There was nothing wrong with Sheila when she first met Colin. She'd been your average teenage girl, a tad rebellious ( nothing unusual ) a risk-taker within a strict household ( nothing unusual ) then found in a field with ,who was first described as, a farmhand. Whether or not it was Colin is debateable, as my thoughts are that if it had been him, why have an abortion ? From that day on Sheila was branded the " Devil's child ". An horrendous way of handling a delicate situation.
It was June who wasn't normal with her constant religious rantings which even the twins got upset about.
June's behaviour certainly did impact on Sheila after the abortion as Sheila would have silently gone through the loss which could have sparked the beginning of her and her way of life after that exacerbated a problem that lay dormant.
Initially I'd blame June, who didn't help, then Colin who couldn't handle Sheila as she was but who could himself sought help from professionals as it seemed always to have been left to Sheila's father. Girls usually go to their mums for help ?
Lookout, thanks.
Some points I'd like to make (assuming I am right on some or all of this, it may need to also go in the Colin Caffell thread):
1. It appears that prior to 1982, June had never been mentally-ill. She did have mental health issues that dated back to the late 1950s, but if I understand correctly, that was more along the lines of severe depression. June's psychosis started after Sheila's marriage to Colin.
2. Sheila was a normal girl/woman up to her marriage to Colin. There is simply nothing I can see in her history that is the remotest bit unusual. Indifference to academics. Trouble with June. Minor experimentation with drugs. June catches her with a local boy (or Colin or whatever). Boredom and dropping out of finishing school. Not sure what to do. Can't hold down a job. This is all normal to a degree and none of it is cause for undue alarm in relation to a young person. Furthermore, her relationship with Nevill was said to be good.
3. I accept that June calling her the Devil's child (assuming that happened) is a bit much and would have distanced her from June. The tension in the relationship is apparent in the painfully-awkward photograph taken in the garden. But really, schizophrenia...??
4. In Dr. Ferguson's statement, he says that June responded to treatment for her psychosis. Yet Colin makes great play of problems he says were caused by June. Unless I'm mistaken, the marriage was ended before the onset of June's psychosis. I wonder how much of the focus on June's supposed 'religious mania' is Colin exaggerating in order to downplay problems that could be traced back to him?
5. Assuming Dr. Ferguson's diagnosis of Sheila was correct (it may well not have been), this schizophrenia may have been a result of a confluence of causes and factors: a bit of genetics, distant relationship with June, and drug-taking. But I wonder how much of a factor her relationship and marriage to Colin was? It seems to me that Colin has a vested interest in allowing us to focus on June's religious zeal and the simple notion that she was a 'religious nut' while taking our eye off on his own role in all this.
Question:
(i). How do we know about the 'Devil's child' incident in which June caught her with somebody? Who is the source for this?
(ii). There is a letter from Colin to Nevill in which he complains about June. Am I right in saying that this letter was unsent? In other words, is it right that the source for the letter is entirely Colin himself, the letter having not been received prior to the incident?