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DEATH OF a GODDESS
The madness and suicide of Jessica Dolin.
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"My name is Jessica Jezebel Joplin,
the girl with glitter on her face, torn up clothes, and who is truly
childlike and savage!" |
| Jessica Dolin's diaries reveal an
obsession with Janis Joplin. She believed she was channeling Joplin's
spirit. |
by CHRIS LYDGATE
Sometime in the darkest hours of May 14, after putting away the groceries
from WinCo and watching some old episodes of the X-Files, Jessica Dolin
descended the creaky staircase into the basement of her North Portland
bungalow, lit a candle and arranged nine Tarot cards in an upside-down
cross, with the card of Justice at the intersection. Then she swallowed a
handful of sleeping pills, slit her wrists with a paring knife and tied a
plastic bag over her head. Her girlfriend discovered her crumpled, lifeless
body by the washing machine the following afternoon. She was 29 years old.
Some suicides are acts of desperation; others, gestures of defiance.
Either way, it's hard to see the justice in Jessica's death. She was young,
intelligent and attractive, and although exceedingly petite (she stood 4
foot 9), she was also exceedingly fit--she ran marathons and could
bench-press 90 pounds. She grew up in a stable, middle-class household with
supportive parents. She had a warm and loving relationship with her
girlfriend. She made a successful--if unconventional--living as a
professional dominatrix under the name of Goddess Athena.
Those things melted into insignificance before a single, radioactive
fact. Jessica Dolin suffered from bipolar disorder, better known as manic
depression--a disease so devastating that approximately 10 percent of its
victims kill themselves, according to the American Psychiatric Association.
Jessica's suicide has torn a gaping wound in the lives of all the people
she left behind, particularly her girlfriend, her mother and her brother,
each of whom broke into tears when they talked to WW about her. But none of
her survivors has suffered more than her father, Dr. Leigh Dolin.
Perched in an office cluttered with medical journals and patient files,
Leigh sinks into his swivelback chair and sighs. A short, scrappy
56-year-old from the Bronx, he favors owlish eyeglasses and a handlebar
moustache that, together with ruffled eyebrows and a hawkish nose, give him
an endearing, birdlike expression.
Ever since he was 6 years old, a scrawny Jewish kid on the streets of the
Bronx, Leigh wanted to be a doctor. His entire career is based on the
premise that Medicine Works.
Jessica's disease demolished that proposition like a steamroller
flattening a tin can.
And I know this book of My Scriptures will be beneficial to everyone. My
only fear is the fear of myself, I've got the life force that only the True
Martyrs of Emotions Shall Possess: IT! ...I DO NOT DENY MY POWER!! ...The
stronger I get, the more helpless others become, and the more impossible it
is to deny Power.... Please, anybody--destroy my personal space, prove me
wrong, wreck my truth, degrade me, hug me, love me, stalk me, use me, kiss
me, hate me, want me, lust after me, worship me.
--from the Revelation of Jessica Jezebel Joplin
Jessica was a dynamo from the get-go. Born two months premature, she was
always small--and compensated by acting big. In middle school, as her
classmates sprouted up around her, she joined the track team and ran
cross-country. She could do more chin-ups than anyone else in the
school--male or female. She used to love to challenge guys to arm-wrestling
matches. She was stubborn as hell.
"As a little girl, there was no question who was in charge of the
family," Leigh chuckles. "It was her."
At Lincoln High School, she lurched through a procession of adolescent
woes--boy trouble, cliques, sleeplessness, self-esteem issues. She was a
flirt. She smoked pot. Like most parents, the Dolins see-sawed between the
hope that she just had a bad case of teenage rebellion and the nagging doubt
that something was seriously wrong.
| "IT'S LIKE BEING PUSHED OFF A CLIFF": Jessica's parents, Leigh Dolin
(seated) and Leslie Dolin, grapple with the tragedy in their home in
Northeast Portland. For a while, their optimism seemed well-grounded.
Jessica graduated from Lincoln and got through her freshman year at
Evergreen State College without major incident. But in February 1994, during
her sophomore year, Jessica's world imploded. She suffered a complete
psychotic break and went wandering through the woods at night, babbling
incoherently to the trees. Her puzzled friends took her to the psychiatric
ward of St. Peter Hospital in Olympia, Wash., where she was diagnosed with
manic depression. |
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"IT'S LIKE BEING PUSHED OFF A CLIFF":
Jessica's parents, Leigh Dolin (seated) and Leslie Dolin, grapple
with the tragedy in their home in Northeast Portland. |
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We all have good days and bad days; compared to manic depression, they're
like ant hills next to the Himalayas. The disease disrupts the fundamental
mechanisms of the mind, battering the psyche like a wrecking ball. "The
brain chemistry is amiss," says Dr. Joseph Bloom, professor of psychiatry at
Oregon Health & Science University. "There's something wrong with the
neurotransmitters."
Paradoxically, the first symptom of the disease is a surge of elation.
Although no two cases are identical, victims typically feel self-confident,
creative and powerful. They're on the go--they hardly sleep--they feel good.
They talk a mile a minute in a nonstop flight of ideas that is almost
impossible to interrupt. They hatch grandiose schemes--and fly off the
handle at anyone who contradicts them.
They become delusional. They believe they have special powers. They go on
wild shopping sprees, make outlandish investments, embark on sexual
indiscretions. In severe cases, they hallucinate.
The tidal wave of mania may last for days, weeks or even months. When it
finally crashes, the victim typically plunges into deep depression. After
the depression lifts, the victim may be stable for an extended
period--sometimes years--before the nightmare begins anew.
Manic depression afflicts approximately 2.3 million Americans, according
to the National Institute of Mental Health, or 1 percent of the adult
population. The numbers vary, but a typical untreated patient may suffer
approximately 10 bouts of mania during his or her lifetime, according to the
American Psychiatric Association.
For the Dolins--particularly Leigh--Jessica's diagnosis was a
breakthrough. In the physician's creed, diagnosis is next to godliness.
Diagnosis imposes order on the chaos, transforms the confusing babble of
symptoms into a coherent pattern. Diagnosis means scholarly articles,
double-blind studies, combination therapies. And while the diagnosis of
manic depression is hardly cause for celebration--there is, after all, no
cure--with a combination of drugs and counseling, most victims can lead
happy, productive lives.
"The diagnosis was in a way something of a relief to her and those who
cared about her," Leigh wrote later, "since it provided an explanation for
several years of maladaptive behavior as well as a hope for successful
treatment."
Jessica was treated with lithium and seemed to make a full recovery. She
returned to Evergreen in the fall of 1994. By the following spring, however,
the phone calls from Olympia grew confusing. Jessica wasn't sleeping.
Jessica was breaking things. She was constantly talking about Janis Joplin,
whose music she played full-blast at all hours of the day and night. She was
writing "the other half of the Bible." She was getting married--no, she
wasn't getting married. In July 1995, she lit a fire on her terrace and was
hauled off to the psych ward again.
One of the most maddening aspects of manic depression is that patients
often refuse to take their medication. There are reasons for this: The pills
can trigger side effects like drowsiness, weight gain and hair loss. But
with Jessica, the problem ran deeper. At times she seemed almost addicted to
her own mania--and the lithium was a buzz-killer.
After a few days in the hospital, Jessica's mania cooled down. Her
psychiatrist had prescribed different medications, which seemed to help.
Hopeful that the worst was over, her parents brought her back home to their
little bungalow on a quiet street in Northeast Portland.
The change of scenery did little good. Within days, Jessica quit taking
her pills. As her mania gathered momentum, she built a "love altar" to Janis
Joplin and concocted rituals with candles and Tarot cards. She blasted music
at all hours of the night.
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| TWO FACES OF MANIA: Left, Jessica's shrine to Janis Joplin. Right, back
on her medication, Jessica still looked to the thrill of the manic high.
Medical science had produced drugs that could hold the demon at bay--but his
daughter wouldn't take them. |
Jessica's relapse was a stunning blow to her parents, especially Leigh.
They had played everything by the book--the medication, the counseling, the
love and support--but it wasn't working. "It was like being stuck on the
world's scariest roller coaster, begging to get off but nobody hearing you,"
Leigh wrote in his diary. Medical science had produced drugs that could hold
the demon at bay--but his daughter wouldn't take them.
| Manic Depression is Powerful! It confuses and no one can
rest from ITS energy! Fear, Mania, Run from me, and run from God!!... Manic
Depression is like shootin up speed, the only problem is I don't have much
say in when it happens.
-From the Revelation of Jessica Jezebel Joplin
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Over the next few weeks, Jessica's mania grew steadily worse. She held
yard sales on the front lawn. She wandered through the streets at night with
a beat-up guitar. She climbed a statue of George Washington and put a
whistle, a warning sign and a broken address book in his outstretched palm.
She spoke to airplanes. She interviewed dogs. She tried to mail her hospital
gown to President Clinton.
"This wasn't the sister I grew up with," says her younger brother, Boris,
then a sophomore at Grant High School. "It was very scary."
Leigh insisted she start taking her pills. Jessica said she'd rather kill
herself.
Finally, something inside him snapped. Maybe her refusal was part of the
disease, maybe it was her underlying personality. It didn't matter. Without
the pills, she had no hope of recovery.
"So I give up," he wrote in his diary on Sept. 1, 1995. "As far as I'm
concerned, she's dead. A lost cause. Hopeless. I have no more strength to
fight. I had a daughter that I loved and dreamed about and had hopes for,
but I don't any longer. It's over. May Jessica rest in peace."
Two weeks later, Portland police officers spotted Jessica wandering
through the park in her nightgown, screaming at the birds. They took her to
Adventist Hospital, where, at her parent's request, she was committed--which
finally gave her doctors the power to force her to take her pills. A week
later, the mania finally burnt itself out, and Jessica crashed back to
earth.
Jessica spent three weeks in the hospital before coming back home. Within
days, the mania took hold again--she believed she was in a concentration
camp; she was talking to the Red Hot Chili Peppers. She wanted to kill
herself. Leigh and Boris dragged her back to the hospital, kicking and
screaming.
While Jessica was riding the manic high, Leigh was hitting an all-time
low. "So, when was the last time I felt really happy?" he wrote in his
diary. "I don't remember. Seems like a long time ago. Oh sure, I feel
pleasure at times. Food, sex, an occasional good day at work, a good talk
before a group, a good run or racquetball game. But happiness? What does
that mean anyway? Not worrying about anything? Leaning back and laughing and
saying to myself or even out loud, 'it's great to be alive'? I don't know."
And then, just when the Dolin family had abandoned hope, they got a
reprieve.
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Advertisements for Jessica's services
reflected her mercurial
personality. |
No one knows why, but that particular episode finally brought
Jessica face-to-face with the destructive power of the disease--it "scared
me straight," she later wrote. For the first time, she had insight into her
own condition. She could look back and see how the mania had torn through
the tissue of her life like a hurricane.
With insight came determination. She took her medications
religiously--eight to 10 pills at a time--swallowed them even though they
made her gain the pounds she had run so far to lose, stiffened the muscles
she had worked so hard to build, sallowed her face and made her hair fall
out. She swallowed them even though they walled her off from the mania, the
beautiful crystalline high that had once sparked through her brain and made
her feel like the center of the universe.
It was hell--but it worked. By the spring of 1996, Jessica was stable
enough to take a typing class at Portland Community College. Eventually she
transferred to Portland State University and majored in psychology, with the
goal of becoming a counselor.
Step by step, pill by pill, Jessica rebuilt her life--though she never
lost her offbeat personality. She worked out at the gym four to six days a
week. She went running once a week with her dad. She started dating a
30-year-old homeless woman named April Welles, who was then living in an '81
Ford Mustang. "Basically, it was love at first sight," says April. "She was
nice, kind, wonderful--she loved me unconditionally."
The two made a striking couple--Jessica, the diminutive body-builder, and
April, the statuesque Goth chick. They moved in together and explored a
mutual interest in Tarot, Wicca, the occult and sci-fi. Meanwhile, Jessica
graduated from PSU in September 2000 and got a job at Renaissance, a drop-in
center for the mentally ill located at Southeast 40th Avenue and Division
Street. It was, in many ways, her dream job--a chance to help others recover
from mental illness.
But at the same time, the fragile recovery she had painstakingly
constructed was beginning to crumble. For four long years, thanks to
medication, counseling and sheer force of will, Jessica had kept the demon
under control. Then she stumbled across something that seemed to be the
answer to her prayers--but turned out to hold the key to her nightmares.
The basement dungeon is a room full of terrors floating on a sea of
bright red carpet, dominated by a seven-foot-high St. Andrew's cross studded
with hooks and girdled with ropes. The walls groan with instruments of
torture: whips, chains, collars, leashes, lead weights, gags, clothespins,
an astonishing variety of rope--smooth white cotton, luxurious red nylon,
cruel thick sisal--and a "parachute" (a weighted leather collar strapped
around a man's toolbox, not his back).
This is where the slaves of Goddess Athena begged for mercy, at $160 per
session.
Jessica and April first started exploring Portland's bondage scene in
2000. April, who briefly tried to earn some money as a professional slave,
quickly lost interest. But domination fit Jessica like a leather glove. It
was the perfect revenge for being short. It was a way to show off her
weightlifter's body. It was fun--and profitable.
Perverse as it may seem, domination is actually a growth industry in
Portland--just turn to our Wild Encounters section if you want proof. Hard
numbers are almost by definition impossible to come by, but the city now
supports approximately a dozen professional dominatrices, or "pro-dommes,"
as they're known in the biz, who specialize in humiliating their clients.
But for Jessica, domination also held a darker allure. "I have to think
it was part of the mania," says Leigh.
Jessica had always been hungry for adulation--now she had devotees who
paid for the privilege of debasing themselves. She had always been
hypersexual--now she had a quasi-legitimate way to express that energy.
"I am Goddess Athena," read an advertisement she placed in WW. "WORSHIP
ME!"
On the surface, everything seemed fine. Jessica still went running with
her father every week. She seemed happy and excited about her life. She and
Leigh were working on a book about her mania, which consisted of diaries
they kept during the worst parts of her illness.
But her parents could not shake off an uneasy feeling. "That's one of the
awful things," says Leigh. "Every time Jessica would seem happy, we worried,
'Gosh, is she going to go manic again?' ...We never really felt secure about
her. We were always worried something bad was going to happen."
Their uneasiness only deepened when Jessica told her parents she was
doing domination in her spare time. "What are you supposed to do when your
daughter is advertising herself like that?" Leigh asks.
In February 2001, Jessica's Jekyll-and-Hyde existence--counselor by day,
dominatrix by night--imploded with a sinister crunch. A client at
Renaissance accused her of luring him into the dungeon and tying him up
against his will. Jessica denied it. While the allegation was never
verified, she was fired.
Losing her job at Renaissance plunged Jessica into a black depression.
"She took that very poorly," says April. "It caused a major depressive
crash. It really tore her apart."
Tossed out of her career--under circumstances that would be difficult to
explain to a new employer--Jessica turned to domination full-time. Working
20 to 30 hours a month, she was able to support herself and April. Although
she never learned to drive, she bought a Mazda RX-7 with license plates that
said ATHENA. She set up a website (www.athenas domain.com) and scheduled
professional photo shoots. Her ads grew bolder and more provocative.
Meanwhile, the cracks widened. Unwilling to tell her parents that she had
been fired, she told them she had found another counseling job. She started
spending time in Internet chat rooms and on telephone date lines. She told
April it was all for the sake of drumming up business. But in reality, she
was going on dates--and, according to two men interviewed by WW, having sex
with them.
In the fall of 2002, Jessica hired a local businessman named Jrob Weber
of Avalon Marketing to build her website. What happened next remains
unclear, but the upshot was that roughly $40,000 worth of hotel rooms,
limousines, and office supplies was charged to her credit cards.
When Jessica found out about the charges, she crashed again. The
depression was like falling through a hole in the ice. Jessica could talk of
nothing but suicide. She was going to lose the house; she was going to lose
her clients. By December, Jessica tried electroshock treatment to jolt her
out of depression. It didn't seem to help.
In the spring, Jessica's depression veered into mania. She sat on
strangers' laps. She'd lie down to go to sleep, then jump up every 30
seconds: "Oh! I've got to go to the gym! Oh! I've got to clean the house!
Oh! I've got to write a letter." Even something as simple as a hug could
send her into a tailspin of rage and accusation. She constantly worried
about the mountain of debt, about losing her clients, about losing the
house.
On the evening of Tuesday, May 13, Jessica and April went shopping at
WinCo Foods. Jessica seemed to have cooled off. She told a friend she had a
dream about being reincarnated as Goddess Athena. That night, as April went
to bed, Jessica went down into her dungeon for the last time.
Her suicide note was as puzzling as it was short:
| My Dearest April,
I am truly sorry but I had to do it. To my truest slaves I love you more
than Jesus! This world is too sad for me I am going to reincarnate to a
goddess. Fuck you all who hate me for being gay and a dominatrix.
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Jessica didn't even sign it with her name--just two pentagrams and a
symbol for woman.
Leigh Dolin still goes into the office five days a week. He still has
patients, after all, and they need him. The pictures of Jessica still line
his wall. Ask him how he feels, and there's a long pause. "It's like being
pushed off a cliff," he says finally.
The journals on his wall carry no description of his condition. The X-ray
machines can't detect his wounds. No surgery can replace a daughter. If
there's going to be any healing, it lies outside his scope of practice.
Pharmaceutical advances, cutting-edge technology, professional
conferences--those are medical solutions for medical problems. Medicine has
its limits--and no one knows that better than he does.
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