** Trigger warning. This site contains descriptions of mental health crisis', sensitive topics and mentions of suicide.
Showing posts with label struggles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label struggles. Show all posts

Friday, 22 June 2018

Silent Times When I'm "Fine"


Six months ago I experienced a major breakdown… complete with unpredictable behaviour, suicidal threats and intentions, and a brief period of psychosis. My depression had hit, my sleep cycle was erratic at best, I continued to refuse to go back on medications, and for a short time, I felt completely out of control again.

Nearly five months ago, I wrote about Suicide and the Awkwardnessof Speaking Out, where I made a stance and said that I would continue to speak out, share my story, and normalise mental health issues. I was doing better, although still recovering from the traumatic events that had triggered my breakdown and which happened during my breakdown. It was the last time I posted here publicly, allowing others to see a glimpse into my life, and share in my journey.

Four months ago, I broke my life apart… pushing people away, making poor decisions, and retreating into near silence… afraid to let anyone in… afraid to let my failures out. During this time I made conscious choices, semi-conscious mistakes, and subconscious defensive moves… sometimes travelling into the world of offense – ensuring that nobody could hurt me further, and hurting them in the process.

“Messy” doesn’t even begin to describe the world I lived in during these recent months.

And in this time… I haven’t known how to share it, or how to erase the stigma in my own head and allow myself to talk about what’s happened and how it’s changed me. Because the truth is… even now, I still can’t.

Four months later and I am still unravelling the chaos of my head. I am still sorting out the difference between reason and fault… still trying to understand the chain of events that led me to where I was, and where I now am. I am still trying to justify my roles and my actions, while accepting that in some cases I am a victim and I need to work through and understand why certain things played out the way that they did.  

For four months I’ve tried to sort out more than a decade of confusion, unhealthy beliefs, and conflicting emotions. For four months I’ve thought about suicide as an answer, an end, or a release. For four months I’ve isolated myself against close relationships, torn apart my previous knowledge of my own mental health issues, and worked through grief, trauma, and pain. For four months, I’ve isolated myself… and yet maintained my composure, my work ethic, and my outward appearance.

I’ve used the word FINE on a regular basis.

I’ve smiled, and I’ve laughed. And the entire time I’ve felt like a fraud.

Today I was thinking about suicide. Not my own, but the many cases I’ve heard or read about recently, the times I’ve listened to stories, pain, and grief surrounding the death of someone by their own hand. In the media we’ve seen stories appear – Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain the most recent celebrities to take their own lives.

I’ve read articles and comments, and I’ve talked one-on-one to others about suicide and its effects. I want to explain the other side. I want to explain what it feels like to be desperate enough to want to just end the pain.

But recently I can’t.

I can’t find the words. But I can find the feeling. I can’t describe it, but I can relate to it. I can feel it deep within my core when I hear about another person who has succumbed to the thoughts in their head… the pain… the desperation.

And I’m sad. And it hurts.

Because our stories are all so different… but that one thing that we all have in common, is that we just want it to end.

It will be four years in November since my last major suicide attempt. And right now, I feel okay… strong enough to make it through the darker days… and strong enough to reach out if I need it. But I would be lying if I told you it was easy, or that suicide didn’t still enter my mind on occasion, or that I was on a steady uphill climb.

I want to say that talking about it honestly and openly has made it easier… but it hasn’t. And I’ve hidden. I’ve been ashamed. I’ve been embarrassed. Again? Really? Shouldn’t I be over this by now? Shouldn’t I be further along in my journey? Shouldn’t I just shut up, move forward, and keep going; just like everyone else? I think these thoughts and I retreat further. I spend time online or on social media – and I read statements that further this belief.

And then I remember why I talk about it. I remember the freedom. I remember the isolation lifting. I remember the controlling hold that depression has, and the way it's grip loosens when I open up. I remember how it changes me to actually open up and speak out. It's never easy... But it's alnost always worth it. 

I want to keep talking about it. I want to reach out and let anyone else who is struggling know that I’m here, and I’m ready to talk – without judgement or shame. I want to tell those of you who don’t experience these thoughts that you can reach out too… you can ask me questions, you can ask me what it’s like, or what thoughts go through my head... you can ask me why, or why I don't think about others in this state. You can ask me about my kids or my family. You can ask me about the path that put me here, and how I found and continue to find my way out. I want to be a light, a spark, or a hope, for someone struggling and debating the answers themselves right now. I want them to know that there is more. The journey is long... but it's worth it. I want to share my own journey and the life I've been granted following the darkness. 

I want to share... and I want others to know that they can share openly with me, or with friends, or with family. 

Because I know.

I’ve been there. I’m sometimes still there.

And it’s okay. You don’t have to be fine. You don’t have to be alone.

We will get through it. 

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Tuesday, 7 February 2017

Amid the Quiet and the Darkness

I should be asleep right now. Eyes closed, mouth open, snoring softly and dreaming deeply. I should wake up in the morning rested and energized, ready to face another day, fight another battle, and smile another smile. I should be able to close my eyes without my mind racing a million miles a minute – ideas and sparks of restless energy plaguing me as a tiredness sweeps into my brain, just out of my grasp.

As is typical, I laid down to rest tonight – electronics shut off, calming thoughts, quiet, and darkness surrounding me. But I did not fall asleep… could not fall asleep. My mind has been going non-stop for several days now, my heart racing constantly, my brain flipping around like a fish out of water. I’m exhausted but I’m wide awake.

It’s one symptom of bi-polar disorder and for me it is one of the earliest warning signs of a massive shift in mood occurring. It started with a mild depression and some anxiety following Christmas – my sleep becoming disturbed and then I began the upswing. I noticed it one night suddenly… the way that my brain changed complete direction. I couldn’t stop talking – I couldn’t stop thinking – and I felt good – really good. I suddenly felt like showing off – spending a little extra effort on my appearance, working a little harder, taking on a little more. I dove into some work on mental health – on my history, on recovery, on management and skills. I tackled each thing I did with a newfound energy and a vengeance. Most of all, I completely stopped sleeping at night – struggling to get an hour here and an hour there.

A couple of days passed. I saw my family physician who prescribed me something to help me to relax – something that had absolutely no effect on me whatsoever. Finally, I became agitated, the lack of sleep getting to me even though I had all of this energy and I knew it was time. If I didn’t get it managed quickly, it would blossom out of control... it was better to catch it early so that it didn't get too far out of my hands.

Taking a risk and facing a nervous anxiety I took myself to the emergency room – not an easy task when you are frustrated and tired, and you have an irrational fear of (being kept in) the hospital. Thankfully it was a good visit – speaking to the crisis worker and the ER doctor on call I was given a prescription for something to help me sleep – something I had been on in the past and that had usually worked well. Going home with a scheduled appointment with the psychiatrist I was almost excited to get to sleep and get back into a ‘normal’ routine. I should have known better.

That first night, I did sleep. It was broken and I awoke several times, but it was something more than I had experienced in several days. The next night I wasn’t so lucky.

It’s a tricky thing – a mood disorder. You want to live simply – take your meds and get better. You don’t want to have to think about whether you are too close to depression or too close to mania all of the time – but you do. You want to be able to fall asleep like everyone else… but you also have your best thoughts and ideas amid the quiet and the darkness – when the rest of the world is asleep.

I’m thankful for the doctors and nurses, the psychiatrists and the counselors, the crisis teams and all of those people who advocate for better mental health care and knowledge. I am thankful that they take me seriously now when I say I need to level out – when I can recognize the symptoms before they get too severe, and I am thankful that the good ones will work with you for a treatment plan that works for you.

Tonight I’m still struggling with Insomnia and I still worry about entering a full blown manic phase. I’ve seen the psychiatrist and we are upping a medication to hopefully get me to sleep before the insanity begins to set in. I wish I didn’t need meds for that – I wish I could sleep – I wish that sleep wasn’t a requirement so that I could act on all of my great ideas – I wish that my mind wasn’t built this way. But wishes aren’t reality.

And the reality is that sometimes life just sits you down on an out of control roller-coaster and you learn how to hang on tightly at all of the important hills and valleys – knowing that eventually it will slow down and you’ll be able to take control back again.

Until then – I’ll control what I can, pray for what is out of my hands, help end the stigma by talking about it, and rely on the support from friends, family, and professionals to help me get back on track.
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Sunday, 25 September 2016

Victory Through the Struggles

It’s not euphoria or hypersensitivity or the darkness of a deep depression. The spikes are no longer as severe as a freshly sharpened pencil, now more rounded, curved and easier to pass over. The waves have not disappeared – there is still sadness and happiness, anger and excitement. But they are easier to steer… they are no longer run-away trains, reaching the tipping point and about to spill off of the tracks.

Level. Stable. Manageable. In control. It’s almost terrifying – a great unknown and after another depressive episode, it is an entirely new world to feel this way. It hasn’t been easy to reach this place and there have been some detours along the way. But right now, in this moment – my mental disorders are not winning.

Recently, I spent a week in the hospital. I was at a low point and drove myself there; I fought through what felt like interrogations and some criticisms, and I was admitted so that I was in a safe place where I could be monitored and so that my medications could be adjusted again.

I did not want to be there.

But I was… and it was a massive victory.

Taking myself into the hospital was not easy… I felt like a failure and like a fraud. I was low but I was highly functional. I was depressed but few people knew about it. I was struggling but I felt like I should be okay. I was angry because it was such a short journey from managing my triggers and being able to work through my emotional surges, to feeling as though I had fallen down a rabbit hole and knowing the world had morphed into a much darker place.

Again, I did not want to be there. I did not want to admit my weakness. Throughout the days leading up to and during my stay, it was often a fight within myself… a heated and intense battle for control… for my life.

But it was also a testament to the changes I have made, the way I have grown within my diagnosis, and my ability to identify with and help myself. It was days of reaching out and seeking help from trusted sources. It was days of self-care while doing things that bring me joy, it was using the resources that I have collected and learned to use, almost as though they have become second nature from the practice and continuous learning that I have done. It was keeping to my routines and it was remaining functional while recognising that I was falling, and doing something that I had never done before. It was stopping when I knew that I was in danger and taking myself in before I was past the point of no return, before I was able to fall further, before I tried to end the suffering or before the police were called. It was calm and without the drama of past experiences. It was me never letting go of the reigns and steering myself to the help that I knew that I needed. It was being aware of and able to hang on to one single spark of light and let it spread as I stayed safe, quickly illuminating the darkness and letting me recover faster and easier than I ever have before.

It was a success.

I was hospitalised, but I don’t regret it. I will continue to grow. I will continue to strive to remain level. I will continue to hang on to those sparks of light when the darkness begins to close in on me. I will continue to learn and remain aware of myself, my triggers, my weaknesses, and my spikes. I will get the help I need, when I need it. I will embrace stability – even when it frightens me.


I will continue to share my story. I will continue to be open and honest, to let everyone know about the struggles and the victories. I will continue to talk and to listen. I will continue to grow stronger and I will keep going. I will continue to be a success. I will continue to change the game, and I will win.

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