Thursday, October 13, 2011

Oh, hey there.

Pills. A nightmare come to life, and at a time when I was already ill-equipped to deal with anything of the shocking or difficult variety. At a time when my support structure had eroded and crumbled beneath me. At a time when I already hated myself.

Really it could be worse, and this is the mantra that I repeat inwardly when I will myself to ingest the little buggers, the chemical cocktail supposedly designed to take the edge off a manic episode, to impede overactive receptors in my dopamine pathway, to slow things down. To dope me up. It could be worse, I say. I could be worse, because it probably will get worse, if it doesn't get better soon.

That whole "you aren't your illness" thing, I like it. I like it because it tells people not to be ashamed or to consider themselves failures or fuck-ups or drains on society. But really, nice as those words are for people who need the coddling, they are absolute bullshit. I am my illness as much as I am a university student or a french canadian or a woman. I have taken enough sociology to recognize this. I have adopted my illness as part of my protean self, and I am my illness. As long as I am ill, provided I am able to function enough to think, I will be my illness, and my illness will be me. It will seep through the chemical haze and take hold of me and I will lose control, and when I regain it again, it will be me who is red-handed, who has to own up, whose reputation and relationships and self-worth are made to suffer, because my illness and I are one and the same.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Dearest Manda,
I am new to your blog so late to the party. A couple of quick responses. First, I sense your intelligence. You can't hide your light under a basket, digital or otherwise. (The Dutch word for basket, btw, is 'maand', if that helps:-)

Second, it seems to me that you have great wisdom despite your protestations to the contrary and the dysfunctional guise you have been cornered into adopting in your life. Manda, Hashem willing, the wisdom can come, eventually, that this outer guise is a Doppelganger. It is our way of concealing our true self in the world until the time comes when we are ready to emerge as our True Selves.

Hope this helps in some small way.

Love from a Karaxsian Friend