• I Guess I Spoke Too Soon

    There are five stages of grief, and we experience them regardless of the situation, as long as it is traumatic. Shock – Anger – Bargaining – Depression – Acceptance.

    I work at the hospital, and I see a lot of the shock and anger, even the bargaining. I can relate to those in my own life, but it takes quite a hit for me not to move past the depression stage quickly. I often jump right to acceptance. See, I am the eternal optimist. I am an optimist to a fault actually. I expect the best and when the worst happens, well, it totally fucks with me. A friend of mine is the opposite. She’s pessimistic and thinks the worst will happen and is pleasantly surprised when things go her way. I don’t get it. I remain the blind fool I guess.

    This car thing has finally hit me though. They say be wary when a major event happens, that it can trigger mania and depression. I didn’t believe it. Why should I? I’m in control of my own life now, right? Well it happened and it sucked as usual. First I slept for 11 hours on Friday night, mistake number one. I got up with trepidation. I am so prone to the manic side of this illness that I pretty much knew I was headed for an eventful day.

    I started out with a run, hoping that would curtail the excessiveness I was sure to feel by early afternoon, but then I had this great idea to cook all day and stock up the freezer for winter. My day turned out to be a shopping spree a the local grocery store, cooking two stew dinners, four helpings of pasta sauce and a vat of black bean soup. While the food was cooking and I didn’t need to watch it, I ripping up the perennial beds and replanted in the rain. Then I had to move the air conditioners out of the house and get in the winter stuff. I vacuumed the house, cleaned out the refrigerator, went through my closet and switched summer to winter clothes. I did three loads of laundry, folded clothes for two hours and worked out. Why in the hell didn’t I stop? Why didn’t I heed the warning signs to avoid the crash?

    Sunday morning. I decided not to oversleep, good idea, but as the afternoon wore on I got more and more exhausted. I had to lay down at 4 o’clock. I would have slept for hours… I forced myself to get up though and make dinner, but when I headed into the kitchen I felt like I couldn’t do anything. I stared out the window and didn’t prepare food. I could tell that something was slipping in my mind and I had to catch it soon – my son was home. I felt this overwhelming sense of hopelessness. Do I really have to live with this for another 20, 30, 40 years? I don’t think I can do it. I thought about the relief of putting a 38 Smith & Wesson to my head and pulling the trigger. I was once again in a very bad place.

    I sunk to the floor next to the refrigerator. I couldn’t get up. I wanted to curl up into a tiny ball and hide. I thought, Should I go to the urgent care psychiatric center?, because I knew that’s where I need to go when things get really bad. I forced myself to get up, regain control, but I could feel the insanity right there, behind a thin veil looking at me, waiting for me to slip up, let loose one tear, pick up one thing and throw it, let out one scream….

    Is this how it’s going to go? Do I really have to live with this? How can I ever trust myself again?

    I’ve been thinking about the word insanity. The folks at AA have taken it and skewed it to their own definition saying, “it’s doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results”. I’d like to punch one of them in the face right about now. I did not choose this, and despite what some people say about alcoholism, I don’t believe in the disease theory either. It’s still a choice to keep on drinking. It’s not a choice to be born with a mental illness that will burden you for the rest of your life.

    Maybe I’m just being judgmental now, but the truth is, what happened tonight scared the shit out of me. How do I manage this? How do I explain to people what happens to me, so that they can help me? My ex-boyfriend walked into a horrible scene once and he got a taste of what it can really be like during a bad episode. I told him then and there, “This is what happens. This is what I am dealing with”.

    So, I guess that I am not unaffected by the stress of being carless. Maybe this is the depression stage. I sure-to-God hope so. I need to move into the acceptance stage really soon!

     

  • Totaled Car / Totaled Mind?

    I am amazed at how treatable bipolar really is. I’m not on much medication, but the effects are huge. My car is totaled, and I feel okay. I feel very calm. Of course when they gave me the news I did start laughing and crying at the same time (a little minor hysteria) and I didn’t get much sleep last night, but there was no throwing things (okay, some swearing). Is it all because of two pills a day?

    I remember a time not long ago, before I was diagnosed, where I really thought that throwing things helped. It didn’t. I’ve lost a lot of nice things as a result and have some holes in the walls that I still have to patch. Of course, those serve as a reminder.

    There was this one particular time, when I think I realized that there was something really wrong with my mind. I was being pushed, verbally, by my boyfriend at the time. He really liked to do that. It was nothing nasty, but fucking relentless! On and On and On he went about me and my problems and how they created all of our problems. I kept telling him to just stop, but of course he didn’t, so I got up and went into the bathroom, shut the door and started screaming “Leave me alone. Just leave me alone!!!” I had passed the meltdown stage.

    He kept talking to me through the door, so I opened it and yanked something off the wall and threw it. It wasn’t enough. I then grabbed a framed photograph that I took of a flower that was hanging on the wall of the bathroom. It was a close up of a thistle. By now things were moving in slow motion for me and it was quite surreal. I smashed the photograph on the floor as hard as I could. I watched the glass shatter into hundreds of tiny pieces and ripple across the hardwood floor. It was so… beautiful. Like skiing on corn snow and watching it rush down the mountain in front of you, or dropping a small pebble into a still pond. I looked up at my now very alarmed boyfriend and pointed to the glass and said, “That is what my mind is like”.

    Last night I was reading to my son and he says, “Well it sucks the car is dead”. I normally wouldn’t like that kind of talk coming from him, but I tolerated it in this situation. “At least I didn’t throw anything”, I said back.  He remembered a time when I foolishly got mad at my iPhone and broke it because I couldn’t get a signal or something. I had to buy a new one. Stupid. So he says to me “Yeah, you don’t do that anymore”. I told him there was a reason for that and I would explain it to him sometime. It was a good affirmation that he could see the difference in me. I have been waiting for that.

     

  • Exhaustion

    My mom thinks I push myself too hard. She thinks that I’m trying to replicate the childhood she gave me with my own son. I try to explain… “Mom, I get up at 5:50, take a half hour for myself, then get in the shower, get ready for work, wake up my son, fix him breakfast, make sure the pets are fed and the dog is let out, fix him lunch, make sure everything is ready to go, drop him off at school, go to work,  work 8 hours, get out at 4:30, pick him up at 5, come home, take care of the dog, help my son with his homework, read over the ton of paperwork that comes home with him from school, make dinner, eat, get him in the shower, put him to bed, read to him, go and clean up the kitchen, start the dishwasher, make coffee for the morning, it’s now 9:30 pm, take an hour to myself, pass out and start it all over again tomorrow.”

    The biggest challenge is keeping my cool. Before I had medication and didn’t understand my bipolar, I would be consoling myself with a bottle of wine and junk food, which is now why I’m 10 pounds overweight. I often got absolutely overwhelmed and would start sobbing in the kitchen around 10 pm, trying not to make too much of a racket and wake my son. Yes, I keep my cool much better now… and when I want to throw some little piece of electronic bullshit across the room (like my iPad) when it won’t connect to the internet, so I can watch one measly T.V. show for a half hour, I don’t. I can stop myself now. That’s a little bit of a relief. I can feel the rage coming on and chill out before disaster strikes.

    I still wake up in the morning and look in the mirror and don’t recognize myself. I think, “What in the hell has happened to you? You look like shit on a stick!” So, I apply a ton of makeup only to discover at work under the harsh florescent lighting that I still have the black rings under my eyes. I still have the furrowed brow and the now ever present downturn of the mouth. No need to worry about laugh lines.

    All in all I have one job – keep my son sheltered from all this. He doesn’t deserve to take on these burdens and thankfully I am still able to do this for him. Will there come a day when my stamina runs out? Am I headed for an inevitable crash and burn? I need to figure out how to have one hour to myself when I come home in the evening. I think it might be vital for my mental health. I’ll continue to try and figure out what that would look like. Until then, I look forward to the small moments of peace that do grace me. My dog who welcomes me home, my mom who unexpectedly makes me a wonderful meal, my son’s pride… It’s enough.

     

  • Trashed Relationships

    My relationship of 5 years has dissolved. I can’t help but think that my bipolar has something to do with it. I understand that this illness has affected all of my relationships in the past. I’ve lost countless friends. Moved every two years; ran away from everyone after creating a scene. The question is, how do I examine what my bipolar brings to the table, without creating self-doubt?

    I was trying to explain it to someone a couple weeks ago. Aside from the brain being totally different in someone without bipolar disorder (more on that later), there is a filter through which I see the world. We all have them. A mothers view of things is completely different from a single woman. The rich businessman can’t possibly see the same view of the world as some homeless guy sleeping under a bridge. We all have a filter. The only difference is mine is not a completely healthy one.

  • The Beginning

    I’m writing this for my son. He’s nine. Super smart. Gifted they say, but I’m not sure this is the time to explain to him that his mom has bipolar disorder.

    When I was diagnosed last May at 41 years old I felt a mixture of things. A part of me thought “Well, I really am crazy”, a part of me was absolutely horrified, and the other part was just laughing at the fact that I was seeing a psychiatrist. For the most part though, I was relieved… I had suspected something was wrong with me for a very long time.

    Being a teenager was hell. My parents probably wanted to strangle me and burry me out back in a shallow grave most of the time. My 20’s and 30’s seemed to coast right along though. I pursued a creative field of work and as a graphic designer. My highs were encouraged. I would stay up for days, birthing a new idea that would turn into a masterpiece (or so I thought). It would continue on for another week as I finished the work and then finally collapsed in exhaustion… I never had an unhappy client. They paid me good money for my work. I was rewarded for my hypomanic state.

    I never seemed to experience a serious depression until my divorce. Insomnia came for a visit. I still struggle with it today. I was awake for about three weeks. There was no mania, no feeling on-top-of-the-world, and no great creations, I just didn’t sleep. When I did finally drift off I was plagued by horrible nightmares, so I finally called my doctor. She prescribed Ambien for sleep and Valuim for anxiety, telling me that other than a death in the family, I was dealing with two of the three most stressful events we can experience, divorce and moving.

    Things seemed to straighten out rather quickly with these two medications, so I falsely assumed I suffered from mild anxiety and continued to refill the Valium until my doctor told me no more. I tried that for a while, then decided to order it online and take things into my own hands, just like we all do when undiagnosed. I was once again trying to mange my moods that were forever trying to manage me.

    Then something different happened. Something shocking and awful. I was driving down the interstate and I thought, If I just drift over the median, I could be hit by an oncoming semi, and I wondered if I would die instantly. I wondered if it would hurt, or if my brain would just stop thinking, if I would just cease to exist. The thought persisted. I found my reality slipping like a hallucination as I drove at 80mph down the highway. I started to cry, hyperventilate, scream at the top of my lungs. I was in some sort of distorted Alice in Wonderland world of terror.

    I had the sense to get off the freeway, but then experienced a lot of confusion. Where do I go? Should I call someone? I should call someone!… This is Bad. This is really, really bad. A part of me knew I should go to the hospital, but then what? Do I just walk into the ER and say, “I think I’m losing my mind?” I sat in a parking lot and tried to wait it out. I knew what town I was in, and that it was daytime, but that was the extent of my grip. I knew I didn’t want to lose my son by being locked up. So I just sat there and didn’t tell anyone about anything.

    Ahhh……. psychotic breaks. That was the first of several.