate.
We have to get together and do something.
Yeah! I couldn't express to people like even my family and my friends like what a big deal
this was to me. This was the most dramatic thing that I was ever happy and I was very painful and very
raw for a very long time and I just couldn't express to my friends and family
like how important it was for them to listen to the story even though they
felt like they knew it. Every single person who has listened to it has said, oh my
god, I had no idea. I thought I knew this story. I didn't know the story. And
holy shit, it's this for real. For me, it was a lot of different emotions. One was closure,
and one was finally feeling heard and understood. You got it and understood, and I needed that.
I just needed that from the people like even in my
life like grandma listened. Grandma's 82 and she figured out how to load the
podcast and she started listening to the podcast and three episodes and she
sent me the sweetest text and she said I remember when this happened I had no
idea that all of these things happened.
I can't believe it.
I wish I had been there for you more.
And I feel terrible that I wasn't there for you because I had no idea how in depth this
was.
I had no idea what really happened.
And I want you to know that I love you so much on that.
Your heart is what makes you who you are.
And I love you. And that's
grandma. That's amazing. Hi grandma. I love that dude. That's really awesome. I'm so glad to hear
that it's been validating for you because it's a really hard story to find other people that can
sort of relate and a lot of people have not been through the
situation that you have been through because it is in a sanely unique situation.
So this was four years of my life and then two years like with no contact and then
everything else that happened. This is four years of day in, day out, four Christmases, four, I mean, four, everything.
And one thing that's like on my list of things
to talk about with you today is,
y'all, this was not a Netflix documentary
made for TV thing.
This was my life and this happened to me.
And, you know, I might not have done everything right.
I might should have handled things differently,
but I was just trying to get through it.
And when it's happening to you,
it's so great to be able to look back and sit and judge
and say, oh, well, you should have done this.
Or why didn't you think about that?
Or whatever.
This was for years in my life.
And it was a constant inundation of emotion.
So they tell you that like someone that you know has cancer,
you begin grieving at the diagnosis
and that you go through all of that.
It's a grieving process.
And so, you know, emotion,
and then it's having someone try to kill themselves
and then you finding them,
and then going through all this,
this was not a TV movie or whatever.
This was happened to a real person. I had so much love for her and I do understand that she was
mentally ill and I 100% understand as much as a layman can understand mental illness, I get it. And when this happened,
and I couldn't get over it, and I needed somehow to process this. The way I processed it was go
back to school. So I went back to college, and I met with my professor regularly, I took psychology and I told him what happened.
And I was trying so hard to figure out like it was helpful for me to go back to school and study it
and study the different types of mental illness and different types of anti-social behavior. But
social behavior, but there is no understanding. This is not normal situation. It was really hard for me to hear the judgment like you are saying. You told me when we sat down to
do the first taping and you said, do not go on the internet. Do not do any of that and I did not listen and I did and I did pop into the Facebook group
I popped out too, but I was really disheartened to
hear the judgment in there and I just would I can't I'm not gonna say her and defend anything because I did the best
I could with what I had and what I knew and
That's all any of us can ever do is try and try to get through something.
And I would say to the people that were kind of haters on Facebook,
you know, walk in my shoes and then put them on for four years,
and then you can judge me.
But that was very painful and hurtful.
That's the only bad thing that really,
that I would have to say about this whole experience
was awesome.
But that, I guess I wasn't prepared for that.
I don't think you can prepare for it.
My husband was, it's always just like,
that wasn't for you, that wasn't intended for you.
And if it was written to you, it wouldn't sound that way.
And it wouldn't be that way.
And it's like people don't think of you.
It's just the internet, you know. It's an abstract.
It's just like social media. Like it's like this abstract view that we think is real life
but it's and has this like wavy relevance in our lives but it actually doesn't.
But it sure freaking feels like it.
One thing I did want to address on there
that was a misconception or misunderstood was,
I did not contact the family after I was asked not to.
So that was a misconception that was out there
that I really wanted to clear up.
So like when the mom, when I found out that the mom said,
it's too painful, I can't talk to you.
That was it, I never contacted them again. And people really judged me on like my letter to Sylvia that I wrote and then like reaching
out to her family. And again, I would say we all just try to process grief and you walk
through it different ways. And I was doing the best I could and I was just trying to get
through every day. And every time I drove by a house she lived in or a restaurant we went to, I was just over-com with emotion
and her.
I was heartbroken, like my friend passed away and it was awful and it was terrible and
those emotions when I reached out to the grandma, the daughter's grandma, you know, when I was still having trouble and she said,
I've moved on, you should move on. That was it. I never heard from her, and ether, and then I just had to process myself, and I did go to counseling,
I did talk to people, and you know, I did the best I could with what I had.
I'm certainly not the person I was yesterday or last week or a month ago.
It's really easy for me to look back on how I handled situations even a year ago and be like,
you know what, I would handle that differently now.
You know, when you know better, you do better.
All of the things that anyone, all of the human emotions.
Tiffany, I'm so sorry. Lily just walked down the hall with a bag of beef jerky in her mouth.
Hold on, hold on.
Same, Lily, same!
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Okay, do we get to some of these questions that people sent in? Surely.
Okay, so Olivia on Instagram said,
Hi Tiffany, I just finished listening to the newest pod episode and Holy shit,
I cannot believe what Dee and so many others went through because of Sylvia.
Absolutely wild.
My heart goes out to Dee and everyone else involved.
Anyway, my question for Dee,
what did you do to help cope after not getting answers about
the situation that you deserved getting?
Thank you so much for listening and being supportive.
So, when Sylvia died, she died on my husband's birthday.
And my husband has a December birthday.
It's right by Christmas.
And we were having Christmas at the family, you know, a family member's house.
And I remember walking into their bedroom and crawling into their bed and like playing the
covers over my head and just sobbing. And my stomach hurt all the time. And I remember my sweet
daughter was like mom's gun,
where's my oh shit mom's gone, where's mom go?
And she found me and then she went and got her dad
and he's like doing it to go.
And I said yeah, and it was Christmas.
The state that I was in was so completely broken.
So I had to do something.
So what did I do?
First I went to a counselor and then I started working out
a lot because that helps clear my head. And then I did something kind of funny and kind of crazy. So I
had to do something that completely occupied my mind because I couldn't stop thinking about
things. So I took all of our bedroom furniture and this is December, January. I pulled it into the
driveway and I started sanding our entire bedroom set.
All of it, the headboard, footboard, dressers, nightstands, arm arm, everything.
I sanded it all down, I stained it, I shlocked it. I think it took me two months, you know, to do it.
I, that's how I did that. I also have an art studio at my house, my paint, and I was up all night
a lot of the time. But those are the things I did.
Counseling, working out, refinishing a whole bedroom set.
I highly recommend that if you need to take your mind off
as something because it's a pain in the ass
and a lot of work.
Diana says, one question I would ask T was,
why didn't anyone try to talk sense in the Sylvia?
How was she working, but also needing everyone to take
care of her kids and cooking? Why was she going to nursing school but also so weak that she needed
to wear diapers and have her friends bathe her? It seemed like her life was so out of balance and
everyone was helping her, but at the same time helping her stay out of balance. I was having
trouble understanding how it all fit together. That's an awesome question. I'm so glad that you chose
that to read. First of all, again, keep in mind this was four years. So there's peaks and valleys
and people who are on chemotherapy and radiation are there, they go through treatment and then
they have a period where they don't. So I did try to tell her like when she told me she was
going to go to nursing school, I'd like to do dude, are you crazy? But you have to remember at that point, she was
going through a good spurt at the year compared year and you're also taking information like the
diapers and not that was at the end. So in the end, she wasn't in school, she wasn't working at all, putting the story into perspective
and how it went through.
So she first gets sick.
She doesn't really start treatment right away.
And then once she started treatment,
she would be sick for a while,
and then she would be okay for a month or two.
The times where she was terribly, terribly ill
was not when she was in nursing school.
The nursing school, she seemed to be really on and up swing and her attitude was awesome through
most of this. It was like, I'm going to kick it's ass. I'm going to, you know, nothing's going to
stop me. I want to be a nurse, a diagnosis that's in a death sentence. We did try to talk to her
and she was not going to,
when we were doing like heavy on the meal train
and taking care of the children,
that was not so much the in-school part.
And she was working very little,
like it was very sporadic.
Once she was diagnosed,
she didn't work for us full time.
It was on and off, on and off,
you know, a day here, a day there. And then when
she worked at the prison, you heard Gen say that like the schedule was posted, but she wasn't working
all the time. We did try to talk to her and tell her, oh, slow down a little bit, but you don't want
to tell somebody who's dying. You can't do this. You want to encourage them. You do this. You go
with your bad self, you get your
degree, you go, you be a nurse, that's awesome. And we were trying to support her through that.
So, Karissa asks, was anyone ever able to verify that she passed away like a death certificate?
It seems to be the number one question that I get asked, is she, do I have a death certificate I don't?
There is a marker stone out of cemetery here in town
that has her name and her date of birth and date of death
on it and her mom put that there
so that her kids would have something to visit.
She was pre-mated.
I tried to
Google search the heck out of it to see if I could figure it out. It turns out
it's really hard to find out unless you're a family member. I 100% believe that
she passed away. Jen 100% believes that she passed away. There's pretty much no way
in hell she would have left her daughter. She did love her daughter in her son,
but I know that there's no way that she could be ripped have left her daughter. She did love her daughter in her son, but I
know that there's no way that she could be ripped away from her kids like there's just
no way.
Tawny asks, have you been able to trust people and form new relationships slash friendships
since this happened? If so, what has helped you?
Um, it's really hard. No. It's super hard to, um, it's super hard to form new relationships
and trust people. I mean, obviously I've made friends in 10 years, but it's really always
in the back of my mind and it is really difficult to let somebody in again.
Teresa also asked would you ever want to reconnect with her family members if you were given the chance?
No, it would not be healthy for me. I know, absolutely.
I thought I could do it and then like process some of it through that without it ripping my
heart out but I know myself and I know that's not possible. Like it would just
reopen the wound. Have you thought about that if you were to speak to them to the
children now like or if they were to hear this what you would want to
communicate to them? Oh gosh I wasn't very close with the sun.
About the daughter was like, what's up with the daughter to me.
And I loved her so much. And she, oh, she's such an amazing kid.
And she was so bright and smart and funny.
Oh my gosh, so funny.
And I absolutely love her.
And I would want her to know that like,
I did not choose to leave you.
I love you.
And I would never, ever want you to feel like I wasn't there for you or that
I didn't love you. I 100% loved you with all my heart and I just talked to protect myself
and not be a part of your family anymore, but I would never want you to think that I left you because I didn't
for a minute.
Thank you for sharing that.
From the whole experience of doing the podcast, what does that experience been like for you?
Now that it's all sort of out there, like what is the positive impact and the positive
experience of like sharing your story with others Ben like? It's been awesome it's been a really great experience
like 98% of it has been fan-free fantastic it's awesome and it was nice to be able to talk about it
freely and talk about it with you and know that you had my back and know that I'm just
a human being.
I could say what I needed to say and know that you understood it and you had my back
on it.
It's been great letting a little piece of it go by talking about it, finally having people
understand what actually happened.
It's been a really great good
experience except for the mean people online.
Other than that, it's been fantastic.
We will always have a different opinion than someone else and how they handle something.
You know, or how they respond to something, it doesn't mean that their trauma is less
or their feelings are less valuable, or any of that stuff.
Like we're all different,
we're all gonna process things differently.
The point of this conversation is not to pick apart
those that are being vulnerable.
The point of this conversation is to lift those up
that are sharing their experience
and what they went through
so that others who have been through similar experiences
can feel validated.
And also to spread awareness
on this disorder and the signs to look for,
that's my purpose and that's our purpose
in sharing your story and I really hope
that that landed for people and that they understood
that this wasn't about telling a super crazy story
while a very interesting story to listen to
because it's intense,
but the motivation that both you and I had and one of the reasons we connected right away was
to help other people and to spread awareness about, you know,
factitious disorder and how it not only affects the person, the patient, but everyone else around them.
Yeah. That was perfectly said. I got a really interesting email
from a practicing psychiatrist in Pennsylvania that I haven't vetted this person, but she says,
hi Tiffany, I'm a huge fan of your podcast since the first season. Thank you so much. This week,
a few things came up in the show about mental health and I wanted to send you some comments about them. This is long but I hope it's interesting to read. It was, thank you.
First of all, this week T said a few things about the system being, quote, broken. I do understand
her frustration and I agree with her, but I also wanted to gently respond with how incredibly
resource deprived both mental health and social services are around the country, which I think was kind of our point.
It's not, it's certainly not the professionals in the industry's fault that they are resource-deprived.
And, you know, I just wanted to highlight that.
If that was how it came across in any way to anyone, like, I highly respect and appreciate
the service that those people do every day.
You know, it's a hard job and I'm really thankful that those people are out there that have
the hearts for it and that are capable of doing it. That was my whole point with that when Sylvia
was super, you know, I'm not doing well, I don't want to live anymore. When I called around town, it was that there was no empty
beds, there was no room. So there are so many people reaching out and needing help and there's no
room or place for them. It's not that the people who are in the mental health field are failing,
it's the system. I sat in a hospital here in town for two days with somebody who drove into the emergency room and said,
I want to be 5150 because I can't take it anymore. I'm so upset. I feel, you know, like I want to die.
And there were no beds for that person for 48 hours, I sat in the emergency room with this person.
And there was no place for them to go.
However, it's not the people who are here
practicing and working in the state of California
are amazing and they are doing great work.
There's not enough of them
and there's not enough help for people who can afford it.
She continues, I don't work for social services personally,
but as a mandated reporter, I can tell you that in my state,
they are limited to investigating reports,
where there is an immediate threat or death,
or serious injury to a child, at least most of the time.
They just don't have the resources to investigate
mental illness in parents,
even if there is real emotional trauma happening
at Sucks. She says when it comes to access to mental health, it is often the same story, actually
live in one of the most resource-rich areas of the country and we still frequently cannot make
referrals earlier than six weeks out because there just isn't the availability. I'm glad T's therapist was able to fit her in,
um, emergently,
but I don't want people to get the impression that the mental health providers
are putting up barriers out of malice or some kind of misplace procedural issue.
We really just don't have enough therapist and psychiatrist.
It's even worse in rural areas.
It also sucks, and I completely agree and
Again, it's that's my whole point right was my whole entire point as yes
There are not the resources
You know, I don't I don't want anybody who's struggling out there to feel like there aren't any resources for them
The National Domestic Violence Hotline can chat with
somebody 24-7. Their number is 1-800-799-safe, 7-233. And they are again open 24 hours a day and free.
And the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. And you can text or call them.
Thank you so much, Cece.
I appreciate that.
She's got fancy letters after her name.
I'm gonna try and look you up and find you.
So I do have two things.
One, I do have a regret.
You listen about your season.
Yeah, would you have liked to say anything different?
Would you like to have not said something?
And I do regret. I was very passionate and I because I was very hurt and I guess that it just like
flicked the scab off of the wound, but we were talking about you know when her family told me that
they were gonna have a you or rest to just family.
And I was like, fuck you, fuck you guys.
And I'm in retrospect, probably regret that a little bit.
But at the time, that's how I felt.
And at the time, I 100% stand behind that that's how I felt.
And I had every right to feel that way.
However, it did come across, because I did listen to it and did come across
a little harsh.
Well, I want to say thank you for being really vulnerable and honest in sharing your
story and your family for sharing your story. I have really enjoyed getting to know you
and I look forward to continuing to get to know you.
It's a really brave and vulnerable thing that you have done,
sharing something that is so personal and so traumatizing and so challenging.
And I'm really sorry that you experienced that.
And I'm really sorry you went through that.
I love you and I just want you to know like your feelings are valid, your experiences
valid, and you're really brave.
Thanks, Lily.
I know Lily's out.
You're thinking of me, you don't know me well at all.
You're thinking of me, you don't know me well. You've listened to us and now we want to hear from you.
What did you think of this season?
What did you think of the live episode?
What did you think of season one?
We can talk about all of it.
Give us a call and leave us a voicemail at 1-3-2-3-379-5678.
Unfortunately, the voicemail cuts off at three minute marks,
so just keep that in mind.
Also, by leaving a voicemail, you may end up hearing
yourself on a future episode, so yeah,
we look forward to hearing from you.
Something was wrong, is written, recorded, edited,
and produced by me, Tiffany Reitz.
All of the music by Gladrags.
Hear their album, Wonder Under on iTunes.
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The book's referenced on this show can be found linked in the show notes.
If you or someone you know is being abused,
please contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE. That's 1-800-799-7233.
Thank you. If you'd like to help support the show, please consider leaving a five-star review
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your family and friends, a neighbor and garbage man and gynecologist and record producer and
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