
Patt & Bert Newton on A Current Affair
BY MIA FREEDMAN
Take a close look at Bert and Patti Newton. What do you see? Your answer will depend on whether you’ve ever loved someone with a mental illness.
If you haven’t, you might see bad parents. Parents doing the wrong thing by their son. Parents too caught up in their own lives. Parents with misplaced priorities. Parents being selfish.
But you wouldn’t have a clue.
Of course, every mental illness and family is different. And yet for many of those whose families have been affected, there’s something familiar about Bert and Patti.
They recognise the fatigue and despair, the devastation and guilt, the loyalty and shame, the anguish and love, the exasperation and the stubborn hope that things can get better. That their son can be saved from himself.
Our society is incredibly tough on people who don’t appear to display the ‘right’ emotions in public. Remember Lindy Chamberlain? Joanne Lees, partner of English backpacker Peter Falconio who was murdered in the Northern Territory? After losing loved ones in horrific circumstances, they then had to endure the nasty innuendo. ‘She didn’t look THAT upset’ people said. ‘Where were the tears?’ ‘I reckon she was involved...’
Because we absolutely knew how we’d behave if it happened to us and it wasn’t what we saw on the news. Right?
Armchair criticism of public figures is a disingenuous game. I keep hearing people say “Why is Matt Newton in America? Why don’t his parents go and get him? What are they doing on TV instead of helping their son?”

Matthew, Lauren, Bert & Patti Newton
Well, think about your own parents. If you decided to leave the country or stop taking medication or break the law could they do much about it? Assuming you are over the age of 18, it’s unlikely.
As Matthew Newton’s world continues to implode, it’s becoming increasingly clear that he’s unwell. But this isn’t actually about Matthew Newton. This is about the scathing attitude towards his parents that’s been seeping into the conversation.
Bert and Patti Newton’s lives have been in the public eye since before their children were born. They’re entertainers and TV personalities. That’s their job and yet this appears to offend some people. So what’s their alternative?
If someone you loved was in trouble – and had been for years - would you quit your job? Even if you knew you were facing years of supporting them financially? Would you drop everything and rush to their side to ‘save’ them again and again? Even if they refused your help? Would you put your own life on hold forever?
For families of mentally ill people who behave in erratic, destructive ways, their lives are a prison. Friends and partners can drift away and invariably do. But families do not. Cannot. For them, it’s a never-ending struggle between loving the person and hating their disease.
I have no first hand experience of such struggles but I know people who do.
“Mental illness can’t extinguish the love of a parent but my God it can push you to the absolute limit,” exclaims a friend whose brother has schizophrenia. “Mum takes the brunt of it. Greg’s episodes of psychosis often centre on her and he becomes convinced she’s trying to kill him and control his mind. He hates her with such intensity it can be frightening. But until he harms himself or someone else, we’re powerless to have him committed. Even when he’s been really bad and the police have taken him to hospital, he’s discharged after a couple of days because they need the bed for someone who’s worse.”
It has devastated my friend’s family as the waves of her brother’s illness crash through their lives again and again.
And it’s his mother who suffers the most.
“She loves Greg madly but she’s deeply ashamed she cannot fix him. She often questions what she did wrong, did she love him too much? Not enough? They were so close when he was a kid and she anguishes over the fact that she caused him to hate her, that somewhere in his childhood she messed up.”
Their family has tried to get Greg care, by buying it, begging for it, praying for it with mixed results. Similarly, people say Matthew Newton “needs to get help” or “be locked up” if he’s so sick but in reality, the mental health system doesn’t work that way. You can’t force people to seek treatment, confirms my friend. “My parents have been to see dozens of psychiatrists. They’ve paid for him to go to counseling, they pay for his medication. Sometimes he takes it. Sometimes he sells it.” They do all they can to get him hospital treatment and ongoing support but he usually refuses anything but money.
“Mum can’t accept that her son is mentally ill. That he will never be okay. It wasn’t love or lack of it that caused him to be ill. It was just messed up brain chemistry and no amount of love or money can fix that. So you have to keep living, even if you’re dying inside.”
And so it is with Bert and Patti. Public figures who earn their living from entertaining us and who have worked for decades to support their family. They have a daughter and grandchildren. There’s the son they love and won’t give up on. Actions they abhor. An illness they are powerless to control. What would you do? Let’s hope you’ll never have to find out.
Have you ever had any experiences with mental illness in your family? Amongst close friends? How have you dealt with it?
If you are going through a tough time, please make sure you get help:
Call Lifeline on 131 114 for crisis support
Visit Headspace (12 – 25 year olds) and specifically their section for parents and friends.
Or see your local GP.






Comments
273 Comments so far
Great post Mia, good to see mental illness getting decent viewpoints in the media.
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This article is very timely as I have been thinking about the Newton family all week. I live in a suburb near Bert and Patti and last week I was standing at the traffic lights waiting to cross with my baby (who was dressed in head to toe pink) when I heard a man say what a beautiful baby boy. I turned around and it was Bert. He was hardly recognisable as the man we see on TV. I have been feeling sad for him and Patti all week and thinking as a parent how would I be feel or what I would do if my girls had a mental illness later in life. I have nothing but compassion for that family.
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Great post Mia! Too many peole criticize without really knowing the story behind it all. My Mum also suffers from depression & self medicates with alcohol. She was actually at a detox at the same time as Matthew once. When she was there we the family were criticized for enabling her behaviour by supporting her. It was suggested that we should let her fall because until she does she will not want to help herself! We are yet to be so brave as it is hard to not support her & want to hide the embarrassment to her & ourselves. So those who suggest the Newtowns should drop everything & save their son, think…maybe they have already been doing it constantly for years. They are in a complicated out of control situation and are doing the best they can. That’s all the family can do!
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Wonderful article.
The judgement that so many feel so free to throw around, making assumptions that they know nothing about. A comment I read below about the having the means to drop everything or that if it were ‘me’, I would drop everything, how self righteous of you.
All this one situation shows is that money and influence are only a factor in being able to afford better support. The person, who is an adult, has to agree to it. I think Mia’s comment about how much influence your parents have on your decisions as an adult was spot on.
My heart goes out to anyone who has to get up every morning and deal with mental illness either themselves or with a loved one. Until our society as a whole stops judging and starts providing the appropriate support, the stigma that goes along with it will only make their journey harder.
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I have a 14yr old daughter with bi-polar. “How have you dealt with it?” is a funny question – one I find impossible to answer. Firstly, it’s in past tense when in fact, it’s never dealt with. Second, it implies that it can be ‘dealt’ with by implementing a plan. Not true. It’s more like being on a roller coaster, blind folded, with no harness holding you in. You just hold on and try and anticipate the next gut churning plummet or turn that might throw you off the rails. The worst part is the fear. Even in the good times when she’s stable I fear for her future.
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You ask if someone we live were in the same situation, wouldwe put our lives on hold, drop everything to help them? If it were my child, absolutely. No question. I’m surprised you wouldn’t.
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But how many times would – or could – you do it? Putting your other family members second – again.
And treatment, air fares, etc, all cost a lot of money – if you are constantly picking up the pieces, where does the money come from?
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Zoe, my question was a rhetorical one because you are not in the same situation and neither is anyone but the Newtons. I honestly have no idea what I would do.
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If I were a millionaire (like Bert and Patti) I’d be on the very next flight to the USA in an attempt to rescue my son (or daughter) from whatever mental demons were consuming them. I’d only worry about any self-centred consequences after I’d arrived there and confronted him or her. If they subsequently refused, absolutely, any of my help, so be it. But at the very least, I’d make the effort whatever the outcome. Matt’s age is, of course, immaterial; he’s Bert and Patti’s flesh and blood, and mental illness affects people of all ages – from kids to octogenarians. Both Bert and Patti are well beyond retirement age anyway. There’d really be NO negative repercussions if either of them “quit” their jobs – other than financially of course! And yes Ms Freedman; as a person suffering from clinical depression and GAD, I know that my parents would (and have) been of enormous help to me when the black dog has been barking at my heels. And your presumption that – particularly for their mentally ill children – parental responsibilities somehow cease at age 18 years is fatuous, and shows a deplorable lack of any comprehension of mental illnesses and their devastating consequences.
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But how do you know they HAVEN’T done that a hundred times already? Unfortunately I have been in this position with my mum, who is bipolar. There’s only so many times you can put your own life on hold, leave work, leave your own life and go and try to pick up the pieces of someone else’s terrible behaviour before you have to draw a line in the sand and say “You know what? If you continue to self medicate, refuse treatment and fail to help yourself, there is NOTHING I can or will do for you.” My support is conditional- and my mum knows it. It is conditional on her holding up her end of the bargain and actually going to her appointments, taking her meds and staying sober. You know what they call someone who drops everything and tries to make things ok for another person all the time? An enabler.
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I totally agree. This is no criticism of Bert and Patti (what do we know of what they have done or are doing to help Matt) but if it was my son, I would be on a plane in a second, sitting outside his hotel room if I had to, just because he is MY SON and I would do anything, go anywhere to help him, even if he didn’t want my help.
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Ok. Then what would you do? How exactly would you sitting outside his room help him?
What if hotel staff had you removed? What if your presence made him more agitated?
What about work? The other people in your family that you’re responsible for? How would your running off overseas affect them? How would you fund this trip?
Also, if you did actually go home feeling as though you’ve acheived something, what happens when you arrive home, pick up the phone and the next incident has happened? Then the one the next day, and the day after that?
See, so many of you seem to think these are just one-offs. These incidents are just the ones making the news. This could be a daily problem! There is not enough time, money and energy in all the world to run to the rescue every single time. And the parents and carers have needs as well
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I don’t think you know enough about the particulars of Matthew Newton’s mental illness issues to be able to say with any confidence that his parents flying to the USA would effect his rescue. I also don’t believe that you know anything of what the Newton family has done over the many, many years that they have been dealing with Matthew’s condition, including in the years since he turned 18. How can we the public possibly know what they have done for him?
What you have done here is exactly what Mia is railing against – presuming to sit in judgement on the actions of a family whom you don’t know. We don’t know what they have done in the past to try to help Matthew, or what hell they have been through or, and here I admit I am making a presumption of my own, how many times Matthew has rejected their help.
I’m glad your own issues have been responsive to the help your parents have provided – just don’t presume that Bert and Patti have not tried in the past to help their own son and are not now feeling devastated and powerless to do any more.
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Just because someone is famous, it doesn’t mean they’re a millionaire. You know nothing of the Newton’s financial situation.
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Honestly? You don’t know what you’d do, because clearly you’ve never had to. You don’t know how much they would’ve done already. You don’t know how deep this runs. This judgement sickens me.
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Fantastic article Mia! So glad to see someone taking a more compassionate view for a change.
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thank you so much for this article Mia.
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Thank you Mia for highlighting this mental health aspect. I have a son suffering Schitzafrenia [what a horrible name ...I cant even spell it!!]
It is a debilitating illness which affects the whole family. My son suffers every day with REAL pain & torment which we all have to watch & endure with him.
Unfortunately there is little we can do but to offer support love & comfort. Even with doctors & medication they can suffer badly from their psychosis.There is little help & not much enjoyment for them. He does not get out much at all & has no friends.Outreach workers are too busy & have little time to give to the unwell patients. We are forced to try to help him ourselves.The media do not understand the Mentally ill. They cannot help themselves when they are unwell.In the media they tend to blame Matthew for his actions but it is the illness which is making him crazy & act in this unrational way.We need to educate the media to change their thinking & be sympathetic to him & his family. My heart goes out to Bert & Patti I know what they are going through. Nobody really understands unless you walk in their shoes!!!
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Thank you for writing this article. We also have a son with a mental illness and our journey has been 26 years so far. I think you have explained just how parents really feel in this situation. It is a daily battle and just when you think you can relaxe a little you are sent another curve ball,but you never stop loving them and live in hope that everything will come good in the end. I wish the Newton family all the love and support that they need over the coming months.
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Thank you for this post Mia. My brother is bipolar and I have depression. We have a genetic predisposition to mental illness in my family. Add some form of trauma or drugs and watch the illness grow.
Within my own immediate family, my parents have been through hell and back with my brother, which meant years of me having to hide my own depression. His illness was made worse by drugs and we never thought we would get him back. We are lucky though – therapy, medication and his own willingness to get help after hitting rock bottom, he has turned his life around. His illness requires continued support on all fronts.
In the last few years I have now been able to reveal the full extent of my own illness to my parents. Up until then only my husband and a few close friends really knew the extent of my depression. Writing is a big part of my life and I have started a blog, as I hope telling my story can help someone else feel less alone, give them the power to get help.
We asked ourselves all the time what else can we do to help my brother. Everyone has a limit though and I almost gave up on him completely. It truly saddens me that people are being so cruel and judgemental of Burt and Patti. We don’t know their journey, their pain and anguish. It’s judgements like this that perpetuate the stigma’s we bear with mental illness.
Much love to all going through this very thing, stay strong and know that there is never a right or wrong answer – only yours.
Jackie
xoxo
http://www.mummyindisguise.blogspot.com
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Thank you for this Mia. My brother in law had a breakdrown a few years ago and became suicidal. He’s doing much better now but supporting him has taken a massive toll on our little family and just yesterday I was thinking that it feels like no one understands what it’s like to have a family member with a mental illness. It’s really good to have it raised. Much love to everyone trying to support someone with a mental illness xx
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Yes, I don’t know from personal experience but I’m sure that the carers and family members have it very very tough. Supporters, you’re doing a great job.
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Thank you for this Mia. My brother in law had a breakdrown a few years ago and became suicidal. He’s doing much better now but supporting him has taken a massive toll on our little family and just yesterday I was thinking that it feels like no one understands what it’s like to have a family member with a mental illness. It’s really good to have it raised. Much love to everyone trying to support someone with a mental illness xx
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Why oh why didn’t Bert and Patti use their celebrity status to raise awareness /funding years ago? Surely his diagnosis was before the girlfriend beatings and arrests? Correct me if I’m wrong but it’s only with in the last 5 years that I’ve heard his parents speak of the illness?
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not exactly helpful to use your son to raise awareness of illness when it is a private matter. he did things that made it public so now I guess they can talk about it.
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It’s is a precarious balancing act when you have someone who is suffering a mental illness – you hardly want to draw attention to your family when you’re suffering so much. Any little thing can be enough to tip you over the edge again and the times you feel you’ve got it together a little bit you just want to be left in peace to breathe.
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Yes my son has bi polar. 4suicide attempts in a year. Hes fought cancer, non hodgkind lymphoma and is in remission. I feel it must be my fault as I lost my husband when my sons were 2 and 3 years old. He died from a stroke so I was the sole parent.. He blames me for every single thing that goes wrong in his life. Its all my fault my son can never see he may be not doing acceptable behaviour. Cause it my fault.my fault. Helplessness, hopelessness, guilt, terror, failure. At this moment I feel I have failed at everything as far as being a mother. My heart breaks for Pattie, we are the same age and it is heart and soul breaking so not be able to hold our sons and make it all right. Col
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Colleen, please do not feel as if you are the cause of your son’s problems. I have bipolar disorder. My father passed away when I was 7 years old. He was a young man of 40 who died of a heart attack quite suddenly. I don’t know how old your son is but please do not blame yourself. I was diagnosed with bipolar 1 at age 26. I have for the most part taken my medication. That is the key here. Finding the right medication and taking it. Also therapy. Of course a great support network helps as well. I am a 35 year old Mum to a four year old boy with ASD. I take my medication. If I don’t who will take care of him?
Colleen, my heart breaks for you, Patti and to my own mum. Please don’t blame yourself. I don’t blame anyone for the mistakes I have made in mine.
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Colleen,
Please don’t despair and think it’s your fault. My sister has bi polar and she blames me for everything that is wrong in her life. It’s taken me years (and moving to the other side of the world) to realise that it’s her illness and not my fault.
I felt like shit for years and my wedding day was almost ruined because she needed to have all the attention and could not let me be happy for just one day. I constantly feel resentful and at times I think I might hate her.
Please understand that it’s not your fault. When someone is mentally ill, they often need someone to blame because they can’t accept responsibility for the actions that result from their illness.
I’ve been going to counselling and it’s really helped me come to terms with my sister. I live in the UK and it’s free, though I’m sure that there would be a similar service in Australia.
I wish I could give you a huge hug.
Katherine
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Congratulations on a well written article. My family has endured many,many years just like Bert and Patti. The system allows the person with the illness to dictate and at times hold their family to ransom on a daily basis. It is very difficult to get government agencies to even listen to other members of the family. My husband and I have been blamed, judged and victimised by others who know nothing of our daily lives but who choose to live in their glass houses and constantly throw stones. We live in a regional city and have felt that the system has let us down. We are not given the opportunity to discuss the options for help and assistance as it is not considered any of our business as our child is over 18 years of age. We have been left out of the picture for many years and find it difficult to cope on a daily basis. At times we feel that our family life has been destroyed, have had little or no hope that things will ever get any better and know that we will be living with this for the rest of our lives. Please note that this also affects other siblings who have to deal with the fall out from others making judgements and assumptions about the family situation. So thank you once again for highlighting how things really are for families.
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This whole Matthew Newton worries the hell out of me. Until this happened I didn’t realise that bi-polar people could be so mindlessly violent.
Least all the publicity has been an education for the rest of us
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It isn’t exactly BilpolR that cause violence. many people with it would not be . I would say the drug use and alcohol use that he would be self medicating the illness is what causes violent behavior.
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I am bipolar and not violent. You can be of a violent nature (as your personality or because of drugs and alcohol) AND be bipolar. I’m sure they are linked for Matthew, but his violence may come from elsewhere.
I take my medication, accept my diagnosis, go to therapy, study, hold down a job, a relationship, friends, and take care of myself. Like thousands of other bipolar people around Australia. Don’t look to Matthew for clues as to how bipolar works. He is the extreme worst side of it. Don’t even read a thread like this – the topic here is the pain caused to families so you are going to get the negative side of things.
Many bipolar people do just fine.
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Great Article Mia – I can fully relate to what you wrote.
Mental illness is a bitch of a disease. it has no boundaries and can affect anyone from any family at anytime….
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Great article. Another tiny perspective. I work with some severely unwell people – all who have eventually turned to drug use (I work with drug addicts, but this is often intertwined with mental illness). It’s not a job you can do for long – and you never forget the ones who lose their battles. There are people out there who are trying to help them change – and we can suffer just life families. We all suffer when mental illness rears it’s head. Make sure you carry the compassion many of you feel towards Bert and Patti into the rest of your lives. That person you stand in judgement of, you just don’t know what’s going on. The person at the supermarket, the person in traffic, the person in the street – you don’t know where their day has taken them. Bit of compassion is never wasted.
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Wow, well said Eva:)
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You are so right Eva…..you just never know what a person is dealing with or where they are at.
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Thank you for your article, not for it being about an entertainers family, but for the article bringing more awareness about mental illness in society.
My Mum has schizophrenia. It is hard not to hold back the tears, and it really breaks my heart that my Mum has this mental illness. My Mum is the most amazing person in this world. She raised 5 kids, 4 under the age of 4, while my Dad worked and supported us financially. I have 2 children now, and have no idea how she did it, as well as cope with a mental illness. Us kids did not know she had a mental illness growing up, but looking back now, I can remember times that she would sometimes be late to pick me up from school, and I would wonder why? I know now, that the drugs that she was taking made her drowsy. She was also admitted one time when I was young, and all us kids were looked after by our Aunt’s til Mum was better. For many years, she seemed to be ok, although there were always some funny ideas that she spoke about. Mum stayed at home to look after us kids. She did try a few times to get some part time work, or study, but is was not too long before she left , and returned home. It just seemed that she found it challenging to cope in society. For many years, I did the family shopping, as Mum had created a crazy story, which meant she would not go near the shops.
Over the past few years, Mum has come off her medication a couple of times, like other people have mentioned, she thought she was doing fine to come off them, only to go down hill. When she goes down hill, my father seems to cop a lot of it. She thinks he is a murderer, and creates all sorts of stories, contacts the police, and it is really heart breaking for all our family. My Mum is no way violent, if anything she gets really sacred, wants to change the locks, so my Dad can not get into the house. I can see how Mum’s mental illness has impacted our family each in different ways. I can not speak more highly of my Dad, who has been by my Mum’s side for over 43 years through all this. He is the most amazing strong person. I know that it is so challenging for him to hear the women that he loves say such crazy crazy things about him, but somehow he gets through it.
Since her last episode in hospital, we have been able to get some fantastic support from the public health system in NSW. She regularly sees an occupational therapist, who listens to her and provides support. She suggests Mum tries different things, Mum is really happy to have this support. She visits a centre at the local hospital who administers her medication. She hates us checking on her, and this way we know that she is going, and she is on her medication.
I can only tell you how my Mum’s mental illness has impacted my life. I think it impacted more so in the last 10 years, when I was older, and witnessed what happens when she comes off her medication. It is really upsetting to listen to you Mum talk about your niece not being my Brothers daughter or your father living another life with another women who has kids, which she can name, and tell you all about. There are things that she did in secret, that she should not have done – nothing major, but I was surprised that she would do something like that.
After her last episode, I did not speak and distanced myself from her for many years – it was difficult for me to cope with. I also saw a counsellor for a while to help sort of mourn the death of what I expected my Mum to be. I think the biggest thing for me was to accept my Mum for who she was, not what her illness was.
My Mum is a very intelligent women, who loves cooking, exercising, looking after her grandchildren, she is beautiful just the way she is. I love her with all my heart, and would not change her for anything. Ever since I accepted her for just her, and not her illness, we have created an amazing relationship that I love. I am really lucky to have such a wonderful Mum… I know its a bit early but Happy Mother’s Day Mum!!!
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LH, your childhood sounds like mine was. My mum has had depression for as long as I can remember. She had a nervous breakdown when I was 6 years old and my two younger sisters and I were sent to live with our Aunty, Uncle and cousins while she was in hospital. Mum never worked. She used to clean the house all night. She used to scrub the floors at 3am. She used to forget to pick us up from school, so we had to walk home. Whenwe got home she would be asleep so we had to break into the house. She has had many obsessions over the years. She learnt to play the piano. She helped my two sisters and I get every single Girl Guides badge available. She went back to uni and got a degree, but wasn’t happy unless she got honours for every subject. She lived overseas for several years when dad went there for work. While she was there she played the tourist and collected thousands (I kid you not) of travel brochures in case any of her friends ever wanted to visit. These all sound like minor things, but when you live with these obsessions life is very different to the one everyone else sees. She has to keep a filing cabinet to keep all the travel brochures in. They will all be out of date by now, but she insists in keeping them anyway. Her current obsession is cooking. I must say I’m enjoying this one, but I know I have to be careful. She will spend days cooking and preparing, without sleep, all for a family meal. She is trying desperately to please everyone, when she doesn’t have to. she will be on medication forever. She struggles to sleep at night, but will finally fall asleep at 4am and sleep until after lunch. Sounds like fun, but when the rest of the world operates on different times it’s very difficult.
I know of all the things that have happened in her life to cause, or make worse her depression. I just wish she could get over them but I know it’s not that easy.
I really admire her though. As a child I had no idea there was anything wrong with mum. It wasn’t until my teens that I had any clue. She managed to keep a lot of it at bay while she had children living at home. But once we all moved out, it was like a flood gate had opened and she could release everything she had been controlling all those years. Now she sees the same psychiatrist she started seeing 40 years ago. I wonder sometimes if she would be better off with a new psychiatrist, maybe with new ideas, but she thinks the world of him. I feel like he just patches her up, never really fixing the problem.
Mental illness is a shit. It is a disease that affects the patient and everyone around them. We need to show more compassion towards others, you never know what their story is.
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I feel nothing but empathy for the family of Matthew Newton. To suffer from a mental illness is a debilitating and isolating experience. As is that of the families and carers of those trying their best to care for there loved ones.
I myself was an unknown loved one of someone suffering from a mental illness, Bipolar Disorder to be exact. I spent four years of my life trying to forge a future with this person, unaware of the existence of this disorder, and its likely influence over every impulsive, irresponsible and insensitive decision made during that time. Decisions, I of course, blamed myself for. A year following our cruel and vicious split, I, by chance, discovered this information. Would I have behaved differently if I had known this prior? Truth be told I am so hurt and numb by the experience I find it too difficult to look back and try and rationale it all.
I thoroughly support and admire the families and carers of those who suffer from mental health conditions. To Patty and Bert, to be able to go through this torment on a daily basis, and still manage to smile at the hordes of awaiting media, I salute you. Two years later, I’m still struggling….
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I guess the one bright light in this murky cloud is that the high public profile of the Newton family is raising public awareness about mental illness in the community. We’re talking about it a lot more. That at least is a good thing.
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Even harder when you are married to such a person. Do you leave them because they are difficult???? We go thru many months of “normal”. But it takes in most peoples mind of normal a minor situation to set him off…for us as his family to become the focus of his discontent..he hates us ..his family that loves him.we are to blame for every thing.he puts us down.he verbally abuses us..he makes us feel like shit..it’s getting worse..and I truly do not Know how to deal with it..should I leave my husband when clearly he suffers from some form of mental illness also make more difficult as he is a medical doctor.
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My husband is exactly the same and I don’t know what to do. He can be a loving husband but his moods are erratic and I think he suffers from mania. He had an episode after a minor incident last night and lost it. He spat at me and told me he hated me, then profusely apologised once he calmed down. I live in a little town with no mental health experts nearby and all family are overseas, I dont know what to do either… Any ideas anyone?
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I feel for you both. I seperated from my bipolar husband a year ago due to his abuse becoming physical after years of emotional and verbal abuse. He finally assualted me in front of the children and it took that to make me realise it was about protecting them now and as much as I had tried I couldn’t make him get help. It had to be up to him. I still cry about losing my marriage to a mental illness. And he still thinks that it is all my fault.
I don’t really have any good advice except that you can only blame the illness up to a point. It still does not excuse behaviour that puts you or your children at risk. You can only do so much to help, ultimately it has to be their decision to get help. I hope that your husband can realise he has a problem and get help before he throws everything away. Stay safe x
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Go and see your doctor – he / she might not be a mental health expert but all GPs are trained in primary mental health care and should be able to talk over the issues that your husband has and work out the next steps, which will probably involve getting him to the doctor for a consultation also. Whether he will do that of his own volition I can’t say, but at this stage you need support, care and a plan.
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Thanks for the suggestions, I really appreciate it.
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I completely agree with your wise words Mia. I do think that Patti and Bert appearing on Channel 9 several years ago to discuss Matthew’s behaviour was a poor decision. I don’t see how it was good for mathew and it’s made people feel they can comment on Bert & Patti’s parenting as they’ve opened up about the issue on national television.
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It is horrible not knowing what will come out of their mouths at the table! Mine is only 12, and boy can we tell the days medication has been taken vs not. It is embarrassing cause to outside world looks are normal but behind closed doors – its all so so different. The overwhelming of been judged and people looking on as if we do not discipline!!! Ha if only they knew…
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I recognise that struggle, pain and anxiety on their families faces i have seen it and felt in my family before.
My heart goes out to them.
I am concerned however at the way in which his illness is reported in the media. Almost all people who have bi-polar don’t go around bashing people, they are more likely to hurt themselves. What concerns me is the lack of reporting on the influence alcohol has in his life it appears when he drinks his behavior escalates. What worries me about the reporting is that people suffering bi-polar may be tarred with the same brush. As someone who has experienced an episode of mental illness their is a difference between mad and bad.
What must be incredibly hard for the family is living through this in public. I hope for all their sakes somebody helps Mathew get help with his alcohol issue so he can deal with the mental illness and the pain he is suffering from. I fear for him and his family. I hope that it has a happy ending for everyone’s sake.
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There really is not a lot the Newton’s can do except be there and I’m sure the pain of watching their son struggle must be immense.
My mother is bipolar and has had several breakdowns requiring hospitalisation. As her loved ones, we copped it the most and it was terrifying to watch as a 12 year old (the first major episode I remember). I felt like she truly hated me, which was in stark contrast to the very loving mother I was used to. Each episode has taken a bit of her away from us and although she’s still our beautiful mother, she is a shadow of the person we remember. She’s lost her confidence and had become incredibly anxious. My sister and I worry constantly not only about her, but about our Dad who deals with this every day. In short, it sucks!
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Great Article Mia,
Love Bert and Patti, must be so hard for them to watch their son on this downward sprial, I’m horrified at the thought that anyone is blaming them!
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A few weeks ago on Bounty Hunter, I heard a little piece of advice Beth Chapman gave, sometimes addicts,and mentally ill, the best place they can actually get sometimes is prison. Don’t be hard on Bert and Patti, because taking a parental hand off sometimes is a good thing. Getting on some of the prison programs can only help.
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People who are unwell should not be in prison just because they might have a program inside the walls. Programs need to be available as a prevention not a punishment. Being in prison would add trauma to the illness and only make it worse. Would we put someone in jail because they had diabetes, and they had good diabetes facilities inside?
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Obviously you have had no experience with the NSW Correctional Services. There is hardly any opportunities for rehabilitation in prison. The idea that the prisoners are given help to get their lives back on track is just lies we are feed by our politicians. No person with a diagnosed Mental Health problem should be any where near a prison.
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Whaaat? This is the craziest comment I’ve ever read! Prison is the LAST place you would find effective help for mental illnesses.
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I have written before about my mentally ill brother so I won’t write the entire story again. In a nutshut,my brother was diagnosed with schizophrenia a few years ago and our family have been to hell and back. He is currently on his meds and reasonably stable but unfortunately he sometimes decides to stop taking them and when this happens we all live in fear for what is next.
Thanks for this article, Mia. Even though you haven’t personally had a family member with a severe mental illness, it’s great to know that there are people out there who are open-minded and compassionate to those of us who ARE dealing with this problem. xx
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As someone whose own family has been impacted by a loved one struggling with mental illness I appreciate the compassion in this article, Mia, but it also sits uneasily with me as I have become increasingly concerned by the link between Matthew Newton and mental illness. I realise my comments sit at odds with many of the comments below but for what it’s worth I have spoken to many people in similar situations as our family and I know I am not alone in feeling anger at the way Matthew’s legal team seem to play the mental health card only when it suits them.
I believe it is very important to clarify that no evidence or documentation of a mental illness on his part has actually been put before a judge. Nor have Matthew or his family ever spoken about the actual nature or condition of his apparent mental illness. The only evidence there is any mental health factor at play comes from his lawyer Tweeting about Matthew’s bipolar and other alleged conditions. Yes seriously, Tweeting – it’s legal defence by social media and I don’t think it’s good enough. Families like mine, and of every other Australian battling mental illness, deserve better. Mental illness isn’t just something you Tweet about when your client gets arrested and this is what I find so extremely offensive about this situation.
I don’t judge his parents but I think the issues and kind words you raise in this article are better directed at people such as your friend whose brother has schizophrenia than at the Newton family.
Don’t get me wrong – if Matthew and/or his family decided to specifically acknowledge and discuss their son’s condition then they would have no bigger defender than me. Raising awareness of mental illness is so important – and they have a great opportunity to kickstart a mature public conversation about it – but using it as a vague excuse whenever he gets into trouble only gives mental illness a bad name.
I think people in the media in general need to be a little more discerning of the facts of Matthew’s background and not allow themselves to taken in by his legal team without looking further afield.
Most people with mental illness don’t get physically violent. That’s a fact. So while I appreciate the good intentions of this article please be mindful that rushing to Matthew and his family’s defence on these grounds is potentially very damaging to the millions of non-famous Australians out there battling mental illness. And let’s not forget most of them are without the access to the sort of top rate medical and legal care that someone in his position so readily enjoys.
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Borderline Personality Disorder can and often does result in severe aggression similar to those outbursts Matthew Newton is known for.
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so to does alcohol
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Evidence of mental illness has been used in relation to a number of Mathew Newton’s legal proceedings and has been considered by the Presiding Magistrates when making rulings (both in relation to sentencing, granting adjournments or varying bail conditions). His prolonged, well documented stay in a psychiatric hospital is further evidence of a genuine mental illness.
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I never said it wasn’t “genuine”. (Although if you look up reports of his last court appearance in March his request to be tried under the mental health act was rejected since the judge was given no proof of any specific mental illness by his lawyers).
But my point is the issue of mental illness is a lot more complicated than the legal representation of this particular case would suggest and to many sufferers and their families this certainly isn’t doing the cause any justice.
If you don’t believe me, just look at the comment above from @ passing through:
“Until this happened I didn’t realise that bi-polar people could be so mindlessly violent. Least all the publicity has been an education for the rest of us”
Weep for Bert and Patti if you want but my tears are reserved for the many Australians with bi-polar who now have to endure the stigma of people thinking they are likely to be violent. It’s a high price for a lot of innocent people to pay in order to protect one man and his famous family.
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I had replied with those quotes before I saw this comment of yours and I tend to agree with what you’ve said. While I was looking up those references, I saw several mentions from friends, colleagues and from Bert and Patti themselves (in that quote below) about how drugs and alcohol seemed to trigger these episodes. So yes, I hope that part of the message also gets through and everyone isn’t painted with the same brush.
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Matthew has spoken specifically about his illness and his family have mentioned it – although maybe generally. It has also been put before the Magistrate going as far back as ’07 as SK mentioned.
From Wiki: “In July 2007, Newton was successful in having the conviction overturned (this was regarding Brooke Satchwell). Solicitor Chris Murphy tendered a letter from Dr Robert Hampshire, Newton’s psychiatrist, which outlined his depressive illness and stated he was unlikely to reoffend.”
Matthew in the ACA interview (quote grabbed from mamamia’s Nov 2011 article): He turns a question about his final assault on Brooke Satchwell into an answer about his escape from a psych ward and his concussion. Matthew’s conviction for that assault was quashed, but he doesn’t feel he got off too easily he assures us, he feels he was not treated properly at the time for his mental illness… Matthew’s talent for articulating his experience is a gift few share and he was able to explain some aspects of his illnesses – which he says include “manic depression, acute obsessive compulsive disorder and some personality traits connected to those two” – honestly and with candor. He says he is now on daily medication to treat his health.
From the HeraldSun article about the Newtons’ interview with Tracey Grimshaw: “Television veteran Bert Newton reveals their son has always suffered from anger and mental issues, but these have been compounded by his use of drugs and alcohol.”
This I found interesting from the same Herald Sun article as I hadn’t heard this before: Bert Newton has also suffered from mental illness. In 1964, he suffered a nervous breakdown at the age of 25. Newton senior revealed in his 1977 autobiography that doctors had injected him with the psychedelic drug LSD, then in common use as a psychiatric treatment, after his breakdown.
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Thank you. I am so tired of our culture of blame. We don’t have control over everything and that’s kind of the point.
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i feel for any one with mental illness, I have my own mental challenges with depression.
BUT enough about Bert and Patti Newton already. Have never liked him he has always come across as arrogant to me. WE do not have TV royalty….argh
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I am so glad we are talking about this – thank you Mia. My Dad had schizophrenia and in 1970s, 1980s, even 1990s it seemed to me that NO ONE talked about it, and my family, especially my Mum, struggled to cope without any support. I hope Matthew Newton finds the help he needs, and we all continue to talk.
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I grew up with a parent with schizophrenia but I never knew about it until I was an adult. It was never talked about. With Matthew Newton, he is constantly in the limelight. His parents are well known. I feel for them. It is not their fault and mental illness can come on at any time
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Fabulous article, yes love the person — hate the disease.
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Thankyou Mia for this informative article. I feel for the Newtons, I have a daughter with mental illness, she has had a loving upbringing but unfortunately mental illness can strike any family. Being in the public eye must be so hard. Unless you have had a family member or someone close to you suffer with mental illness it is hard to understand to fathom the destruction and heartbreak it can cause.
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Excellent article Mia, my family went through the same trauma with our Mother, it was very hard to understand and it takes a lot of forgiveness unfortunately not till after she took her own life …
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Well said, Mia! As the Mum of a similarly afflicted young adult son, my heart goes out to the Newtons. The guilt, regrets, night terrors and paralyzing fear of phone calls or knocks at the door are something I understand. Mental illness is not someone’s fault! It just is. And it is often incredibly difficult to understand, treat or even cope with. Sometimes, though your heart is breaking, the only thing you can do is keep loving them unconditionally and carrying on with the rest of your life so that you don’t neglect others who need you as well. This family needs the public’s support not condemnation. A great story. Thank-you.
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I totally agree with you Nikki. I’m also a mum of a young adult son with a mental health issue and would like to thank Mia for her article.
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And let’s remember our prisons are filled with mental illness, often it’s mental health that needs to be the focus of rehabilitation and it so rarely is.
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This is a great article, Mia! I feel so sorry for Bert and Patti and the rest of their family and friends… It would be hard enough to go through this privately, but it would be so much harder to go through it in the public eye. I actually can’t stand Mathew- never have- but these are just 2 parents struggling to deal with their son, and his illness.
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Hi Mia;
I am so glad that you published this article. Have followed the debacle that has been Mathew Newton’s journey for a while and have despaired over the unspoken that problem can be solved – there is no easy answer as you have detailed above. My heart goes out to Bert and Patti and I feel their desair and hopelessness. (also the family of above example) Yes I
too have adult children with mental health problems, daughter 33 with BPD and son with Schizophrenia, the agency we deal with has been so good
publicsystem – mental Health unit, BUT we (husband and I) can’tdo it for them – the people themselves must be willing to be helped. I also reflect on their lives and wish we had done things differently. BUT would it have made a difference ? – maybe,maybe not We must deal with the reality of how it is now and no amount of guilt will change this.
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Well written Mia and particularly chilling for me – I had a brother named Greg who had schizophrenia and was particularly cruel in his episodes to my mother. Greg is no longer with us. On Christmas day this year it’ll be ten years since he took his life.
I concur with pyjamamel (below) – for anyone who really wants to understand, Anne Deveson’s ‘Tell me I’m here’ is not just very well written by a talented writer, but an errily accurate portrayal of what family life is like in this circumstance. It could almost have bee written by my mother.
It’s often overlooked in the media, but for every person that’s in the news for negative reasons – be it abuse, mental illness, even murderers & rapists – there is a family (and/or friendship circle) that’s going through an incredibly torturous time.
Keep up the great writing Mia.
cheers
Amanda
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What makes me sad is that in the same paper this article appears in there is an opinion piece having a go at the husband of a murdered woman for not publically joining in the search for her or appearing at a news conference with her parents to beg for information. Apparently he has scarred his three small girls for life and they have a “right to know” why he didn’t do these things. Why do we feel the need to crucify people for not reacting in the same way we think we would?
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I think in the case you’re talking about the press are doing their hardest to say ‘he did it’ without actually saying ‘he did it’.
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Thanks Mia. Your lighthearted articles are certainly entertaining, but This is when you are at your best. Smart cookie xx
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I have never been the mother or sister of a mentally ill person, but after reading this article I can picture just how hard it would be.
Thank you.
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Mia, this is a great piece, congratulations. It is incredibly hard on the whole family when you have a child with a mental illness. Firstly, they have to accept there is a problem and want to do something about it, without that it’s twice as hard. Even when the person is getting treatment, it is a hard road.
Then there is the whole guilt thing. Even though I know, it’s not my fault parenting wise ( maybe not gene wise), I feel guilty. It causes arguments with the person and arguments ABOUT the person. And all the time there is not only the fear that your child may never be able to lead a happy and fulfilling life, but that if you get your responses to situations wrong, that they will take their life. It is just awful. I imagine the Newtons are just as stressed as every other family is in this situation because basically you are on your own trying to figure out how to deal with it all.
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I have always admired you but after reading this article my admiration has taken on a whole new level. Like so many others that have written today, we too are a family coping with the devastating effects of mental illness. I find it frustrating and heartbreaking when I hear people judging the Newton family and am so proud of your article and got goosebumps reading it. Thank you, Mia, so beautifully written.
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It is evident from the comments just how hard it is for families involved….deepest sympathy to Compassionate.
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