Bryan McGlothin believes he’s getting a second chance for a happy childhood.
That’s because he and his wife now have a son, 8 months old. “I’m getting to experience it with him. I have a chance for a happy childhood through him,” he said. “I’m privileged.” Since McGlothin works from home, he gets to be “Mr. Mom.”
This is exciting for him since McGlothin has very few happy memories of his own childhood.
He writes about this life in “Have You Seen My Mother?” The book is both heartbreaking and sad — yet it remains a page turner. Readers will find themselves unable to put it down until the last page.
McGlothin admits he hates to ask people if they enjoyed reading it. “Of course if they were intrigued and found themselves wanting to turn the page, then they did enjoy it.
“Though with the tragedy of the story, I find it difficult asking readers to enjoy Irony, I suppose,” he said.
McGlothin was a victim of parental abduction when he was two. He was taken by his father at that time and did not find his mother until he was 33.
He says his father, a Jehovah’s Witness elder, convinced him his mother was “demonized” and wanted nothing to do with him.
For years, McGlothin believed his mother didn’t care about him.
As his father told him for years, if she wanted to see her son, wouldn’t she have tried to find him?
It wasn’t enough that young McGlothin thought his mother didn’t love him. There wasn’t much love in the household where he grew up. His stepmother and father both showered love on the two sisters from his stepmother’s first marriage. He received very little caring or love from anyone.
The family lived in Texas for years while his grandparents and other extended family lived in Oklahoma. In the book, McGlothin recalls happy times during the summers when he would visit the extended family in Oklahoma.
Other than that, he did not have a happy childhood.
It wasn’t until he grew up that McGlothin began a search for his mother. He didn’t know if she was dead or alive but he felt he needed to know either way.
It wasn’t until he was 33 that he found his mother. It took many tries and a lot of dead leads but he finally found her — in McAlester.
He learned she hadn’t abandoned him and searched for him for years before eventually giving up. She even tried to commit suicide, which left her with a brain injury. “I have conversations with her,” he says. “Part of the joy is how happy I am making her with her having her son back.”
But that’s only half the story of the book. McGlothin discovers many lies and betrayals as he tries to learn the truth about what happened during his childhood years.
The results are bittersweet. He ends up being disfellowshipped from the Witnesses, making him an apostate. That means he has been literally kicked out of that religion.
“You have to totally believe what they tell you or you’re out. It’s very mind-conditioning. Don’t think outside the box,” he said.
As an apostate, Witness members aren’t allowed to talk to or even look at him. And that includes many of his family members, including a daughter from his first marriage.
“Some people need the structure of the Witnesses,” McGlothin said. “But when it destroys families and lives,” that isn’t right.
Recently, McGlothin said, “I want people to understand that parental abduction can be just as traumatizing as any other case of abduction.” He says one of his biggest difficulties is the feeling of not coming from somewhere and not having an origin.
What does help, he says, is the support of his wife and their son. He says he was a “dead man walking” and now he knows “God wants us to be happy and have a good life.”
Visit www.haveyouseenmymother.com for more information.
Contact Teresa Atkerson at family@mcalesternews.com
Book explores what happens when a child is abducted by a family member
- By Teresa Atkerson
- Updated
Trending Video
Recommended for you
Trending Recipes
This Week's Circulars
Obituaries
Clara Helen (Anderson) Caver, of Ft. Worth, Texas, formerly of McAlester passed away on April 17, 2021. Services will be held Sat. April 24 at 10 a.m. at Cedar Hill Memorial Park in Arlington, TX.
Jerrold "Jerry" Wayne Perteet, 71, of McAlester, passed away Saturday, April 17, 2021. Viewing will be Thursday until 5:00 p.m. and Friday until 8:00 p.m. at Brumley-Mills Funeral Home. A service celebrating his incredible life will be held Saturday, April 24, at 10:00 a.m. at the First Unit…
James W. Murrin, 88, of Indianola, passed away on Thursday at St. John Medical Center in Tulsa. Arrangements are pending with Brumley-Mills Funeral Home in McAlester.
Bobby Logsdon, 69, of Tannehill died Friday in Tulsa. The family will greet relatives and friends 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday at Bishop Funeral Service and Crematory. A funeral service will be held 2:00 p.m. Tuesday at Bishop Chapel of Memories. Burial will follow at Tannehill Cemetery.
Most Popular
Articles
- OSP inmate indicted in international drug ring bust
- RAMBLIN ROUND: Buffalo Springfield: Beginning enduring musical careers
- Sentencing hearing scheduled in Hartshorne embezzlement case
- McAlester getting $1 million to help with COVID relief
- 'This is justice': McAlester law enforcement, residents react to Chauvin trial verdicts
- Tribe charges woman accused of child abuse
- Tribe's public safety director details cross-deputizaion
- 5 THINGS TO KNOW: What happens after a charge is dismissed due to McGirt?
- Charge dismissed in 2019 murder case
- Pittsburg County District Court criminal filings - April 12-16, 2021
Commented
Sorry, there are no recent results for popular commented articles.