On this day in my history, I was hospitalized for a psychotic
break. I didn't know it at the time; I thought I was going to a birthday party
rather than the ICU of a psychiatric care center.
Today's five-year, post-breakdown anniversary is a
bittersweet reminder. I celebrate the absence of a re-occurrence, but recall
vividly the horror of the injury.
The name of that disease, its category of illness, and the
shame of it all felt like more than I could accept in the spring of 2010. I
certainly didn't feel I would ever be right or normal.
However with medical treatment and a loving support system,
I did learn I could be healthy and most importantly happy, genuinely happy even
with a feared and disrespected illness as part of my whole.
I came to realize the man-made construct of control
can be destroyed through a force outside of oneself. The savings account, the
physical ability to work, the false sense of security.
I also learned how to rebuild with a more solid foundation.
I do not feel stronger for having survived. I am weaker — more
timid, more hesitant, more fearful. I literally have come to accept I am, in
fact, not strong enough to live
without the help of medical treatment. I have learned I am not strong enough to live without love and support, which I both
give and receive.
A sense of gratitude did emerge from the rubble. I thank God
for each day I am able to wake up symptom free. I appreciate my family, my
friends, and my vocation as a writer. I am indebted for the men and women who
came before me to study,understand, and treat mental illness so those afflicted can
live with health. I learned to see the beauty of nature, and through this I recognize
the evidence of divinity.
The title of my book, "Stress Fracture: A Memoir of Psychosis"
speaks to the temporary nature of psychosis, a fracture, something that can be
repaired. A stress fracture — differing from other bone fractures — results
from repeated pressure put on a bone, which over time causes a break. Psychosis
can be like that; the repeated pressure of living with an untreated or
mistreated mental illness forces a fissure in sanity.
The book was shared so others can recognize many
of the symptoms of a chronic mental illness can heal. People with mental
illness can live well and enjoy the view from a place of a healthy mind, body,
and soul.
Happy spring; happy new life. For my Catholic friends, on
Easter Sunday sing those Alleluias jubilantly.