I want to add one thing. Dave, I absolutely don't think either you or your wife should get hung up on the what ifs. I was here for some time before Bryce died, and I remember watching all the things that you did do as he was grappling with his addiction and his other issues. You were there. Consistently and regularly. You weren't just saying "buck it up, kid!" You were, pardon the mixed metaphor, there in the trenches, and so was your wife, trying to deal with a son with a complex set of problems, doing the best you could. "Semper fi" doesn't just describe your life in uniform, after all; you've shown us all, time and again, that it describes your life, period, and it would even if you never wear those funny pants again.
The problem with mental illness is that the state of our collective understanding is somewhere back in the Stone Age. We literally don't yet know what to do, whether we are the sufferers or we are the sufferers' families, neighbors, and friends.
Sometimes the meds work, sometimes they don't. Sometimes the head talk helps, sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes prayer and faith do the trick, other times they don't. Sometimes tough love works, sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes ....well, sometimes. THere is no magic recipe.
About the only thing I think of as "wrong", and not even that is always wrong if it comes from someone very close, is the "just buck it up, guy!" advice. I've used the phrase or its variations occasionally, but ONLY with one or two people who I have a very long personal relationship that includes a lot of sharing about our respective depression/anxiety illnesses. But it seriously bugs me when I hear it being used by someone who does not have that kind of relationship.
Just a few days ago, I was at work. My door was open as it usually is, and I overheard part of a conversation between a friend next door and another colleague. My friend, who has grappled with the depression demons for many years, has had a particularly bad spring, stresses that make my whining about my job and my mom sound like, well, the whining of a little kid. Right now he is taking pretty significant doses of antidepressants just to get through the term, and is considering applying for disability. I don't remember what set the discussion off (I was only eavesdropping, after all), but this chirpy person must have said something annoying, because my friend, who never snips at anyone, blurted out something about "only with massive doses of antidepressants." And Ms. Chirpy, missing even that clue, says, clear as day, "Just buck up, guy, summer is just a few days away, life is good." Completely, entirely, clueless.
But that isn't you, and it wasn't you back then. Sure, you can be blunt. Sure, you can do the wrong thing or say the wrong thing. . Everyone does. Everyone will. You can get frustrated and let the frustration pull you temporarily here or temporarily there. But you aren't clueless and unseeing like Ms. Chirpy. And whatever you did or didn't do, whatever Mrs. Foster did or didn't do, you did the right things by your son.
You did your best. And you did it well.
You loved well, my friend.
You did.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)