Irish Daily Mail

Luke’s autism made him hit rock bottom. But now he’s thriving thanks to a mum who NEVER gave up

How one man and his mother, helped by the kindness of strangers, are able to have a life full of hope once again

- By FRANCES HARDY

L UKE Dicker doesn’t converse. He entertains. Spending an afternoon with him is like being in an audience of one at a comedy performanc­e. He rattles through a repertoire of impression­s —– he has an unerring ear for accents and also creates the personae to go with them.

Gags are woven into stories; he’s a terrific raconteur. Occasional­ly, he bursts into song in a flamboyant, operatic tenor.

‘I can’t sing in my own voice, but I can mimic most voices,’ he explains. ‘I can sing all the parts in Les Miserables. I can sing the theme tune from Frozen in 21 different Disney voices.’ He demonstrat­es. The paradoxes that make up Luke’s personalit­y are both baffling and complex. On a good day, he talks incessantl­y. Always loud, often inappropri­ate, he can be, by turns, outrageous, pedantic, erudite, selfaggran­dising, charming and utterly hilarious.

Yet, when anxiety grips him, he retreats to his bedroom, into a world of impenetrab­le silence from which it is impossible to rouse him for days, weeks; sometimes months.

Luke’s brain is a repository of facts. He has a prodigious memory for subjects that interest him — among them Formula 1 racing and the Second World War — but he forgets people’s names, where he’s put his car keys or when to take his pills.

His heroes are Nigel Mansell, Winston Churchill and Queen Elizabeth. ‘She does the hardest job in the world. Non-stop meeting people and talking to them is extremely tiring. More physically draining than working on a building site,’ says Luke, and he has done it.

His practical skills — in craft, building and joinery — are prodigious. The home he shares with his mum, Jan, 60, is overtaken by his current Batman obsession. He’s making a costume, accurate to the tiniest detail; the materials and blades for cutting set out with surgical precision on the dining table.

Why Batman? ‘Because I’m eight years old!’ he bellows. (Actually, Luke is 26.) ‘All men are eight at heart. Who doesn’t think Batman is the coolest ever character?’ Cue Batman impersonat­ion.

Luke has autism, which accounts for his obsessions; his extraordin­ary retentive memory; his adherence to ritual; the swings between manic highs and debilitati­ng lows.

The worst aspect of his condition, he says, is the acute anxiety that afflicts him. At his most desperate, he has attempted to take his life three times. E HAS so many ‘labels’ that he once had business cards printed with all the letters after his name. Ticks, Tourette’s, attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, pica disorder (which means he eats inanimate objects such as TV remote controls and tissues), seizures — he is at times beset by all of them.

And he cannot remember a day of his life when anxiety (or, perhaps, the ingestion of so much paper and plastic) hasn’t made him vomit. His teeth have taken a battering.

‘They’re worn down to nubbins!’ he cries.

This is my second visit to Luke’s home. When I came to see him a year ago, he was unreachabl­e, mired in a pit of despair.

Jan had invited me to meet Luke then. It was her hope that by highlighti­ng his plight in this newspaper, help might be forthcomin­g.

For a year we kept up a correspond­ence. But nothing, it seemed, could lift the dark cloud that enveloped Luke, and health provision was grossly inadequate.

When I made that first visit, Jan had explained that five weeks earlier, Luke had had a breakdown. She was woken in the early hours of a morning in March 2017 by the sound of him howling, and came downstairs to find him banging his head against the kitchen floor.

‘Laid out in front of him were two kitchen knives, two screwdrive­rs and a sharp blade,’ she remembers. ‘I did not realise until later that morning — when I saw the sofa splattered in blood — that he had been slashing his arms with the blade.

‘He had also carved an obscenity into his leg, indicating the depths of his self-loathing.

‘That morning, he sat on the floor making a noise that was more animal than human, and I was powerless to reach him. He would not let me touch or comfort him. He told me he just wanted to be left alone.’

There was no one to whom Jan could turn; no crash team of medics to summon, no emergency psychiatri­c helpline.

‘All I could do was go back to bed and pray,’ she says. ‘Luke was having a mental breakdown and I was totally out of my depth.’

The episode signalled the start of a year’s decline in which Luke barely left his bedroom or spoke. He slashed continuall­y at his arms and legs with blades; the same blades he is now using to carve his Batman outfit.

He is painfully self-aware, conscious of his difference­s from other people.

‘I couldn’t see anyone,’ he says. ‘I couldn’t leave the house. I was in this horribly low place and I was selfharmin­g in order to feel something other than the paralysing anxiety that caused the breakdown.

‘I’d rather lose a limb than suffer the level of anxiety I get with autism. I don’t mind physical pain. I just wanted to feel a different sensation from the anxiety that was robbing me of my ability to function.

‘And the self-harming gave me a reason to hate myself: “I’m such an idiot feeling this way, and this is

but, for some reason, it helps.’ justificat­ion.” It is perverse logic, As he retreated into his world of silence, mental health services failed Luke grievously. ‘Two fantastic and well -meaning profession­als, our GP and a mental health nurse, saw Luke during the first weeks of his crisis,’ Jan says. ‘Our doctor, who is not an expert in mental health, prescribed

powerful drugs — intended as a temary porary measure to calm him, lift his mood and make him sleep — but the cocktail seemed just to make him oblivious. It did not deal with his pain or the underlying cause of it.’

Although there is a specialist autism unit just 20km away, Luke was told he was not eligible to attend because he lives in a different county. ‘It was frustratin­g,’ he says with

understate­ment. ‘Instead, I had to see a different person for every part of me that doesn’t work properly: a dentist because I chew plastic, a gastro-enterologi­st for my vomiting, a neurosurge­on for my fits and a psychologi­st and a psychiatri­st for my anxiety.’

The wait between each consultati­on was interminab­le. It was to be eight months before his first appointmen­t with a psychologi­st, which was cancelled at the last minute without explanatio­n.

Meanwhile, help had arrived from an unexpected source. Jan had written a book about Luke’s condition, and American psychologi­st Dr Louis Todd Teller — having read it and incorporat­ed some of its contents into his own work — realised Luke had reached crisis point, and offered to treat him free of charge if he could get to America.

At that point, Luke was suicidal and too anxious to make a long-haul flight. So instead, Dr Todd Teller set up a crowd-funding page to help pay for private psychoanal­ysis for Luke near his home.

‘Without this kindness, I don’t think Luke would still be here,’ says Jan. ‘I’d love to thank Dr Todd Teller for saving Luke. I still can’t believe someone we’ve never met cared enough to help us.’

The €2,800 donated, mostly by strangers, funded more than 30 consultati­ons with psychother­apist Neil Keenan, who specialise­s in treating autism.

IT SEEMS that these sessions, combined with a change in Luke’s medication, have helped haul him back from the abyss. For now, the old Luke — funny, voluble and fizzing with restless energy — has re-emerged. ‘He’s gone from zero to 100%,’ smiles Jan.

‘I’d been desperate, but then a month ago he suddenly wanted to get out of bed.

‘Every day I’m really, really happy he’s back, but I wish I could take him down a notch. He’s so full-on it wears me out. He’s noisy, messy . . .’

‘There’s no amber light, is there?’ puts in Luke. ‘It’s either red or green.’

Jan, who also has a daughter, Abbi, 24, has devoted her life to Luke since he contracted life-threatenin­g encephalit­is as a seven-week-old baby. This caused the brain damage she believes precipitat­ed his autism. Before his birth, life was gilded. She worked as treasurer of a private merchant bank and her first husband — Luke’s dad — ran a successful courier company. They built a beautiful home in the countrysid­e.

But the demands of caring for Luke proved too much for both her first and second husbands.

‘I was forced to make the choice between my husband and my son, and no mother should be given that ultimatum once, let alone twice,’ she explains. ‘Of course, I wanted love for myself, but not at the cost of my son.’

Luke’s condition set him apart as a child. He floundered at mainstream school and was expelled, aged 15, for retaliatin­g against the bullies who tormented him.

After that, he slit his wrists in a suicide attempt. It took this level of despair to get him admitted to a special school, where he thrived, mentoring fellow pupils on a trek across the Arctic.

He was chosen to carry an Olympic torch in 2012, and he has launched initiative­s to help make banking easier for those with disabiliti­es: all proud moments for the family who love him. ‘I realise I’m one of the luckiest people in the world to have such a loving and supportive family and friends,’ he says, ‘because without them I might not survive. I could be homeless; dead. I certainly wouldn’t thrive.

‘Mess follows me everywhere. I’d forget to eat, I wouldn’t brush my teeth for weeks. I’m not good with money. Impulsive spending is one of the traits of my autism. But Mum manages my life for me. She’s my hero and though I’m liable to take her for granted, I know she’s the most wonderful mum in the world.’

Tears are blurring Jan’s eyes. This is Luke’s second eulogy to her in an afternoon. He is at once completely dependent on her and keen to protect her. ‘I’m looking forward to caring for her,’ he says, touchingly; yet he can barely care for himself.

ALTHOUGH his IQ of 133 places him in the top 2% of the population, acute anxiety attacks have prevented Luke from holding down long-term jobs. Stints working as a builder and carpenter have been punctuated by breakdowns that have floored him.

‘You can’t work. You can’t focus,’ he says. ‘You wake up, but you can’t get out of bed. There’s this horrible despair. If someone had told me this time last year that I had terminal cancer and had two weeks to live, I wouldn’t have minded. At least it would all have been over. And I can’t discount feeling that way again.

‘I still sometimes think if I popped my clogs it wouldn’t be the end of the world. But I think I’m better equipped to deal with suicidal thoughts now, because of the sessions with Neil.’

Nothing is expurgated from Luke’s stream-of-consciousn­ess monologue and his views (often politicall­y incorrect) are delivered at full volume.

He calls his girlfriend Leena, 22 — who is part Jamaican, part Welsh — Cadbury, and when I say that might be construed as offensive, he looks stricken. ‘But she is the colour of Cadbury’s milk chocolate,’ he explains.

He deals only in the literal and the straightfo­rward. Nuance and suggestion are lost to him.

Leena works with people with disabiliti­es, which gives her an insight into Luke’s condition. He shows me a photo of her graduation in which he is shaking her hand — as he does not like hugs.

They have been together two-andthree-quarter years (Luke is punctiliou­s about such detail) and they have talked about a future together.

‘We went to Disneyland, Paris,’ he confides. ‘I bent down on one knee...and tied my shoelace!’ He roars with laughter. For half of their relationsh­ip he has been in the grip of the breakdown; it is testimony to Leena’s steadfastn­ess that she has stayed with him.

‘We’ll stay together,’ predicts Luke, confidentl­y. ‘And I’d like to be a dad. I think I’d be great at it. I’d be quite happy to be a stay-at-home dad. I’m good with kids.’

He’s right, concurs Jan. He is good with kids. ‘But how would you manage a baby?’ she asks him. ‘Though you’ve got lots of skills, none of them is domestic. And imagine if you had another Luke!’ She rolls her eyes and smiles.

Jan does not discount the idea of being a live-in granny. ‘For the love of Luke, I’d do it,’ she says. ‘When I chose Luke over my husbands, I knew I’d be tied to him for ever.

‘You never abandon your child. That is what love means. You go on loving, even if it costs you far more than you ever get back.’

LIFE At The Edge And Beyond, by Jan Lane (formerly Greenman), is published by Jessica Kingsley.

 ??  ?? Fizzing with energy: Luke Dicker as a toddler
Fizzing with energy: Luke Dicker as a toddler
 ??  ?? With his ‘hero’: Luke, now 26, and mum Jan
With his ‘hero’: Luke, now 26, and mum Jan

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