It’s hard facing the truth; that I might actually need to be
in a place like this. I daydream about a
day when my illness doesn’t govern my life.
Just to imagine being on a medicine that always works and not having to
warn people about what to expect; that I can be normal all the time and have
healthy relationships. It’s unbelievably
embarrassing to look at someone you respect and tell them that you will soon
lose control. When they find out the
person they thought you were, isn’t you at all.
So many of them put you on this pedestal and act like you were too good
to be true when you fall short. So
short…
When I was nineteen years old I got drunk and confessed to
the guy I was dating that my father was schizophrenic and that I was having
hallucinations. My friend Nathan from
work was there too. He heard me say
these things but, unlike the guy I was dating, he didn’t run for the hills. Nathan is my best friend now; the only friend
I have left, the only friend I don’t have to take care of. When a friend of Nathan and I’s asked him
(unprompted by me) if he thought he and I should be lovers he said that he knew
if we got involved he wouldn’t be able to focus on anything else. It’s refreshing to get such honesty, such
logic from another human being. I just
wish I could find someone else, a friend, lover, or even support person, that
would accept me as crazy. I wish there
was someone else I don’t have to dress it up for. I wish I didn’t have to guard myself by
spouting off information. I wish, I
wish, I wish…
I waited until my early twenties to be diagnosed with more
than I had been dreading since I was a child.
At ten years old I found out my father was a paranoid schizophrenic and
I did as much research as I could to find out if I would possibly inherit the
disorder. With the amount of research I
did even at ten I knew that I could someday be as odd and as crazy as my
father. Not to mention the resentment I
felt towards my mother for leaving someone so sick. When I found out my mom had a mental illness
as well I tried hard to forgive her, to no avail.
I try, unsuccessfully, to stay healthy. As I got over the stage of thinking I didn’t
need my meds, I began trying something new:
Doing everything right. I took my
meds at the same time every day, I exercised, I watched my diet, no drugs
(which had been my policy all along), no alcohol. I continued on that path until, time after
time, I ended up back in the hospital.
With every hospitalization it became clearer and clearer that what I was
doing was having no bearing on whether or not I got sick again. I gained weight and I had bad side effects
from my meds. I kept making it to the
same place: The hospital. And even when they decided to put me in
placement I stayed normal for awhile and then I would swing one way or the
other, until I was normal (or they perceived me to be) just long enough for them to let me go.
It was also becoming clearer and clearer that I was unable
to work or go to school. It was a never
ending cycle. I would start work or
school, but as soon as my symptoms made it too hard for me to be able to
function I would have to call in or put off the work. Every time I didn’t go to work or didn’t
complete an assignment I would start to feel guilty and I would slide further
down. Again I would hit bottom and the
cycle would begin again. Even after
volunteering, trying to make myself useful, I ended up not being able to move
from the couch as I slid into a deep depression.
I have accepted that taking medication will be a daily
ritual for the rest of my life. I’m
starting to face the fact that none of them will work for long and will
consistently need to be changed. I still
hold out a glimmer of hope that I will find a medication that will work
forever. Other people have this
luxury. It would only be fair for me to
have it too. But fair life is not and my
glimmer of hope is slowly fading with each med change.
With each medication I expect side effects. My favorite is not being able to eat. I’ve had stomach problems since I was in high
school and it seems to creep up on me when I start taking some new-to-me
meds. Usually this is accompanied by
feeling the need to spit my food out. I
don’t really want to, I just physically feel like I should. I tend to find foods that I can manage to
stomach and try to eat them when I can.
While some may think it’s a great way to lose weight and shouldn’t take
for granted, it’s really miserable. Just
one more thing you lose control of.
My second favorite is weight gain, everyone’s favorite I
think. The antipsychotic/mood stabilizer
that seems to work best for me has caused me to gain sixty pounds. I used to be a cute little thing (I have the
pictures to prove it) and now I’m a short little blob. And, because of the rapid weight gain, even
though I’ve never been pregnant, I do have stretch marks.
Speaking of being pregnant, I never will be. I don’t think that anyone should base their
decision to (or to not) have children on mine.
Having babies is a deeply personal issue. It seemed less of one to me before I fell in
love with a little girl named Sydney.
She is my mother’s soon-to-be ex-husband’s granddaughter. She is a beautiful little girl, full of energy
and so smart. I met her when she was a
year and a half old and spent a lot of time babysitting her and just spending
time with her. A situation caused me not
to be able to see her hardly at all and my heart was broken. It shattered when in an email her father said
that he would never allow me to watch her overnight or for an extended period
of time. He gave the reason that when I
would take my medications she was not safe with me.
Before I spent time teaching her new things and giggling
with her I didn’t really think about having children. I was hurt by his accusations, but it got me
thinking about whether or not I would be a fit parent if I were to have a child
of my own. After pushing aside the hurt
and looking at the whole picture I knew what I had to do. In December of 2010 I had a tubal ligation, a
procedure to make me sterile. I am still
grieving everything I gave up. Most
people who can have children only think about my not being able to have a
baby. I think about not being able to
feel my child grow inside me and feeling their heart beat and kicks from inside
my belly. I think about not being able
stare at them through the hospital’s nursery window. I think about not being able to hold their
tiny hand and feeling their grip. I
think about not being able to teach them their ABC’s and how to tie their shoes. I think about not being able to see me in
their face and helping them learn right and wrong. I think about how without children, I will
have no grandchildren to spoil. I think
about how adoption agencies don’t give babies to crazy people.
In an effort to soothe myself while I go through a long
grieving process, I remind myself of my reason for making that decision; I
can’t stop taking medication for nine months while I’m pregnant, I hardly want
to impose dealing with me, having my illness, on people who are willing and I
especially will not impose me as a burden on my child, I am not willing to pass
along a strong predisposition for mental illness, not to mention the selfish
reasoning that I cannot watch my child go through what I have, and, lastly, I
don’t know if I could make it through making the right decision, if I were to
accidently become pregnant, to have an abortion. Why, you ask, does it have to be
permanent? I answer with two very good
reasons; they are not going to cure schizophrenia in the next fifteen years
(hell, they not even really sure what causes it), and because when I am manic I
make bad decisions, for example, possibly having my birth control removed and
becoming pregnant. While there are slim
chances that even with my surgery I could become pregnant, well…they’re slim.
While I’m listing the problems with being crazy, I’ll add
one more: Men. Men want what we all want, someone who’s
attractive with little to no baggage, who can give them a family. Might as well cross all three of them off for
me. I’m overweight, have enough baggage
you need a semi to pull it, and I’m not able to have children by my own
decision. It seems that men who are
willing to accept these things are not the men I’m looking for. I seem to find men who are attractive ok, but
if they are (or think they are) willing to accept all the problems with me they
definitely have baggage (and more than I can carry). And if they are ok with me not having kids
they usually already have some. That is
something I simply can’t deal with.
The feelings I have about being schizoaffective are neatly
tucked away in these pages. It’s exhausting, going from one extreme to the other, over
and over again. Trying to figure out what to say to people, how to explain, well, everything.