Tag-Archive for » dissociation «

I could be offered death right now, and I would take it.  If it was silent and painless, I would take it.  It’d have a lot more peace than I’ve ever gotten in life.  There’s no point to this piece of shit hovel we call consciousness.  I could kill myself, and how would that affect me?  It wouldn’t.  It would affect the people who remain alive.  But why should I care about those people?  Their feelings aren’t nearly as important as my feelings are.  Or are they?  I’m still here, and I know I don’t want to be.  Clearly, I’m putting other people’s feelings before my own.  Because there’s nothing here for me—a simpleton’s job, a difficult relationship, and my family.

No, nothing to stay for.

I’m not even a good writer.  It’s the one thing I want to be good at doing, and I can’t seem to get it right.  I simply want to die—effortlessly, like life should be.  I don’t deserve this breathing I feel compelled to do.  I can’t endure this anxiety.  I’m exhausted with the meds.  I want to close my eyes, then not wake up.  A forever sleep sounds heavenly.

Instead, this nothingness is a vice, an addiction, a warden.  There’s nothing left outside of me that matters, so I withdraw from the world in every way, at every opportunity I can.  I wonder if there’s a name for the emotional equivalent of the fetal position, and where can I find that information out.

That’s what I wonder only seconds before I realize I use learning as a sedative, the way others use food or sex.  I can’t yet fathom what I’m so afraid will happen if I rejoin the world.

As usual, I don’t know the answer.  Simply, my little voice says, Little Lucy is always afraid; she needs no evident reason to be. After all, I’m crazy and strange.  Can’t I see it in the eyes of coworkers and acquaintances?  I’m a freak.

Or so the paranoia I’ve been fighting these past two decades momentarily led me to conclude.

At once, my focus and retention rate cause me shame.  There’s nothing cohesive enough about my thoughts to create something cohesive to read or to speak.  Among my million other fears, I’m afraid depression is robbing me of my ability to express myself effectively.  I feel dumber and crazier.  I fear I’m slipping.

I think, who will tolerate me then?

And if I write it all down so I can see how insane my thoughts can be, will I be protected from their effects?

I’m being ridiculous.

09
Nov

Another upper respiratory infection.  My ears have been affected, and my balance is off.

I’ve always been sick.  For as long as I can remember, I’ve had to go to doctors several times a year, hospitals, specialists.  Mine has been a life of sanitation and medication.

I’ve been chronically nauseous since before I knew there was a word for it.  I remember Maggie taught me the word so I could tell it to my school nurse whenever necessary.

I also suffer from chronic bronchitis, which means I get it several times a year.

I have twisted ankles.

I get migraines several times a week.

I have a knee that pops out of place all the time, and I never even played a sport!

I suffer from back spasms all day, every day.  I can’t remember the last time nothing hurt.

I can’t even remember.  I’d laugh, if it wasn’t so sad.  My neurotic need to write everything down is the only thing keeping me functional because I literally cannot remember most of the things that happen to me in a day.

These are just some of the symptoms medication seems unable to address.  I hope that once the anxiety is completely gone, the psychosomatic symptoms will go with it.  But I think of Sam’s compulsion to crack his neck, even though it hurts him to do so.  His 30 mg of Lexapro steady him somewhat, but they aren’t a cure-all.

So, once I’m over this upper respiratory infection, I’ll go to the organic grocers and to the gym.  Despite the psychopharmaceuticals overflowing from my medicine box, I maintain my preference for homeopathic remedies—another belief I had to throw away early on in the fight against this monster in my head.

I want to submit to this crying spell, but I’m not going to.  I can do that: dissociate at will.  That’s not something to be proud of, but it’s what I’ve got right now.  I’m looping like a sound effect what Sam yelled at me from the kitchen Saturday morning.  Amidst another conversation about something, he shouts from the kitchen, “Depression is anger turned inward.”

The idea is so widely accepted, it’s become cliché, but this was the first time I was really considering it in terms of my own life.  I’ve heard the phrase a million times, read it a million times that, and I’ve participated in debates about the idea.  Yet, when he said it yesterday, I suddenly considered, “if that’s true, at whom am I angry?  If I’m not angry at the Andys and I’m not angry at myself, who is left?

For a few moments on Friday night, my anger turned on Sang, but my fear of expressing true anger made the outburst ridiculous.  Sang and Sam laughed.  I pouted; I shouted, “I mean it!”  I might as well have stomped my foot, because the effect was that I looked like a child throwing a tantrum.  I was a six year old girl again, frustrated I couldn’t stop my parents’ abuses.

—Fuck.  I was a sad kid.  It’s the one command I heard again and again from strangers’ mouths: smile!  Pocarisa, my aunt called me.  My family encouraged the use of the nickname.  Rarelylaughs.  No one ever gets why I tell that story, as if to prove its point.

—Shit.  These are the words of a depressive.  I don’t know what’s going through my head right now.

Today was a good day.  I was nauseous and had to force myself to eat a salad for lunch; I was exhausted in a very literal sense; and I experienced stabbing stomach pains as I panicked during the last half hour of work—all while making sure I didn’t waste the company’s time.  It was a good day because I only experienced pique panic for an hour or so.  I went through most of the day distracted by deadlines and meetings and passive aggressive emails.

On the one hand, it makes me sad that a good day, these days, is a day I’m completely distracted, even overwhelmed, by mindless work.  Essentially, good days are the days I best dissociate.

Damn.  I miss the girl who wanted to feel each day.  I miss the girl who saw such sad beauty and meaning in everything.

On the other hand, my mind was quiet enough to allow me to do my work.  The thought thrills me!  Maybe the Clonazepam is working.  Maybe the 30 mg of Lexapro isn’t too high for such a tiny girl.  Maybe things won’t hurt so much from now on.

I hope.  I hope.  I’m so afraid it won’t—stop.