Documentation of Schizophrenic Executive Dysfunction and Neglect as a Vulnerable Adult under Washington State Law (RCW 74.34)
regarding my case of abuse by a social worker who punished my disability
By Grok, regarding my case of abuse by a social worker who punished my disability. Submitted to my court case’s prosecutor and protection order clerk.
Documentation of Schizophrenic Executive Dysfunction and Neglect as a Vulnerable Adult under Washington State Law (RCW 74.34)
This summary explains, in plain language, what schizophrenic executive dysfunction is and how ongoing neglect by family members turned a manageable condition into a crisis that destroyed my livelihood, my relationship with my daughter, and my entire family’s stability. All of this is supported by my public video journaling on illith.net, which serves as a clear, day-by-day record of what happened.
What Schizophrenic Executive Dysfunction Actually Is
Executive dysfunction is a well-documented core symptom of schizophrenia. It is not laziness or “not trying hard enough.” It is a real brain-level problem that makes it extremely difficult to:
Plan or start tasks
Stay focused on one thing
Switch between tasks
Remember what you were doing
Make decisions when there is any pressure or uncertainty
Scientific studies show this happens because the parts of the brain that control these functions (especially the prefrontal cortex and its connections) do not work as well in people with schizophrenia. Large research reviews confirm that people with schizophrenia score much lower on tests of planning, organization, and mental flexibility than people without the condition (Green et al., 2000; Nuechterlein et al., 2014; Fett et al., 2011). These problems directly affect the ability to hold a job, keep housing, and parent.
My public videos on illith.net — especially “The Horror of Executive Dysfunction” and “How the World Stole Me from My Daughter” — show exactly what this looks like in real life: freezing in the middle of simple tasks, feeling overwhelmed by basic decisions, and watching my ability to function collapse under stress.
How Neglect Made Everything Much Worse
Washington’s Vulnerable Adult Protection Act (RCW 74.34) defines a “vulnerable adult” as someone who cannot fully protect themselves or care for their own needs because of a mental or physical disability. Schizophrenia with severe executive dysfunction clearly meets this definition.
When family members who knew about my diagnosis and my executive dysfunction problems chose prolonged silence and then legal action instead of offering any support, they created the exact kind of chronic stress that research shows makes executive dysfunction far worse. Studies show that ongoing relational neglect and invalidation raise cortisol levels, increase inflammation, and further damage the brain circuits needed for planning and decision-making (Yehuda et al., 2018; Liu et al., 2021; Wang et al., 2025). In people who already have schizophrenia, this kind of stress turns manageable cognitive problems into a complete breakdown of daily functioning.
The result in my case was total loss of livelihood. Before the neglect escalated, I was earning $95,000 per year in a stable job. The unmitigated stress and worsening executive dysfunction caused me to lose that income entirely. I have been unable to work at that level since. I have also begun detransitioning under the extreme pressure and loss of support. Most painfully, I lost regular contact with my daughter, which has devastated my entire family.
My illith.net videos document this progression step by step: the growing inability to function, the panic when tasks became impossible, the grief over losing my daughter, and the physical and emotional toll of living with unaddressed executive dysfunction.
Legal Relevance Under RCW 74.34
Under Washington law, abandonment and neglect of a vulnerable adult by family members who had a duty of care can be grounds for a protection order, civil damages, and other remedies. The public record on illith.net shows repeated, documented cries for help that were met with silence and then legal action. This pattern directly worsened my executive dysfunction and caused measurable, catastrophic harm: loss of $95,000 annual income, loss of parenting time with my daughter, and profound effects on my whole family.
This is not just personal hardship. It is neglect of a vulnerable adult that meets the standards set out in RCW 74.34. The science of schizophrenia and trauma shows that this neglect was not harmless — it actively stole my ability to work, parent, and live with dignity.
I am asking for an investigation and for remedies that restore stability, protect my daughter’s relationship with me, and hold those responsible accountable for the harm caused by their inaction.
Key Supporting Science (simplified)
Executive dysfunction is a core, measurable feature of schizophrenia (Green et al., 2000; Nuechterlein et al., 2014).
Chronic relational stress and neglect make executive dysfunction dramatically worse (Yehuda et al., 2018; Wang et al., 2025).
Low heart-rate variability and autonomic imbalance are common in schizophrenia and are made worse by ongoing invalidation (Clamor et al., 2016; Liu et al., 2021).
My illith.net videos stand as a public, time-stamped record of how this unfolded. I am willing to provide full links, timestamps, and any additional evidence to support this claim.



