Archive for » September 5th, 2009«

What is this resistance to medication, supplemented hypocritically by self-medication? Why do we feel the need to scrape bottom, to suffer, to try to do it without anyone’s help, to hurt ourselves? Do we think we deserve it? Do we think that the mental anguish will suddenly vanish, we just need to find the right key? We’re not Harry Potter. We’re humans living in a real, ugly world that gave us bad genes and even worse environments to grow up in. We’re little girls and boys committing ourselves to wars we can’t win on our own. Why do you think I write all this to you? Why do you think I transport my tears and fears from my mind to yours? Megalomania? Exhibitionism? No, you sad girl, you desperate boy: I don’t want you to feel alone!

I know several people may suspect I’m talking directly to them. I’m not. I don’t criticize any of you for your decisions, and I aim my thoughts at the community of the abused, neglected, and ill as a whole: I merely ask that you reconsider your position against medication.

Consider this condensed version of what you will probably go through if you have a serious mental illness. This has a college setting, but I’m sure you post-grads will get the point:

You are twenty years old. You’re not flunking out of college yet, but you haven’t been to your classes all week. Why? Because you couldn’t get out of bed. Maybe you were drinking the night before, or doing a line of coke, or you were helping a friend, or you just couldn’t get your mind to shut off until the sun came up. There’s so much to do and think about, school is the least of your worries. You keep putting off emailing your professors, too. You don’t know what to tell them. Hi, prof, I’m lazy and stupid and, I promise, I’ll be there next class, prepped, pumped, all caught up? No, they’ll laugh at you. Better to not call attention to yourself. Maybe they haven’t noticed you haven’t been there.

Maybe you make it to the next class. But then you oversleep for the class after that. And shit, did you just miss the midterm? No. Big exhalation. Or yes. Fuck. How am I going to get away with this?! There’s so much work. You’re so stressed out. You’re such a loser. You’re not worth the air you breathe. God, fuck, why am I like this?!

All this, and you’ve only been awake five minutes.

But you keep trying. You tell your professor a bullshit excuse, he’s a nice guy so he gives you an extension, you do the paper the night before anyway, and you hand it in just in time–or a little after. And maybe you even get a decent grade.

You’re all pumped up after you got a decent grade on that paper. You’re ready to tackle these bullshit classes. You’re not a loser. You just need to get yourself organized. You’re going to do that this weekend.

The weekend comes, and some friend needs your help moving, or she doesn’t want to go out to this party by herself, or your boyfriend and you fight, or your mood simply just tanks. You figure, you worked hard this week, you’ll catch up tomorrow, Sunday, even Monday morning, if you have to. Organizing is easy. In reality, you’re not even all that behind, you think.

Before you know it, you realize you have to struggle for a decent grade in two of your five classes. You barely eked a C out of the third class. You Aced the fourth class. But the fifth class, the professor won’t let you make up the work. He won’t forgive your absences. He won’t accept your medical note. He’s an asshole.

Or even worse. Mid-way through the semester, your body and mind turn on you completely. You can’t take it anymore. Your heart won’t stop beating out of your chest. It hurts to exist. Your mind is screaming at you the same ugly thoughts, day in, day out. You just want to die, but you don’t have it in you to kill yourself.

So you drink more, do more coke, smoke more weed, eat less because you’re nauseous all the time, sleep less because your mind just won’t shut off.

You make it through the semester. Next semester, you won’t let this happen. You’ll be better. You can make up those bad grades over the summer, and you do.

So new semester, new you. Everything going to be better.

Except, mid-way through this semester, you collapse. No, not emotionally. Physically. One minute you’re standing, the next, you’re barely sitting. You don’t know what just hit you. But now, now you’re in the hospital, or at least trying to convince some nice paramedics that you’re blood sugar’s just a little low.

And maybe it was low, you think.

You get up and go again. You have to make it through the semester. At least, because you went to the hospital, your professors have to forgive your short absence.

A day, a week, a month later, it happens again. You faint, collapse, or you can’t get up one day because your heart, your mind, they just want to crawl out of you. All this is preceded by a lot of forgetfulness, a lot of struggling to focus during class, a lot of anxiety. Reluctantly, you go to a doctor.

You go to a doctor because it’s not your mind. Something must be seriously wrong.

No. Nothing. All the blood work shows you’re a healthy twenty-something. They send you home. If they really care, they might see the signs and send you to a therapist. Or maybe you were already going to a therapist. Either way, the word medication starts floating around a lot more. And because you can’t get out of bed anymore, because you’ve lost too much weight for your own good, because you need to not be a loser who can’t make it through school, you take the medication.

Maybe it’s a year while you feel like a human guinea pig. During that time—I won’t lie to you—life might suck. Unless you get really lucky with a therapist who listens or you have a friend—me? good family? good friends?—who will tell you how to talk to a psychiatrist to get on the right meds, you probably won’t be okay for that first year.

But I can tell you this: after those initial months of adjusting to whatever they prescribe, things start to feel—manageable. Everyday is still a war, but you have a gun now, a bullet-proof vest, and some training from professionals. Why would you deny yourself those things as you march forward into the field?

Because medication is bad, psychiatrists are evil, and chemical x, y, and z make me feel so much better.

Yeah, I bet they do. And then you bottom out with a hangover or, worse, regrets. The girls I know who were raped in frat houses and bar bathrooms! The people I’ve known who are now in mental institutions because they trusted their dealers more than their doctors!

Look around you. Who is your friend? Who is your enemy? Now, ask yourself the same questions. Is fear really worth what you’ve already suffered? And do you really think you will beat the odds and battle bipolar disorder or depression or addiction by yourself? Do you think I say these things for my own good?

If you truly believe you can do it alone, go ahead. Good luck. I wish you the best. I’ll be here if you need me.

Clara, just a few weeks ago, insisted I say goodbye to her. She argued, things were just “too intense.” I argued with her logically and calmly. When that didn’t work, I respectfully gave in, said goodbye, and hung up the phone. And then I wept.

But a week later, the memory of her wasn’t uncomfortable, any residual bitterness had subsided, and the only feeling that remained was anxiety for her well-being.

Until yesterday.

I don’t know whether it was an oversensitive “follow/unfollow” button on my iPhone’s Twitterific. I don’t know whether my looking through her twitter site caused some brain waves to filter over to her. Or maybe it was just sheer happenstance of thought spurred on by technological savvy on both our parts. But yesterday morning, I began receiving her tweets on my phone. Mind you, this woman does not tweet. I’ve never met someone who so fervently insists, despite their own desires to be free, on the privacy of their thoughts.

And they were heart-wrenchingly sad thoughts. But I figured she was in the mood to try some tweeting of her own. I was hesitant to assume her messages were in any way aimed at me.

It was my boyfriend who convinced me otherwise. He argued they were for me, that she was reaching out. He encouraged me to write something encouraging. So I wrote, with some help from Brw, “She who stares into the abyss should never stare alone.” It was me reaching out to her. I wanted her to know I wasn’t mad at her. I wanted her to know she wasn’t alone, like her message implied. I wanted her to know she hadn’t done anything irrevocable. So on and on we went, tweeting back and forth in vague recognition of the other. Until I received direct confirmation: my words, she said, gave her strength. I practically wept. I still don’t know exactly how I feel about all this communication. I know I’m happy about it, but I don’t know yet what limitations I need to set on this, how best to protect my heart while still providing her with the care and attention she needs. I don’t know if she wants to continue having contact. If she does, I don’t know how she wants to continue that contact or how frequent she would like it to be. In short, she and I are crawling around in a dark room, aware the other is there, afraid to reach out and have our hand bitten.

To confirm my fears, the one thing I do know is she never asked me how I was. I was sicker than I’ve been since I was a kid, and she never asked me how I was. Is this indicative of the same selfish trend that led to my heartache so few weeks ago? Or can it be brushed away as the negligence of a nervous girl distracted by the fear she was going to get slapped down by someone she suspects, or perhaps knows, she hurt deeply not too long ago. In other words, have I become a twittering twit more eager to save others than herself? The fact I simply thought of the question indicates I still have some sense of self-preservation.

I was just so relieved to know she was okay. I hadn’t let her down, pushed her with what she interpreted as my intensity toward some oblivion. Her words indicated every day was a struggle for her, but they also said, I’m okay, and I’m taking care of myself. She’s getting dressed up nowadays. She’s going to therapy twice a week. She doesn’t need me to push her anymore, and I’m so relieved. I’m relieved she’s figured out she can make hard decisions on her own, even if she still needs some comforting words from me along the way.

So I figure her talking to me, as she was the one who broke up with me, was far harder for her than it was for me. For that reason alone am I willing to ascribe any hint of self-centeredness–I say hint because I may just be over-thinking things, as I often do–to anxiety.

The point is, I’m looking forward to seeing where this goes. I think we’ve both learned some lessons in the last few weeks. No?

…I wonder if she still reads me.