Ramblings from an average woman in recovery from Mental Illness, fighting to end stigma and offer hope.
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Sunday, 30 September 2018
The Hardest Confession
Monday, 10 September 2018
World Suicide Prevention Day 2018
Friday, 22 June 2018
Silent Times When I'm "Fine"
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. We will get through it.
Sunday, 28 January 2018
The Awkwardness of Speaking Out
** If I Fall, If I Die by Michael Christie, is a fiction novel about a mother and son, and their relationship - it is NOT a novel about suicide.
Tuesday, 16 January 2018
Suicide - A Part of My Vocabulary
* I want to add on that I in no way hold anyone accountable for the choices that I make when I am in an unstable state of mind. This post's intention was merely to open up the conversation surrounding such a sensitive topic, that is often whispered about in corners, or behind closed doors. Shame and stigma will not end if we don't talk about it, and I encourage you to leave a comment, share a story, or simply speak to a friend about this important topic.
Tuesday, 29 August 2017
Chaos, Emotion, and A Glimpse
A little over three
years ago I felt okay. I was still struggling with a bipolar diagnosis and
finding my own unique degree of “normal”… but I felt like overall, I was
starting to get things together. Life was busy and I was keeping up – full time
job, four busy kids, the entire family moving every direction with activities,
and a marriage that needed work but that was dedicated. It wasn’t perfect, but
I did feel like I was starting to get a handle on things – that if I worked a
little harder, and pushed through the rough times a little stronger, than it
would be okay… I would conquer the madness.
But then I remember
the good days. I remember the small victories that I am the only one who has
noticed – the way that I didn’t go to bed one night feeling like there had been
a massive war inside my head… or the way that I controlled myself in an
overwhelming situation… or the time I set a date for myself to make a decision,
and then I let it pass by. There are victories every day. There are reminders
and support systems and people who might not ever “get it”, but who are there.
There are the days that I force myself to talk about it – the good and the bad –
the victories and the struggles, so that other people might not feel alone any
more… or so that someone else might see the battle that I face. There are the
days where I say I will not give up – and there are the days where I cannot do
much more than sit and pretend to be okay. There are days where compassion
fatigue and struggles of their own prevent my friends and family from checking
in or from being able to help when I ask… and then there are the days where
they are there – a touch, a hug, a tea, a friendly “hello”, and I hadn’t even
thought that they noticed.Thursday, 2 March 2017
The Invisible Prison
I know why I do it. I’m high-functioning. Sure, every now and then I go through something and end up at the hospital to adjust some meds, or get my sleep patterns back to normal. But for the most part I am calm, rational, able to talk and think and work and relate. My kids are normal. My marriage looks normal. My house is usually clean, there are home cooked meals on the table, and I bake and take photographs, and I write. I function… and I function well. Logical me splits from emotional me and for some reason I can still live day to day life while feeling like I am going to explode on the inside.
So... I'll see you tomorrow. I'll be smiling and talkative, I'll be at work, and I'll look just like I do, every other day.
Saturday, 10 September 2016
World Suicide Prevention Day 2016
** Trigger Warning **
She looked into the mirror - her eyes were blank... hollow, her heart was heavy, and her hope was lost. She was tired of struggling and of fighting... She was simply exhausted and had lost her ability to cling to life.
She had heard it all and she hated the words, their voices of encouragement, and their stories of recovery; it wasn't worth anything... she couldn't feel anything. Once the pull of death's comfort, peace, and ease had infiltrated her mind - there was no going back... No other way out... Nothing could change her decision.
She sat in the tub, filled to the brim with water and with a hair dryer in her hand: she crouched in the darkest corner of her room with the razor at her wrist: she sat on the patio with the pills poured out into her hand. Once death had claimed her mind, it was far too easy to know what came next, to follow through.
She didn't expect the moments of clarity that would take her breath away... It would be a few seconds at most as remnants of light blasted through the darkness - pieces of conversations surrounding recovery and hope and life, bits of memories filled with love and joy, reminders of hands reaching out - showing grace, friendship, support, and acceptance.
It was only a few moments and then the light vanished, the darkness and despair returning to cage her mind, filling the space, consuming everything except for one tiny speck... A glimmer... A sparkle.
Maybe, just maybe those moments of clarity were enough and still shaking she takes one last chance. She drives herself to the emergency room or she picks up the phone to call a trusted friend, a hotline, or emergency services.
She will be questionned - it will feel like an interrogation on why she is in crisis and she will have to repeat her story and her history to every person who walks into her room or tries to help her. She will fade to darkness and wish she hadn't made the choice to open up and let them in.
But that speck. Gradually it will grow a little bit brighter and so she doesn't fight them. She decides to stay, to muster any ounce of strength that she can find, to fight for that light one last time.
At her weakest point in life, she has become the strongest she has ever been. She faces anger, shame, guilt, and humiliation... She is stripped of her clothes, her freedom, and her choices. Still she sees that sparkle hanging there and she chases it, speaking up - revealing truth and suffering, voids and failures, grief and loss.
And as she does - that light, that bright speck, it becomes a star which gradually reveals the other stars, and suddenly the sun is shining and the world, her world, is brighter again; illuminating even the darkest places in her mind.
Once she is stable, she holds onto the light like a security blanket. It shimmers and flexes, fades and boldens as she mives forward, one small step at a time. She chooses to continue to speak about her experiences. She speaks and she listens, she accepts and she prays, and she helps and she seeks help. She becomes the glimmer in another person's darkness while she gains more sparkles to hold onto herself, in case the darkness ever threatens to return.
September 10, 2016 is World Suicide Prevention Day. Find your speck of light - it is never too late to find hope in the darkness as long as we never fall silent in our pain and our light, in our support of friends and family, and in sharing our own experiences.
Tuesday, 9 February 2016
Thoughts From the Psych Ward
Stop.
I know how I want to feel right now... I know how I think I should feel. My mind says I'm a fraud and that I have taken 10 steps backwards after only a single shaky step forward.
How else do you explain the backslide into depression, the disturbed sleep cycles and routine turned to chaos, and the suicidal threats that landed me back in the Psych ward 3 days ago? It's the same thoughts and the same stigma that tell me I'm a loser, I'll never be normal, and I'm nobody... Just simply mentally ill.
But those thoughts only see what they want to see. They don't take into account the fact that I'm here because being here and alive is better than risking my safety and my heartbeat doing something stupid. It doesn't take into account the co-operation and the will to re-stabilise that I have had to find. It doesn't take into account the sheer exhaustion and the simple need to rest (with a little help to make it happen). It doesn't take into account the lifelong battle I've been involved in and the fact that even though I wanted to quit... I haven't. Part of me wanted to die... But I let help get to me, fighting an inner war the entire time.
So even though I'm currently sitting in a hospital room, waiting on doctors and sleep and new meds to level me out; I will not feel ashamed or embarrassed or unworthy. I will feel strength from those who love me, determination to win this battle, and hope for a better tomorrow... One day - one moment - at a time.
Thursday, 22 October 2015
Journey to the Cliff
November 6th, 2014 I made my way to the waterfall around the
corner from my house and attempted to jump to the jagged rocks below, a razor
blade cutting into my wrist as I let go of the wall. Two police officers
managewall and to the ground, saving my life. Deciding to jump from the cliff, to end my life and to ensure my success with a backup plan was not something that I came up with that morning – it was not something that I woke up with and simply decided, ‘hey, today’s the perfect day for a suicide attempt!’
I don’t have a problem with people who don’t understand; but
it’s just one more reason why I’ve felt the need to share my story, my feelings and
my experiences. It's about stopping stigma, breeding empathy and understanding, and learning to give hope. It's about giving even one person something to grasp onto when they are in the throes of despair, sinking and about to give up. Thursday, 24 September 2015
You Call Yourself a Christian - So Where's God in All This?
God. Religion. Faith.
If you pray hard enough and keep believing - God will heal you. I've heard it thousands of times, I've seen the people who have been healed, and I've seen the people who haven't. I've seen people who understood that sometimes a situation or an illness in life can be given a purpose and a meaning, and I have seen people who have spiraled down, disappointed and angry and frustrated with God and themselves for not being healed.
I myself fall into several of those categories. For the most part, I don't always speak about what I believe as I find that it is very personal to me. Quick run-down... I consider myself a Christian and I do believe in God, and I do believe that He has the power to heal and the power to comfort.
A few years ago, I was going through a difficult episode; aside from cat-naps I hadn't slept for weeks. I was depressed and suicidal, my husband was at his wits end with me, and I couldn't even function around the kids. At one point I went out walking at night, it was early winter and I walked from one end of town (where I lived) out to the gas station at the far end of town. Sitting on the concrete retaining wall outside the gas station I was contemplating ending my life by continuing down the main road that I was on, down to the highway overpass and jumping.
As I was sitting there I saw several police cars pull into the gas station, the officers getting their coffee and I sat silently there in the dark, in the middle of the night waiting for them to leave. I didn't want anyone nearby to stop me. As I sat waiting though, I felt something slither across my hand and when I loooked down was surprised to see dozens of worms crawling across the very wall that that I was sitting on. I have a strange fear of worms and all things similar (caterpillars, snakes, etc...) I remember panicking, jumping down off of the wall and taking several steps away. Looking at the wall it was now completely covered in worms and as I glanced around me I noticed the ground now was as well. I was getting shaken up and suddenly all I wanted to do was get back home. I had no wallet on me or money to call a cab and so I began the walk back home, hearing the slithering of snakes in the frost covered grass on all sides of me and practically dancing my way down the sidewalk to avoid stepping on the slimey worms. Suddenly I was standing in front of the Tim Hortons, and as the snow started falling heavily around me I stopped walking and closed my eyes, squeezing them together as tightly as possible.
This couldn't be real. It was the moment I realised that I was far enough gone that I had been hallucinating this whole time. Opening my eyes back up I looked down the road and I saw the gas station I had been sitting outside, the lights off and closed down and not a car (police or otherwise) in sight. Looking down at the ground I could see a fine layer of snow under my feet, but not a worm or a snake in the vicinity.
This was also the moment I began to feel the cold, seeping in through my clothes and causing me to shake. I spent the next few minutes digging through my pockets, looking for change and I found what I thought was enough so I went inside the coffee shop and ordered a small tea, something to take the chill out and give me time to collect myself. I remember I was five or ten cents short and the girl at the counter gave me my drink anyways. Sitting down at a table in the corner I wrapped my hands around the paper cup and put my head down. I was suddenly exhausted and although I had been diagnosed with a mild case of depression a few months earlier, I knew that this was something more. And for the first time in a long time, I prayed.
That night I made it home, but not without further hallucinating during part of the walk and the possibility that I had been approached by a man in a van who continued to circle and try to pick me up for "fun" (I'm still not sure whether or not that was a hallucination or it really happened). For the next weeks and months I prayed alot. I spent time with my Bible and I fought hard against what I didn't really understand. I attended church and I read online blogs and stories and believed that I would simply get better. I put everything in my prayers and begged God to 'fix me' or 'take me'.
Instead I got worse and a few months later, after another period with no sleep and all-encompassing depression, I ended up in the hospital because of an overdose on sleeping pills. I had been desperate for sleep at the time and I didn't care if I lived or died any longer. Early one morning, I parked in our church parking lot where I took dozens of sleeping pills and blacked out for the majority of the day. When the police found me that night, I had been wandering down the highway, my body aching and my mind completely out of it. I have only slices of memory from that day and for the most part they involve me stumbling down the road, into traffic and through town, at one point I remember a car nearly hitting me, swerving and barely missing me - it could be real, or again, it could be something my mind made up.
It wasn't until more anti-depressants and several doctor's appointments with my family doctor and the psychiatrist at the hospital that the Bipolar diagnosis was finally made and the pieces began to fit together.
That was also when I truly began to find my Faith. My prayers began to change, my heart and my mind more aware and more willing to accept what I now believed. Although I knew for sure (and still do believe) that God has the power to heal people fully, he didn't heal me and there are many others out there that won't be healed either, despite their desperate prayers and their complete faith. Why? Because as my husband reminds me, simply put - we live in a broken world. I don't always understand the 'why', and I don't always want to believe that there's a chance that I might always suffer. Personally, I have shifted thinking and I believe that God uses people in all different ways - in my case, the doctors that have treated me, the counselors who have helped me to understand and even everyday people that I come into contact with. My prayers are different now too, when I pray for myself or others I pray for peace and comfort and understanding and I would never encourage someone to only pray for complete healing. For me, God is still there, by my side - watching over me and maybe even intervening in some cases - perhaps the car that swerved should have hit me, perhaps he used my hallucinations (although part of my disorder), to actually save my life - I never ended up jumping from an overpass, and perhaps He was with the officer that gripping me as I jumped from the cliff at the waterfall last November, reaching out and grabbing me just as I let go.
The truth is, I have my Faith and I know what I believe. But I don't know the details and I don't know the whys... I doubt I ever will and that doesn't bother me. So when I think about where God fits in to my illness, I know I have the answer that I need - He is where He is and I'm okay with that.






