Sheila's friends felt the young woman had changed greatly during the first six months of 1985. Gone was the anxious, sweet personality and in its place was a driven, tormented creature. A friend described her state of mind: "At that point she was even more distant than usual. She seemed as if she had been very ill. She was quite frail and I realized that the illness she had talked about was some sort of mental trouble. I remember she called me again about a month before she died. She wanted to see me and I was busy. Then, after the murders, I felt so guilty, of course. She had wanted to talk to me and I hadn't had time for her."
I wonder if the noticeable change in Sheila's personality stated by her friend had a connection to her high dose of Haldol? Such drugs have effects on psychological coping skills as well as possible physical skills.
Who knows how much June understood Sheila's plight? We certainly get the impression that June wasn't good at communicating on an emotional level and seemed to show her love in a practical way of providing food and financial support.
On the other hand we do get the impression that Sheila was very emotionally insecure and desperately needed the emotional connection her mother couldn't give.
I would guess there was a breakdown in understanding between the two women but in all fairness that doesn't prove a lack of love on either side, the best of mother daughter relationships are often loving but complex.
Think the young woman expressing her guilt after Sheila's death for being 'too busy' to speak to her is simply expressing a commonly felt reaction to sudden death and doesn't prove that no one bothered with her. We have to be aware that although we know in hindsight how ill Sheila had been it seems many of her friends/aquaintances were not aware.
Paranoid Schizophrenia and its medication is a very difficult and isolating medical condition, my heart goes out to Sheila but because of her trauma, anxiety, heavy medication etc. she possibly was difficult for people to relate to which would have compounded her isolation.