By Joyce Alexander, RNP (retired)
Recently I found a book in a “junk book store” that caught my eye. Its title was I Don’t Want to Live This Life, and it was written by Deborah Spungen. The book is about her family trying to raise a “difficult child,” her first daughter, Nancy. Nancy was murdered by her boyfriend, a “rock star” named Sid Vicious, in the 1970s.
Nancy’s birth was problematic with the cord around her neck, and a rare blood disorder caused her to need a total blood exchange transfusion immediately after birth. From the day that she was brought home from the hospital, she screamed and fought her caregivers. By the time she was 14 she was out of control. By the time she was 17, her parents helped her set up an apartment in New York just to get her out of the house so that there could be some sort of peace for themselves and their other children.
Deborah was at the point of suicide at several times, but with much willpower, stayed to fight for the rest of her family and to try to find some way to reach Nancy. She tried to help Nancy get off drugs and out of the sordid life of prostitution and intermittent homelessness.
Recognition
The book tore at my heart. Deborah and her family suffered terror, pain, confusion and guilt at Nancy’s self made hell-on-earth existence. I read with recognition the confusion Deborah felt in trying to decide how to both protect Nancy and her other children. I too have felt that tearing in trying to give something to one child by depriving the other child of what they also needed from me.
I also identified with Deborah’s frustration that nothing she did seemed to work, so she tried harder to do the same thing. A wise man once said, “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.”
Deborah and her husband Frank turned to the “experts” in medicine from the time that Nancy was a baby. They prescribed Phenobarbital to quite her screams as an infant. Did that drug as an infant set her up later to require drugs to “self medicate” her pain?
They put Nancy into a mental hospital at one point, and got her into methadone treatment multiple times. Gave her food, but not money, paid her rent, but didn’t give her cash. They did the best they knew how to protect their daughter from herself. It still didn’t help, and she stayed with a man who was as disordered as she was, and who was more violent, even after he had beaten her.
After the murder
After Nancy’s murder, and getting out on bail, Sid Vicious overdosed and died. Either accidentally or on purpose, who knows which? Before he died, he wrote letters and called Nancy’s mother vowing his love for Nancy and wanting to see the family and have them validate his love for Nancy, and to receive solace for her loss from them. I can’t even imagine how Deborah must have felt receiving these letters and calls.
The press hounded the family and after Vicious’ death, his mother even had the gall to call Deborah and want to bury him next to Nancy. The press hounded the family even more. The press vilified Nancy, one headline reading, “Nancy was a Witch!”
Deborah and her family eventually got into therapy and also saw a television show with Bob and Charlotte Hullinger, who were the founders of Parents of Murdered Children, to support other parents who had lost a child through murder. At last, Deborah and Frank and their two surviving children were no longer “alone” in their grief. Deborah and Frank became advocates of the group, forming a chapter in their hometown, and becoming very active in comforting others. No longer feeling the shame of their daughter’s life and her death, but finding new purpose in their own.
Grieving the loss
Anyone who has lived with a person who is disruptive, disorderly, and disordered can relate to Deborah and Frank’s pain in trying to deal with that person. When the person is no longer there, either through death or through no contact, there is a loss there that somehow must be filled.
We grieve over the loss of a person who is part of our “family” no matter what the relationship is, mother, daughter, father, son, lover, spouse, or how we lost them, either through death or no contact. What kind of relationship we had with that disruptive person, the person we cannot please, that we cannot save from themselves doesn’t matter. We grieve. We feel the different stages of grief; the denial, the anger, the bargaining, the sadness, and if we grieve appropriately, we eventually come to a state of acceptance of the loss of the person or the relationship. The deeper the love, the deeper the grief.
Shame about the situation
Sometimes, we also feel like Deborah did, the shame that comes when people in our community learn about the disordered behavior of the one we loved. In Deborah’s case, it was nationally public for her and her family. There was even a sketch on Saturday Night Live about Sid Vicious and Nasty Nancy that popped up when their son David was watching TV with friends. And when their daughter’s professor was doing roll call in class and he got to her name he said “Spurgen, no kin to that nasty Nancy Spungen who was murdered.” Their daughter left the class in shame and tears.
Sometimes, we are involved with the justice system, either the criminal justice system, or the “family courts” where we may be raked over the coals by a system we believed would protect us. Or, others who are closer to us do not believe that the disordered person is the one at fault, but instead blame us, shame us, or desert us, leaving us to feel even more betrayed.
In my own case, for nearly twenty years I felt the shame of my son’s crimes, hid them from my extended family and friends, essentially lied to them when they would ask about where Patrick was living. “Oh, he lives in Texas and works for the State of Texas, and doesn’t get to Arkansas much.” While that is “technically true,” it is deceptive and essentially a lie to cover up my own shame at my son’s failure to be the kind of man he was raised to be.
Some kind of peace
I’m glad that Nancy’s family has finally come to some peace, and that her parents have found a cause that they can focus on to help other families who have violently lost children. For those of us on the “other side of the coin,” though, who are the parents of the murderers, we also have “lost” sons and daughters by the crimes they have committed. While Nancy was indeed a troubled soul, she did not deserve to die violently at the hands of her lover. Her parents suffered in a futile effort, trying to save her from herself, and they suffered again because of her murder.
Like Deborah, I too, do not want to live that life. I do not want to live in self doubt about why my son became what he is, or why he killed Jessica Witt. Though my son still breathes, he is as dead to me as Nancy is to Deborah and her family. As I work on protesting the next parole hearing for Patrick, I have reached out to the group Parents of Murdered Children to assist me with that protest. They have warmly received my request and have put me into contact with people who do understand even my position as the parent of the murderer, and are willing to help me.
While Deborah never gave up on her daughter Nancy, and spent 20 years in trying to deal with a person who was unable to attach normally to a family’s love, now that Nancy is gone, Deborah can move on.
We must disengage
Many former victims of people who are unable to attach normally, such as psychopaths, also spend decades trying to save that person from themselves, and to save themselves from more abuse. There comes a time, though, when we must disengage from those people in order to save ourselves and to save our children from those disordered persons. It isn’t easy. I’m not sure what would have become of Nancy’s family if she had not died that day, but in the end, Nancy’s death may actually have been the salvation of the rest of Nancy’s family because her disruptive presence was removed from the home. Though her family did not want to lose her, they couldn’t save her, but after her loss they were able to save themselves.
I didn’t want to “lose” Patrick either, and I held on to him with denial for many, many years even after Jessica’s murder. It was only his attempt to have me killed that shook me loose from that denial and made me face the truth that he is truly, as my attorney said, “a baaaad man.”
This article is wonderful, OxD. I vaguely remember Sid Vicious and never knew what the controversy was about until this article.
What a mess….maybe, mom’s “gift” of the heroin party was “her” way to see that good ‘Ole Sid didn’t murder anyone else? Who knows? What an ugly mess.
Sid’s music, if you want to call the noise he and they made “music”–wasn’t anything I was ever interested in though I heard te NAMES at the time, I didn’t pay any attention to them or their lives, so the name was VAGUELY familiar when I picked up the book and started flipping through it at the junk book store (I find all kinds of goodies there!) and so I paid the 50 cents or a dollar and brought it home.. started reading it and couldn’t stop.
I saw the dysfunction in the family (Nancy’s mom and dad enabling her just in order to TRY to buy some “peace”) but of course nothing worked.
I think at lot of the book was written to help Nancy’s mom cope with her “failure” to save Nancy…and I hope that it did that. I don’t see Nancy’s mom as a “failure” because I don’t think there was ANYTHING that could have helped Nancy lead a “normal” life. Was it brain damage at birth, lack of bonding, some form of mental illness, the drugs the doctors gave her to keep her quiet as an infant? The list could go on forever trying to figure out what made Nancy Nancy….but I will venture the opinion that it wasn’t anything her mom did “wrong.” I venture that there WAS NOTHING “right” that could have been done.
Sid “Vicious” was also what he was….an addict, a violent man, a narcissist (“You can’t arrest me I’m a rock star!” LOL) and who knows what other name could be legitimately tacked on to him, but whatever he was he didn’t appear to know how “normal” people think about the person who murders their child. His mother also didn’t seem to “get” what “normal” behavior is when someone murders your child.
To this day I have never made any attempt to contact Jessica’s parents because I am afraid to hurt them more. Maybe I should have sent a letter saying “I”m sorry for what my son did” but I didn’t, and even now when I hope that they are going to protest Patrick’s next parole hearing I am not going to contact them, but have Parents of Murdered Children do so and encourage them to protest his parole that way IF THEY WANT TO. But I could never directly contact her parents….much less ask to bury Patrick next to Jessica. So I guess Sid’s apple didn’t fall far from his mother’s tree.
OxD,
I think it’s fantastic that you contacted parents of murdered children. I am familiar with that group. It’s a great idea to get some support from all angles.
A tenant at our office was involved with their local chapter. His son was murdered and theydidn’t catch the guy for a long time. Unsolved misteries filmed at our office and ran the show. The guys former girlfriend came forward after years of fear after the second airing. The dad held no ill will toward her and saw her as a victim too. The murderer was a big time attorney who she feared but the show jarred her enough to dare to tell.
The attorney got 5 years for manslaughter saying he was fearing for his life. He gunned down 2 college guys on the side of a road and from what I recall it looked like road rage homicide.
When I saw they caught the guy, I asked the dad if he thought it was the right guy and he said YES. The chief of police had his whole family go to some counselor to prepare them for the killers attitude! I had never heard of this and wasn’t as knowledgeable as today about spath behavior but they took the steps to help the family be prepared for an arrogant arss in the courtroom. The police knew the family would expect to see a sullen man who felt remorse but they prepared them for a remorseless spath. This made such an impression on him he told me about it separately as he was shocked thinking the man was carrying around the guilt.
I read somewhere the only thing a spath fears is getting caught or getting hurt. I also read an old judge or tenured police officer is very discomforting to these guys as they sense they see through them. Watch them in high emotion situations as their act gets distorted, like at a funeral or something.
Glad they’re working with you OxD and hope it helps all around.
Well, I am glad too….last time we had a TON of evidence including information about his breaking the rules in prison, etc. (many times) including having a cell phone and a weapon in his cell, as well as him trying to have me killed, engage in a stock scam and more, this time I have no evidence of any law breaking or rule breaking (but I bet there has been both) as well as NOW Texas prisoners can call out on a monitored telephone line (collect and the cost is like $25 for 3 minutes or some such outrageous amount, and of course the prison system gets a big cut of the cost. Until the last few years there were no phones for prisoners to call out on at all. If you wanted to TALK to your family you had to have them come to visit, and of course with Texas so big and prisoners moved to te farm ends of the state many families couldn’t come. I think the bottom line though is the INCOME from the phones that the prison gets and if a prisoner is not a good boy they can’t call at all so it is the “carrot” method of control.
Patrick has been consistently a “bad boy” though and has engaged in many fights (he as been pretty badly injured in several of them) with his shoulder frequently dislocated, his wrist and ankles severely injured, head slammed into bars, etc. He is a small statured white male so he has learned to fight like a badger….and in fact I have been informed that he will “get up into the face” of a black male that is double his weight and call him the N word and dare the guy to fight him….and simply because Patrick is UNafraid of anything it seems (lack of fear is one of the things about a high level psychopath) that even much larger guys will back down. Of course there is always the chance that there will be one a touch mentally off who will shank him.
Years ago I ran a large farm which had a large group of day laborers who I would go Bail out of jail every monday morning as regular as clock work…most of them were just “drunk and disorderly” or DUI but there were a few hard azz criminals in the group that had done some serious bad time. One guy was a small guy who had a “banty rooster” attitude…and he was always showing an “attitude” and one day he showed the attitude to a 16 year old who put a 12 inch butcher knife in one ear and out the other. (I didn’t witness this, I just heard the details from one of the other guys)
I really wasn’t afraid of these guys (maybe I should have been) though at the time I lived 1 1/2 miles from the nearest neighbors, but they all knew me, knew I was armed and had a stomp azz dog that they were all afraid of. I never had any trouble from them. Actually, when the local city cops would steal things from them at arrest, they would tell me and I would say to the cops, “Give Carl back his X, y or Z” and the cop would reach in to a drawer and say, “Oh, sorry, I forgot I had that.” Yea, right!
I can’t even imagine how it would be to have a child murdered by a pedophile or pervert or some random killing even….in a “way” I can imagine it, but not fully I don’t think. My child died, but by degrees, and like my beloved step father, who died with cancer over 18 monts, when the actual “death” came I was ready to allow him to “go.”
Actually, I wish I COULD FULLY let patrick go, but e is an animated dead man still breathing.
Oxy,
I can relate to the slow death and the animated dead man analogy. My relationshit to the spath had died over the previous 15 years. A very slow and painful death. As his behavior got worse and worse, my love disintegrated, but I couldn’t leave him, I felt obligated to stay out of loyalty. yes, I was too loyal. And I pitied him too.
When I found out what he was, it was as if chains had been removed from me. I was free.
But he is still animated, unfortunately.
I think there are Nancy’s everywhere. Sometime’s death is better than living.
hens:
I agree. Tortured souls. Sometimes I feel like that is me.
skylar:
I can’t remember…does your spath live near you? Just curious.
Another question. How were you able to trust again and find your boyfriend? Again, just curious as I feel like I will never have a man again…
But Louise, you have found some peace I hope? I am like you, I doubt I will ever find a mate but thats ok.. So much of my life has been wasted in the pursuit of finding HIM. I am at the point where I do good to take care of myself, I dont have that desire for HIM anymore..I just desire to love and be loved with no expectations.
hens:
Oh, yeah…I have found some peace.
There just seems to be so few men I am compatible with and I don’t know why. I guess I am just a different bird.