I've been nicely strong-armed back to a blogging group on Facebook in which we work to increase each other's blog awareness.
I've never been a part of such an effort but the people who run it, run it like schoolteachers. To wit: you get an assignment every Monday to link a FB post to this FB page. Then other members read and comment and like and well, I'm still trying to grasp it completely, but I thought it would push me in a more positive direction and keep me writing.
They are strict - do the assignments, don't fake it, or you're kicked out.
Writing is hard work. For me, it used to be a breeze but depression knocks the winds from your sails in many ways, especially bipolar depression and my traveling companion, anxiety. So it's very tough for me to write regularly - the muse comes in spurts. Heh heh (forever 12).
Anyway, I had a great time in New York City but when I came home I crashed very hard and am still not in a good place. The sick reason is that I was having so much fun I completely put work and all other troubles out of my mind.
You may think that's a good thing - but the way my mind works, when I came back on Wednesday, the shock of going back to work was too much. You see, when I worry, I'm prepared. Yes, I count the hours until I get back to work but it prepares me mentally for whatever may happen.
To forget my troubles for four days invites a sort of mental illness tsunami in which ALL of the worries come back at once. It's easier for me to deal with them continuously. As a consequence, I told my wife we'll probably not take a vacation like this for a long time.
Yeah, it sucks big time.
In addition since coming back, I've been having heightened anxiety and work flashback which have really thrown me for a loop since I haven't experienced those in many months. I see my shrink on Wednesday and we need to talk about this. The Ativan isn't working like it should - I'm taking more - and I feel like I'm on the verge.
Being 'on the verge' is not a good place to be, believe me. I even departed FB for the weekend because I realized beyond a shadow of a doubt that it was harming me. How? When I get really angry, anxious, worried or lonely, I post things that I should not - I'm trolling for attention and I become one of those people I dislike on FB. It also feeds a bad spiral that causes me to become more depressed, anxious and mad and post more.
I think it's therapy - it's not. It's coming apart in front of a small audience of friends, many of whom do not know how to take it, And I'm putting those friends in an uncomfortable situation. Facebook is a drug - it can be good or bad but when I'm in a serious state it's a bad drug.
Twitter seems different but that's because I try to avoid getting into flame wars and only deal with people in my interest circles. Yes, it's an echo chamber (so is FB) but people like me can't, and I really need to stress this, can't let their emotions drag them into something they regret. And when my emotions are on a hair-trigger, that is not a good thing to exhibit on a forum more public than Facebook.
I recently finished binge watching '13 Reasons Why' which will be the subject of another blog post.
PS: I told you all that my writing would reflect the mood I was in on a particular day and I wasn't kidding.
Showing posts with label anxiety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anxiety. Show all posts
08 May 2017
25 April 2017
Boring Man Goes to New York
There are, it seems, 10,000 blogs in English talking about
various mental illnesses. Mine is one of those.
Of course, I want to talk about other things as well, with
an emphasis on sharing my experiences in midlife dealing with bipolar2 and
anxiety issues.
I don’t think I’ve been doing a very good job of it. I’m not
good at self-promoting. I feel I have something to say but, really, are my
experiences any better or worse; is my writing better or worse than the other
10,000 bloggists? I read some incredible blogs, some that literally want to
make me stand and cheer.
I look at what I write and it seems flat.
I really used to be better than this. I was a columnist for
two daily newspapers. I’ve been a journalist most of my life. I used to get a
lot of kudos for my columns and it kept me going. I enjoyed writing them. I am
acutely aware, right now, that my short sentences must sound like a jackhammer
on the brain.
In the last several years, I have forced myself to write
through the illness for my own mental health. This does not always produce
entertaining or enlightening material. And let’s face it: no one wants to read
vanilla blogs.
It is a great sadness to me that writing only comes when it
comes. Several days go by and I just can’t do it, even though I have something to
say. And when I do, it all seems so flat; sort of the writing equivalent of a
flat affect personality.
Is it the medication? I think that plays a part. When I miss
the highs and lows I also miss a lot of the creative spark that could send my writing
flying in all kinds of exciting (and dangerous) directions.
Am I more afraid? Perhaps, but I’m getting over that. Pretty
much everyone who knows me knows what I’m dealing with. There are certain
things and people I can’t write about, family being one of them.
I think it is possible that I fear wasting the reader’s
time. I’m probably doing that right now.
Author David Foster Wallace worried extensively about his
medications hashing his creativity. A switch in medication led him into a downward
spiral resulting in his suicide. Considerations of dropping medications for the
sake of creativity are not to be taken lightly.
As much as I miss a lot of the old me, I understand why I
must stick to my medication. The mania that was so self-destructive is held at bay
and the depression, well . . . it’s handled as best as can be expected.
My psychiatrist has suggested subbing Celexa for Lexapro
when I get back from New York. I doubt it will make me feel like a ‘new man’
whatever that means, but I’m more willing to experiment (with her supervision)
than I would have been two years ago.
The basic problem is I can experience all the lows but the
highs bring with them a certain glib silliness without the energy and
creativity I would like to experience again.
My psychiatrist said I should mentally prepare myself for
our (my wife and I) upcoming trip New York City. I told her that I was doing
that by imagining every terrible thing that could happen to us.
Why do I do this? Simple – it’s insurance for the anxiety.
If I go through every bad thing that might happen, if it does happen, I’m mentally
prepared for it and it’s less of a big deal than being surprised. If nothing
happens and I have a good time – it’s a bonus.
This is the typical thinking of people with anxiety issues.
It’s why so many of us find it hard to relax and have a good time. Going to New
York is me pushing myself far out of my comfort zone on the off chance that I
will actually enjoy myself. It beats sitting on the couch wondering: what if?
20 April 2017
My Story in 'My Life and Mental Illness'
Here's the link: https://mylifeandmentalillness.wordpress.com/2017/04/20/keiths-story/
Here's the main page: https://mylifeandmentalillness.wordpress.com
I'd like to thank Maria for including my story in her blog. I am one of many people who are telling their stories in the fight against the stigma surrounding mental illness. These stories show that we're your friends, co-workers, family and people you meet everyday.
May, by the way, is Mental Health Month. Follow that link to find out all about what's being done to raise awareness and fight stigma. Also, a major point is that awareness is not enough - services have to be available and affordable or society will continue to pay the price.
I recently found out that in parts of rural America there may be one psychiatrist or psychologist for an area containing 50,000 people? And even if people find a mental health professional nearby, many times they don't have insurance - you know the drill.
In a way, mental illness touches everyone - probably someone you know. Like any other illness, it is treatable and people do recover and are productive members of society.
I am very lucky to have such a supportive wife and Facebook friends that put up with my screeds. Many people don't have such a support system and that's what this month is really all about.
I hope you'll take a few minutes and read these stories and look at some of the materials linked above.
Here's the main page: https://mylifeandmentalillness.wordpress.com
I'd like to thank Maria for including my story in her blog. I am one of many people who are telling their stories in the fight against the stigma surrounding mental illness. These stories show that we're your friends, co-workers, family and people you meet everyday.
May, by the way, is Mental Health Month. Follow that link to find out all about what's being done to raise awareness and fight stigma. Also, a major point is that awareness is not enough - services have to be available and affordable or society will continue to pay the price.
I recently found out that in parts of rural America there may be one psychiatrist or psychologist for an area containing 50,000 people? And even if people find a mental health professional nearby, many times they don't have insurance - you know the drill.
In a way, mental illness touches everyone - probably someone you know. Like any other illness, it is treatable and people do recover and are productive members of society.
I am very lucky to have such a supportive wife and Facebook friends that put up with my screeds. Many people don't have such a support system and that's what this month is really all about.
I hope you'll take a few minutes and read these stories and look at some of the materials linked above.
14 April 2017
High Anxiety
The reactions to my Monday therapy experience have not gone
away. This morning I was as nervous as I’ve been in many a month.
I don’t get it. Maybe a therapist could tell me. For two
weeks, I unpacked some fairly traumatic experiences in my life. The first week
was work, the second week was family. This may be because the entire
conversation centered on trauma.
I hate that I can’t control the ‘willies’ as I like to call
them through conventional means. My brain races too fast for mindfulness
techniques and Ativan will only take me so far. It’s not good to either drive
or try to work popping too much of that drug.
Yesterday in a meeting I got the ‘willies.’ I hoped no one
saw me taking the deep breaths in through the nose and slowly out the mouth.
That DID buy me time.
This week, routine meetings have become ordeals of
nervousness and paranoia. Today I have to attend a noonday awards banquet which
I am dreading. At least I get a free meal which is about the best I can say
about the experience.
My new therapist promised to teach me some techniques (which
I probably already know) for managing these issues. I wanted to unpack some
more personal garbage but perhaps I should give my continuing reveal a rest.
She’s already diagnosed me as PTSD (and surprised other mental health
professional haven’t) and knows enough about me to get to techniques. I suppose
the rest of the shit package can be unwrapped later.
The rudimentary Cognitive Behavioral Therapy hasn’t been of
much use either. I KNOW I will survive the day. I KNOW I can make it through this
awards luncheon. I KNOW I can somehow manage my workload. My rational brain
knows these things and keeps telling me I’ll be OK. But all of that knowledge
seems to be overridden by – what? I don’t know. Some part of the brain that
likes to fuck with me.
It is one of the most frustrating parts of the illness –
getting mad at yourself for not being in control, thereby starting a vicious
circle.
Yesterday something else happened. I had an eye appointment
and went to get glasses. While waiting in the mall for the glasses, I
experienced phenomena that comes about every 18 months to two years.
I will write a post in Facebook or Twitter and then come
back to that post in 20 minutes and the post will look foreign to me – I didn’t
write it that way. I can remember I wrote a post – right there – but not using
those words and phrases. It’s like someone, not me, completely rewrote it.
It’s a scary thing. I tend to panic and start looking at
other posts and tweets, making sure I haven’t written anything odd or
offensive. I used to joke that I think my ghostly rewrites were better than the
original text.
So I did post about it, trying to explain that my posts
might not be written in my normal style and that if I wrote anything people
found odd or offensive to forgive me. I said I’d look at them tomorrow and
correct or delete them if so.
Of course, while writing that post, I was fully aware that
these words might not look the same to me 20 minutes later. So I stared at the
post for about 10 minutes trying to make sure.
When this happens I feel like I’m losing my mind or possibly
having some kind of weird stroke. The episode lasts about 6 hours, always comes
in the late afternoon or evening and is usually gone after a night’s sleep.
By posting it, I was also hoping someone would recognize the
process and maybe help me with some advice. I’ve talked to doctors and the only
thing that was ever done was switch me from Xanax to Ativan. It did not help.
But it’s worrisome. The best thing to do is to sign off
social media, stop writing anything, and take a walk and connect with the
environment around me.
My fear is that one day I’ll get an episode that might not
go away.
11 April 2017
Nightmares of my Father and other things
I must write this out because I fear if I don’t this day
could be worse than I’d imagined.
I already clawed my way out of bed 10 minutes late, had a
cup of coffee and a small bowl of cereal and knew, just knew that I would have to call off sick today.
I didn’t want to. I hate calling off sick. But the
overwhelming tiredness, the shaking hands, the seizing feeling in my chest told
me I would be a complete, useless mess if I went in to work.
Waking up at 9:45 a.m. confirmed that feeling. I am still
feeling out of sorts, tight, nervous, jumpy, etc.
I went to my new psychologist yesterday. It was part two of ‘everything
that ever scared the shit out if you – family edition.’ Last week was work and
modern times edition.
I should say something about getting a mental health
diagnoses. Most of the time, you can only get an ‘official’ diagnosis from a
qualified psychiatrist, that is, one with an MD after their names.
Occasionally
a Psy.D (Doctorate in psychology) will do the trick. But getting one from an
MSW (Master’s in Social Work) counselor is a bit rare.
Yesterday’s session – ever see those Hitler scenes from the
movie ‘Downfall’ or pretty much any movie featuring Hitler and his emotions get
the best of him and he rages and gesticulates and such? You know, pretty
standard Hitler stuff (note: I hate using Hitler as an analogy but right now
the bastard is the best one I can think of)?
That was me. Talking about my family. I was shocked at how
worked up I was. I had covered this ground with other shrinks before but I
never gotten quite this worked up.
My shrink was concerned and told me we needed to get off the
topic because she wanted me to leave in a settled state of mind. I understood
this as Turnpike driving is bad enough without me processing another beating
from my father.
She wanted me to look her in the eyes. I had not been doing
that the entire session or the one before. Because what I was telling her
embarrassed and ashamed me.
“There is no doubt in my mind that I can diagnose you with
PTSD,” she said. I questioned, she was firm. I asked her to talk to my psychiatrist
since Dr. H-S is protective and cautious of her diagnoses.
My shrink would. But she held firm. It was that obvious
after two sessions? Yes, she said, and, really, nobody has ever broached PTSD
with you before? No, I replied, no one had.
And so, I went home and everything seemed OK. I had dinner,
did a little Internet surfing, watched Jeopardy, talked about it with my wife,
all the usual.
Then I went to bed and the gates of Hell opened.
Not even here, not even now or maybe even later, will I
recount the dream that woke me, finally at 3:15 a.m. It was one of those dreams
that you clutch the covers and look around a darkened room convincing yourself
that this is the real world, not the
one you just left.
I clawed my way backwards out of bed, trying not to wake up
my wife, downed an Ativan and went to the bathroom to try to get my shit
together.
I will tell you the dream was about my father and a cat my
mother had. It involved a weapon. And that’s as far as I will go.
It was, without a doubt, the worst dream of my life. And, it
had seemed to go on for hours. In dreams, it may have indeed lasted that long.
I must have sat there for 20 minutes at least – shaking,
breathing hard, trying to concentrate. Our cat came and sat next to me. Our cat
seems to know when we need some company, so I was not surprised. She did not
nuzzle me and jump up and demand petting as she normally would. It’s like she
knew I didn’t want to be touched but just to have someone there.
The other thought I had is, it’s interesting that my father,
dead since 1983, could transcend the decades to reach out and touch me again and
make me hate him all the more. Some shrinks talk about giving someone space in
your head. I guess he never left or something else is going on I’d rather not
believe. Because this is not the first time I’ve had a nightmare about him –
just by far the worst.
I managed to go back to sleep with more Z-Quil, a half
Ativan and some meditation music. I knew that if I stayed up from that point I
would just be re-living this dream over and over.
It didn’t work. I woke up less than two hours later and knew
I had a problem. But I did my best to get up and try to shake it off and go to
work.
So here I am. I have a day to try to work my way out of
this, forget the feels as best I can, and not fear sleep tonight although I
think that’s a given.
So, I understand my shrink’s concern about covering certain
subject matter. Yesterday’s session must have somehow planted a ticking time
bomb in my subconscious that went off in my sleep.
Recounting the subject
matter covered in the session and in my dream, I think it’s a good bet.
Why this reaction now when previous re-tellings didn’t spawn
this reaction? All I could think of is the cumulative aspects of the last 10
years – taking care of my infirm mother, watching her slowly die while trying
to protect her estate from a sister whose boyfriend threated to kill me (in
front of my mother). Also: my job, the SWAT team raid on the house and then the
18-month inquisition at work that followed – all of it, wrapped up in one awful
package.
Here on the couch, in a darkened living room, trying to
write it out, am I. It looks like rain. The cat has left me and I just had a
piece of raisin bread and a cup of tea. I don’t know how to process the rest of
the day. I don’t know what my co-workers are thinking of me having taken the
balance of the afternoon yesterday to attend this session with an eye
appointment looming Thursday.
Yes, I always worry what they think. Because one time what
they thought about me almost got me killed in front of my wife. A ‘mistake’ the
current director refused to apologize for since wasn’t in charge then. I
thought I’d forgiven that; I guess I haven’t.
I know when I come in tomorrow, I will work twice as hard,
twice as fast, to make up for it – out of fear, no more, no less. I can’t
escape the place, I told my shrink, so I will have to deal with it or lose
everything.
I remember years ago, the Most Giant Asshole Rush Limbaugh
pontificating that “fear is a great motivator.” It was, as he admitted, easy
for him to say. Decades later, that fear would produce Trump. Fear is never a
great motivator. If you rely on fear to motivate other or yourself, eventually,
you’ll break down your people or yourself. Perhaps some thrive off it, I don’t
know. The Limbaugh legions (who have now moved on to the even more execrable
Bannon bastards), would probably attribute it to being a ‘snowflake.’
The personal is the political indeed.
But somewhere, deep down inside, a little growing voice
tells me I am stronger than I know. To have gone through all of this and not
jumped into a homemade noose is a good thing – taking nothing away from the
poor souls to whom the pain was too great. We live in a society where the
suicidal are hounded into their grave as a kind of sport. But my heart aches
for each misguided soul to whom the pressures of the world and the fight against their illness, have become too great to bear. They have my sympathy –
not my condemnation.
I feel battered this morning. But for some weird reason, I
will get up and go back there tomorrow – a place that pains me every time I
step on its grounds. I will fight the fear, not only of that, but of crowds,
traffic, cops, my own government, and, most of all, the demons of the past.
There’s still something in me that wants to fight – that insists I fight.
But today, I must get my shit together.
08 April 2017
I Am (not) A Rock
Part of the life of most bipolar people is regretting not
living the life they could have lived. In most respects this is caused by the
illness – the inability to make a keep friends, jobs, other social contacts.
But environment plays a part too. If one has strong ties to
neighborhoods, friends, parent’s friends and school mates, that can go a long
way towards ameliorating the effects of bipolar behavior. In short – they
already know you’re kinda weird and they accept the good with the bad.
They aren’t the only Catholic grade school to hold such
reunions. There were a lot of Catholic grade schools in the 70s that had large
classes (it was the height of the enrollment boom) that sent the majority of
their students on to Lake. Now, many of them are struggling to hold on and some
have had to close.
I recently felt this little sting of regret when I saw a
reunion of the eighth-grade class of one of the Catholic schools that fed into
Lake Catholic where I went to high school.

My elementary school I attended beginning in November of my
kindergarten year, still exists. It grew a little and became more exclusive and
expensive than it was. The nuns have pretty much disappeared, giving way to lay
teachers. It is in many way, a shadow of its former self. Which is a good
thing.
About six miles to the north is St. Mary’s Chardon where
most of the people I rode the buses with went to school. It was a bus transfer
point for Notre Dame’s students. It was also my family’s parish where we went
to church.
But my mother (who was the sole decision maker here – the
only time in our family she was allowed to make unilateral decisions, perhaps
because she was a cradle Catholic and my dad was not) refused to send me there.
Her story, passed down through the years, was that a teacher at St. Mary’s told
her that if she wanted the better Catholic education available, to send me to
Notre Dame.
But Notre Dame has the beginnings of what would become a
long waiting list to get in, as the entire school from K-8 had room for less
than 400 students. So, I went to a public school, Park Elementary (strangely
enough with some kids that would transfer later to St. Mary’s) until November
of my kindergarten year when I was unceremoniously yanked out of what I thought
was a fun school and delivered to the tender mercies of the Sisters of Notre
Dame.
To say this was a shock to my system was putting it mildly.
I will skip details; I’ve discussed some of them earlier in this blog.
But the real mistake was probably made earlier when my
parents decided to move from Mayfield Heights to Chardon. I was on the verge of
kindergarten when they moved (August 1968) and was set to go to my neighborhood
public school in the Mayfield system, one of the better and later, best in
Ohio.
It was also the system where my mother taught second grade –
not in the school I would have gone to, mind you. But there would have been
some familial clout later when she because the teacher’s union president.
I often stare at the ceiling at 3 a.m. and wonder what my
life would have been like to go to school with the kids I knew in my
neighborhood, without ever having to be subjected to the ritualistic
humiliation suffered at the hands of the nuns, largely for two reasons – my
parents weren’t rich and I was a willful and smart kid who didn’t want to hide
it.
Even though my mother would never admit, I was in the worst
possible situation I could have been placed in. Even she would later admit that
I learned almost nothing in school relative to what I taught myself by reading.
Several years into my 8 ½ year sentence, even my father was making the case to
my mother that perhaps I should transfer to St. Mary’s. If you knew my father,
or have read about him here, you know that his objections were significant.
Usually he didn’t care if I was suffering if it would ‘toughen me up.’ But he
had seen enough of the nuns’ behavior and what went on in the halls that even
he was disturbed.
I got off easy. We literally drove some kids right out of
that school through bullying – kids that entered in the fourth and fifth grade.
And yes, I participated lest they pick on me. And I was picked on enough being
a fat kid with a funny last name, a geeky intelligence and a family nowhere
near the economic level of the most popular kids. And there was nowhere to
escape when you spend almost nine years with the same 26 kids (more or less) in
the same room.
An aside: I often wonder if it ever occurred to her when she
sent me to my first shrink between seventh and eighth grade, that my school
environment would have had something to do with it?
But mom held fast. First, as I said, it was the only
decision she had ever been allowed to make unilaterally in our family and
second, she was one of these people who believed that once you committed to
something, you should stick it out no matter what the damage or regret. After
all, she didn’t have to be exposed to the nuns on a daily basis, she didn’t
have to stand in a lonely outfield on a hot day waiting for the occasional fly
ball that I would inevitably drop.
She also didn’t have to attend the Cub Scout pack comprised
of people from the local elementary schools I didn’t go to when the majority of
my Notre Dame classmates were part of the pack at. . .yep. . . St. Mary’s.
I KNOW this sounds like whining and I get that. But she
couldn’t have devised a childhood to fuck me up more. I was surrounded by
people I couldn’t bind with. And my insecurity as I got older just got worse as
the mental issues took hold. Chicken or the egg? Causation or correlation? I’ll
never know.
When I was paroled from Notre Dame and went to Lake Catholic
I was very intimidated at first. But the people I met were not like the kids at
Notre Dame. They seemed far more accepting. There were more people like me. And
a lot less snootiness. After about a month, I was in smoothly and greatly
relieved.
It wasn’t perfect but for me, no environment is ever
perfect. But, although it isn’t the same most people, high school, looking
back, was some of the best years of my life, especially after what I had gone
through.
The years immediately after high school were full of effort
on my part, to retain those friendships and connections. Eventually, slowly and
sometime painfully, eventually, we all drifted apart.
I guess that’s why I was so jazzed about my class reunion
last year – our 35th. Of all the friends I had known, these were the
people I had gotten closest to. I was very curious whether I could make friends
again and possibly keep some.
The reunion went very well. I thoroughly enjoyed it and
re-connected with some people. Unfortunately, for some of these folks, my own
posting about religion and Trump have undone some of these connections. To
their credit, most of my classmates are still nominally Catholic, many
seriously so. Catholicism and I parted company some time ago. I do miss the
feeling of belonging to a community, having something in common with people and
the strangely comforting rituals of the Mass. But for many, many reasons, I
simply can’t go back. They have their rules and I respect them but I don’t
think it can ever be again.
As for politics, the heartbreaking thing is in another time,
this would not have been an issue. Unfortunately, we only had a small grace
period before the election would tear some of those bounds asunder.
If we can’t find a way to get beyond it, and we probably
can’t, I probably won’t go to the 40th reunion. I still have
Facebook friends that I am trying not to lose or push away for various reasons.
I hope they understand that I was always just a little – maladjusted. But I
mean well.
When the elementary school classes of 77, whether they be
St. Justin Martyr or St. Mary’s Mentor get together, I feel that tinge of what
might have been. Although I recognize many of them who went on to Lake Catholic
from the Facebook photos, I know that is not my tribe. I had four years with
them – they had 12 and many grew up just streets away from each other, attended
the same sports and social leagues and hung out at each other’s homes.
There were only four of us from Notre Dame that went to
Lake, absorbed into a freshman class of 375 students – all boys, no girls.
And many of them still have friends and family in
Northeastern Ohio. I’m two hours away in Pittsburgh so I can get up there if I
want, but it’s not the same. I only really interact on Facebook.
Strangely, one of the guys I went to school with at both
Notre Dame and Lake Catholic lives here in Pittsburgh. We used to be thick as
thieves at Notre Dame. He won’t respond to my friend requests yet he is friends
with some of our mutual friends at Lake Catholic. I would be lying if I said it
didn’t hurt just a little.
I realize that a set of circumstances led me to where I am
today – some I had control over, some I didn’t. I love Pittsburgh. I love my
wife. But one should have friends outside of their spouse. My wife does – she’s
tight with both her former classmates and all the friends she’s met in her
knitting hobby.
My effort to do the same at work, at the Mustang club, at
the local NAMI branch, at the improv school all have ended in either regret on
my part or simply not being a good fit with others. But I have tried.
It’s difficult to talk about being lonely when part of the
fault is mine. Most people who know me online don’t know how hard it is for me
to go to work every day and when the day is over, I’m all out of spoons and
find it difficult to leave the house for socialization. In fact, on my days
off, I find I almost always have to work up the nerve to leave the house at
all.
I try to be someone I’m not to make friends because I’m
always worried that people won’t like the real me. And to those who always say,
‘be yourself’ I can go over my track record where that has lost me enough
people in my life. And besides, this three-page whine has gone on far too long.
It just hurts.
Labels:
anxiety,
bipolar,
bullying,
Catholic school,
Catholicism,
class reunion,
counseling,
depression,
friendship,
getting old,
good memories,
I Am A Rock,
Lake Catholic,
mental health,
mood swings,
NAMI,
nuns,
spoon theory
07 November 2016
Psychiatry R Us
I went to see my drug pusher today.
She has a nice office, of course, in a nice building and she
has a lot of pretty professional plaques on the wall and a special chair given
to her by the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh. And she’s
been listed as one of the top psychiatrists in the metro area by Pittsburgh
Magazine for at least two years in a row.
And, frankly, she stinks at what she does. And I probably
should find (yet) another psychiatrist, but I am so tired of it all.
![]() |
Maybe she's still practicing? |
Today was the day I knew I wasn’t going to get any more help
from her than I already am.
I told her about my ER visit and how, after all the tests,
they could find nothing wrong with me. I also told her that since then, things
have not been getting better with the reprimand still hanging over my head and
a supervisor who gave me a yearly rating guaranteeing between the two personnel
actions, that I will not be able to leave this job, even if we want to move.
I made it very clear that the drug regimen is not working.
I made it very clear that the work situation was untenable.
All she wants to know is whether I’m going to kill myself.
And how. And she wondered about my rusting shotgun.
Exasperated, I said, no, I’m not going to kill myself but if
I did I know it wouldn’t be with a shotgun that doesn’t work.
![]() |
It was Col. Mustard in the bedroom with the bungee cord |
Well, how, she asked.
I gave this a few seconds of thought. Drowning myself in the
koi pond sounded romantic but I didn’t think she’d buy that.
Um, how about a bungee cord from a doorknob? Seems easy
enough, and, like those exercisers you see Ronco pushing at Christmas, they fit
over any doorknob anywhere – at home, at work, even in your doctor’s waiting
room!
Instead of seeing the humor (hell, no one ever sees the
humor, I think they’d rather see you off yourself since it would demonstrate
that at least you’re a serious person), she asked me if I had any bungee cords
at home.
Seriously?
Yes, seriously.
Doctor, do you want to come over to my house and take all my
bungee cords? Because if I ever must bring home something large in my car or
move, I’ll have to buy a whole other set.
Words fail me some times. This was not one of those times.
![]() |
I really think we're making progress here |
“Look, while you’re there taking my greasy bungee cords, why
don’t you help yourself to all the knives and forks in the kitchen too,” I
said. “I mean I don’t mean to be disrespectful (but I did), but there are so,
so many things you can use to off yourself, it’s only limited by your own
imagination!”
See why I’ve gone through so many, many mental health
professionals in my life?
As for the drug regimen that is clearly no longer working, that
seemed to panic her about as much as the phantom bungee cords (I mean
seriously, have you even LOOKED at pictures of suicides doctor? I could show
you a few sites. . .).
Her solution was to double down and prescribe more of the
same, which we did six months ago.
![]() |
Happy happy happy happy |
Yes, if it’s clearly not working, let’s do much more of the
same.
With that kind of thinking, I think she has a clear shot to
be the next general manager of the Cleveland Browns.
As for the job, her solution was quite novel.
“I just think you need to find a different way of thinking
about your job,” she said.
I am seriously not kidding.
And that’s when I knew it was game over.
You see, I think my psychiatrist is probably pretty book
smart. But I think judging from what I’ve seen of her credentials and FB site
(yes, I spy on everyone – I was in Military Intel, it’s in my blood) that she can’t
put herself in the shoes of her patients. I asked her to do that today and she
said “I’m trying.”
She can’t. She has never known the want, the pain and the
fear inside of people she is looking to help. She can’t relate to it. There’s
always a book solution, always another pill, always some, well, bullshit
rationale that will keep the patient from bleeding out mentally. At least until
they do.
But for Christ’s sakes, don’t die on my watch. The paperwork
is such a pain.
Often time I have caught her looking at me as if I was some
sort of exotic insect. I suspect many other patients have noticed the same
thing as well. We fit somewhere into the diagnosis matrix of the DSM V. Some of
us are just a little harder to identify, classify and index.
So, the next time I go back to see her, everything will be
fine. I won’t waste her time by whining about intractable issues of jobs and
medications and she can get me in and out in enough time to protect her billable
hours because her nice Lexus in the parking lot needs paid.
No sense fighting for treatment or a solution. There is no
solution and treatment, it seems, is pushing the latest drug the pharmacy rep
has just given her samples of (I’ve seen all manner of trinkets on her desk
with drug trade names on them).
I should have given up on treatment a long time ago. I was
stupid. I believed the advertising, the hype, the caring professionals who
said, in the nicest ways, that they wanted to help you.
It’s an industry, like everything else. As for your mental
concerns, what it comes down to is this:
You’re on your own sucker.
12 October 2016
Sell it and they will come. . .
![]() |
So many books! |
I should really write a book.
This blog is intended someday to become a memoir. If it
doesn’t, I’m OK with that. The writing is more therapy than anything. But the
more I look for books on bipolar/depression, the more I am convinced that many
of them are written so the writer can gain fame and fortune.
I won’t name names. Just google search bipolar and dig a
little into some of the author sites and you’ll see what I mean.
![]() |
Kids are a growing market in bipolar |
I get it though. Book deals and speaking tours are great if
you can’t work a conventional job. I have this fantasy that I’ll just go around
the country doing TED talks and other seminars where I can add a whole lot of
psychobabble bullshit to my personal experiences.
But I can’t do that. There’s enough of that already.
The problem is America doesn’t really want to face up to the
reality of mental illness. They want to read stories of overcoming, of triumph.
They want a happy ending, believing everything has a fix if we only
work/read/meditate/pray enough. The books reinforce that perception.
![]() |
Bullshit! |
The whole idea of suicide prevention in this county is to
keep people alive. That’s admirable, of course, but in many instances, that’s
it. Great, you’ve rescued them from killing themselves – now are you going to
provide affordable and compassionate mental health services in the community so
they won’t do it again?
Of course you won’t. There’s so much more that needs to be
spent on weapons and subsidies to corporations. Besides, if you can’t afford
the services, it’s because you’ve failed, and why should I have to pay for
someone else’s treatment?
Unfortunately that is who we are.
BUT, we have lots of cheap cures in the form of books and
tapes and, my, oh, my, drugs (some of the most widely used are generic and
therefore, by comparison, cheap) that you can have, but geez, having the
taxpayers furnish luxury hotels with compassionate, well-trained staff is a bit
much, don’t you think?
The problem is that too many people watch ‘reality’ shows
like ‘Intervention’ and think everyone gets to go to the Mental Health Club Med
where the kind director meets you at the door and starts scheduling your
horseback riding therapy classes in the morning.
![]() |
So. . . who ordered the wine? Dinner at six! |
These places are anywhere from $15-30,000 a month and even
if you have insurance, forget it.
An attack at the Arizona state mental hospital |
The real reality is that you are taken by force, usually by
the police (they don’t usually send men in white coats anymore) to some kind of
county facility which resembles something out of Dickens’ time, where staff
that get $9 an hour throw you in with people who may or may not cause you
physical harm. If you’re lucky, you get to see a real, live therapist for 30
minutes a week or every other day. Your insurance, if you have any, may pay for
30 days of inpatient treatment. Then, ‘cured’ or not, it’s out on the street
you go. Good luck!
If we are going to keep people alive, we, as a society, have
to ask ourselves: why?
If it’s just a ‘feel good’ exercise, for the love of God,
stop it. Let these people have their eternal relief. Yes, I know, many mentally
ill people (usually with means and an already existing support system) get
‘cured’ and never try it again. But I can almost guarantee you; they think
about it the rest of their lives.
And then there are the people who get out of our medieval
mental health facilities and, faced at some point with the prospect of having
to go back, and unable to afford therapy, quietly hang themselves in a closet.
Where are all the self-congratulators then?
![]() |
He. . . is. . . .serious. I got nothing. |
What I’m getting at is there is nothing sexy, trendy or hip
about having a mental illness regardless of what you see on TV or read in these
books. I can speak to bipolar, depression and anxiety. Believe me, there is
nothing glamourous about it. The reality is, for most of us, there is no cure
but a gritty, grinding, awful existence that is punctuated occasionally by
brief periods of relief.
It is a hard life and for the vast majority of people
suffering, there is no cure; it is something they have to deal with all of
their lives.
The cruel thing is not only the stigma we face – it’s all
the quackery sold to us by the books, the seminars, the yoga teachers, the
sweat lodge shamans, the homeo- and naturopaths – all more affordable than
decent therapy and medications and all promising something they can’t deliver.
And if you fail, it’s because you ‘didn’t try hard enough.’
![]() |
Yeah, eat your way to sanity. Woo! |
There is not one physical ailment in this country that
someone isn’t hustling a quack cure. ‘Buyer beware’ has never been more
relevant than with the mental illness community.
I have a son with autism. I remember going to some of the
Autism Society seminars and, looking around at the booths and companies
offering this and that. I felt the atmosphere the same as a sales convention –
because that’s exactly what it was.
![]() |
Step right up! Can I get a witness!? |
So my message today is that if you suffer from these
maladies, don’t buy into anyone’s quick fix – it’s a long hard road and beware
those who say they have been ‘cured’ by any one method: often they have an
investment in that method.
![]() |
This one I recommend |
For society, please understand that we as a community are always
keeping the wolf from the door. If we could snap our fingers and ‘snap out of
it,’ we would. Don’t push the Dr. Oz snake oil on us and then blame us for our
own lack of effort. Believe me, you wouldn’t want to feel like this and we are
doing all we can.
There’s nothing to sell here except blood, sweat, toil and
tears. Every day we rise again, it is our own little triumph. Understand that.
I could write a book about it. But I don’t think it would
ever get published.
Labels:
advice,
Amazon,
anxiety,
bipolar,
books,
bullshit,
depression,
funny,
Intervention,
memoir,
mental health,
quackery,
sales,
stigma,
suicide,
suicide prevention awareness month,
TEDx,
writing
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)