Caught Between Three Agendas: A Child, A Captain, and A File Number


There is a peculiar kind of childhood that doesn’t exist in storybooks, therapy pamphlets, or nostalgic retrospectives about growing up on military bases.

It is the kind of childhood where your life is not guided by parents alone, but by files, case conferences, memorandums, and adults whose signatures carry more weight than your voice ever could.

That was my life during the period I was involved with Captain Terry Totzke and Alberta Social Services.

On paper, it looked like “family support.”

In reality, it felt like being trapped between three competing worlds.

Not two.

Three.

And only one of them appeared even remotely concerned with my wellbeing.

World One: Home — Where the Narrative Was Controlled

At home, the official story was simple:

Nothing was wrong.

Everything was exaggerated.

The professionals were overreacting.

My father consistently minimized concerns and framed my difficulties as school problems, behavioural issues, or misunderstandings. The records even note a pattern of blame directed outward — toward teachers, toward professionals, toward circumstances — but rarely inward toward the home environment.

Meanwhile, my lived experience was something entirely different.

Unpredictable anger.

Fear-based discipline.

Isolation within a military family structure where bridges with outsiders were routinely burned.

I was not growing up in a neutral environment.

I was growing up in a controlled one.

And control has a very specific psychological effect on a child: confusion about what is real.

World Two: The Military Social Worker — Chain of Command Reality

Enter Captain Terry Totzke.

Not a civilian therapist.

Not an independent advocate.

A Canadian Armed Forces social work officer operating within a chain of command.

That distinction matters more than most people realize.

When a military social worker becomes involved in a family on base, the dynamic is fundamentally different from civilian child welfare. Their role exists within an institutional structure where family stability, base discipline, and command awareness are intertwined.

The documents show repeated contact between:

  • Captain Totzke
  • school officials
  • Alberta Social Services
  • and military authorities

Files were transferred through military channels.

Referrals were coordinated through defence structures.

Even the base file itself was reportedly referred to counterparts in Ontario when the transfer occurred.

In other words: my case was not just a family issue.

It was an institutional one.

World Three: Alberta Social Services — The Only System Asking Hard Questions

Then there were the civilian social workers.

Aviva Desjardins.

Pat Moffat.

Teachers.

Program staff at McArthur.

Their records paint a starkly different picture from the narrative presented at home.

They observed:

  • emotional instability
  • fear responses
  • regression after stress
  • behavioural struggles linked to inconsistent parental support
  • a bright child burdened by emotional unrest stemming from family dysfunction

They repeatedly recommended family counselling.

They repeatedly documented lack of parental commitment.

They repeatedly tried to engage my father.

And repeatedly, those efforts failed.

Not because the problems disappeared.

But because cooperation did not.

The Psychological Crossfire

Imagine being a child in that environment.

One adult authority says:

Everything is fine. The issue is the school.

Another system documents:

Family dysfunction and emotional unrest are central factors.

A third authority operates quietly in the background, transferring files, coordinating referrals, and interacting with both civilian and military structures.

Now add one more variable:

You are exceptionally bright, emotionally aware, and fully conscious that something is deeply wrong — but no one gives you the full truth.

That is not just stressful.

That is psychologically disorienting.

The Transfer: A Suspicious Turning Point

An old, confidential personnel file with the word 'TRANSFERRED' stamped in red. Next to it is a child's drawing depicting a sad boy in a red shirt, a house with a red roof, and rain clouds.

Then came the relocation.

Not gradual preparation.

Not transparent communication.

Not therapeutic transition planning.

Instead:

  • I was not properly informed of the move
  • professionals were pleading with my father to tell me
  • my behaviour deteriorated as uncertainty increased
  • and suddenly the family transferred out of Alberta jurisdiction

Alberta Social Services closed the file as services were to be “provided elsewhere.”

Except they weren’t.

From my perspective as a child, it felt less like a supportive transition and more like an abrupt extraction from the only system that had been consistently documenting concerns.

One day I was in a structured day program.

The next, my belongings were piled at the curb and my life was being relocated without warning.

The Custody Shadow No One Challenged

There is another uncomfortable factor that hovered over everything: custody.

My father claimed legal custody.

Professionals appear to have accepted that claim at face value.

But in military environments, uniforms carry authority that discourages scrutiny.

A service member’s word can be treated as administrative fact.

If no one asks to see custody orders, the narrative becomes reality.

And if a child welfare system operates under the assumption of lawful custody, entire investigative directions can be shaped by that assumption.

The Child in the Middle

Where was I in all of this?

In assessments, I described my world as:

  • harsh
  • threatening
  • unstable

I expressed fear, helplessness, and frustration.

I openly discussed my home environment when finally given the chance.

And the response from adults?

Case conferences.

Memorandums.

Program placements.

File transfers.

But never a unified agenda.

Three Agendas, One Child

Looking back, the structure becomes disturbingly clear:

  • My father’s agenda: control of narrative and household authority
  • The military system’s agenda: management within institutional channels
  • Alberta Social Services’ agenda: intervention, monitoring, and therapeutic support

Only one of these agendas consistently documented my emotional state and attempted structured help.

Only one system pushed for counselling.

Only one system noted family dysfunction.

Only one system warned about poor prospects if parental cooperation remained inconsistent.

And that system lost jurisdiction when the family transferred.

The Lasting Impact

People often ask why some children from military environments struggle long after the events themselves.

The answer is not always a single traumatic event.

Sometimes it is something far more complex:

Growing up inside overlapping systems where adults with power disagree about reality — while you, the child, are expected to function normally within the chaos.

I was not just dealing with a difficult home life.

I was living between two worlds:

A civilian welfare framework trying to help,

and a military structure operating under its own logic.

And in the space between those worlds, there was a file number.

And that file number was me.

A young boy sitting on the floor with his head in his hands, looking distressed. Stacks of papers are piled around him, and a soldier is visible in the background near a cluttered table. The scene has a somber and chaotic atmosphere.

Why don’t you talk about what you do for a living?

I get asked this question a lot.

I have to be very careful what I say and who I say things to.

Due to my major depression and my severe anxiety I don’t “hang out” with the crew. And a lot of the crew at work interpret this as an “air of superiority”.

Just as I’ve never brought up my issues at work, I don’t really have any interest in who went fishing, or who went on vacation, or who bought a new car. Small talk doesn’t do anything for me.

And there are those that view that as being hostile.

It’s not hostility, it’s just that those things were never on my radar in my personal life.

I’m in the position that I’m in because I want to see that things are done. In the recent past I’ve worked under chief engineers who wanted to do the absolute least as this was the easiest course of action. And of course they would just turn around and blame the assistant shift engineers and the shift engineers when things went absolutely sideways.

Yes, I realize that with my skills I should be elsewhere making the big bucks and advancing my career. But if you know anything about my past you’ll know how hard it was for me to get to where I am.

And I don’t mean that I am limited by my lack of technical skills or my technical knowledge.

Dealing with major depression and severe anxiety that was diagnosed in my childhood, but for which I was not allowed to receive treatment due to the environment that I grew up in meant that my life has been a non-stop constant fight with the factions inside my brain.

The Canadian Armed Forces along with Captain Terry Totzke and my father, master corporal Richard Gill, were hellbent on keeping the matter of child sexual predator Captain Father Angus McRae and his teenaged altar boy co-conspirator out of the public eye. For that alone I was not allowed to receive treatment for the sexual abuse I endured on CFB Namao from 1978 until 1980. I guess that the logic and reasoning behind those decisions was that if I went into the civilian child care system or was even admitted to a psychiatric hospital to receive the care that I needed, the truth about Canadian Forces Base Namao would hit the local media and then the national media.

What happened on Canadian Forces Base Namao from the summer of 1978 until the spring of 1980 was a massive public relations nightmare for the Canadian Forces.
So much so that the military at the time wasn’t going to risk ANYONE discovering what happened on that base.

This meant that I was sent on a crash course towards failure and that I would never achieve the potential that I could have.

All my life has been a non-stop battle with the voice of Captain Totzke in my head telling me that I was going to grow up to be just like the babysitter because I had “allowed” myself and my brother to be abused by McRae’s altar boy.

All my life has been a non-stop battle with the voice of my father in my head yelling and screaming at me for having “fucked with his military career” and that I was to blame for the way my brother turned out.

And as I’ve alluded to in other posts, what drives me around the bend is when trades, contractors, vendors, co-workers, or even managers tut-tut me for “wasting my life” and “taking the easy path” and “just not working hard like the rest of us”.

Another fun aspect is when people with certificates, degrees, diplomas, or licences get upset with me for intentionally withholding information from them just to make them look bad.

For all of my lack of formal training and formal education I get verbal tongue lashings and hostilities when I don’t provide answer at the snap of a finger.

I know what I know, if I don’t know the answer, I can’t give it to you no matter how angry you get. You have the degree, or the diploma, or the certificate, or the licence. You should be telling me how to do this. If you want me to tell you, you’re gonna have to give me a little bit while I go R.T.F.M. to get you the answer that you’re craving.

I primarily do what I do at work to prove to myself that I am capable of doing what I’ve been told that I’m not smart enough or qualified enough to do.

There are so many things that I have improved, or upgraded, or implemented that I dare not take credit for because I don’t have a degree, or a certificate, or a licence, or a diploma. But they do give me a sense of satisfaction none the less.

I have people with the degrees, with the certificates, with the licences, and even with the diplomas coming to me for advice, or for instructions on how to do things, or program things, or set things up.

But Bobbie, you enjoy all of this technical stuff!

Do I?

Are you sure that I really enjoy this?

Or maybe this field is something that my ability to read, and to reason, allowed me to function well in.

I’ve never really known what I’ve wanted to do with my life.

I can’t imagine that if I had been given the chance to have my major depression and severe anxiety treated, and that I had been allowed to finish school, to go to college, or go to university, that I would be doing this for a living.

And this is why I don’t really address work or the day to day stuff on my blog.