Passion Is The Gateway Drug: Transforming Perceived Mental Illness Into A Blessing - Blog 1

in #introduceyourself7 years ago (edited)

Welcome to the 21st Century Mental Health
Reformation, Transformation, Evolution and Revolution!

We are here together for transformation through allowing ourselves to follow our bliss. Let’s re-imagine and re-create how the world perceives mental illness and mental wellness and more importantly how those of us with these experiences perceive our selves. A major component of this reformation is introducing integral methods towards leading lives beyond hope and surviving into inspiration and thriving!

Good Evening and welcome to the first entry in this series where I will share about my personal journey with the Bipolar Experience and the tips, tricks, methods and realities which I have used for my self or have heard from others. I've spent the past 23 years on this adventure and the last 6 travelling the world as part of a sociotechnological project. During this time I have sat with and spoken to people from all walks of life who share similar experiences and we have all learned together what pieces are part of the mental health transformation puzzle. I look forward to sharing with you and becoming part of a community of practice here that has resonant intentions and visions.

My first several entries in this series will be taking us back in time beginning in 2011 when I wrote an essay as part of a co-authored book. From there, I will be sharing some more about the last few years with some video clips and other writing, until we catch up to the now and what's happening around the world both for myself and when it comes to the absolutely required transformation on this planet from individual responsibility all the way through to the pharmaceutical companies and national polices and perceptions. There is TONS of amazing stuff happening right now in the world of grass roots activism onward.

I would be very pleased to connect & dialogue with like-spirited people here on Steemit who are working in these fields (all related) and interested in sharing their insights, perspectives and experiences. I am also keenly interested to connect with people I can collaborate with in spirit motivated social action. Please tag people you know interested in these subject matters. Thank You <3

Onward to the story... 3a0c796bc6879ba2d817f5697d4878b3.jpg

My chapter was called The Hero’s Journey & inspired by the epochal work of Joseph Campbell and the story I share includes some of my most intimate experiences from being diagnosed in the western world, (at age 19), with bipolar disorder and persevering to see my self transforming the perceived shameful and debilitating experiences associated with a mental illness diagnosis into a blessing. The ongoing process of reaching turning-points of acceptance, grace and moving ahead even further with my Hero’s Journey to serve others while I continue exploring, integrating and expanding my own spiritual and physical experience.

"The way to find out about your happiness is to keep your mind on those moments when you really are happy — not excited, not just thrilled, but deeply happy. This requires a little bit of self-analysis. What is it that makes you happy? Stay with it, no matter what people tell you. This is what I call, ‘following your bliss.’ if you do follow your bliss, you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you. And the life that you ought to be living, is the one you are living. Wherever you are, if you are following your bliss, you are enjoying that refreshment, that life within you, all the time. When you can see that, you begin to meet people who are in the field of your bliss, and they open doors for you. I say, follow your bliss and don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were going to be." Joseph Campbell

The Hero’s Journey
Transforming Perceived Mental Illness Into A Blessing

Fall of 1994: I am nineteen and in my first semester of film school in New York. Despite living with three good friends, I suddenly feel very much alone in the big city. All the women here are intimidating, spectacularly beautiful, like models. I can’t tell if they’re my age or thirty, and I certainly don’t dare ask them out. I’m feeling a little depressed about all this, but it’s nothing enormous or earth-shattering.

As Christmas approaches, I start having trouble sleeping. I’ve been reading Zen & The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance night and day, fascinated…. obsessed. Living with fellow film students, and smoking a lot of pot, no one notices anything unusual when I start talking a lot and more and more rapidly, spending money like crazy and still not sleeping. Day 3… Day 5… Day 6… not sleeping. Writing furiously in notebooks. Unable to focus, I cut classes and roam the streets listening to Nirvana.

I am due to take a trip to Italy for the holidays, and after seven days without sleep, I show up at my parents’ house to get the plane tickets. The trip to New Jersey by bus is totally surreal. People’s faces look strange. I spend the two-hour ride speaking with a rabbi about the Bible and listening to Led Zeppelin. The time passes unevenly, sometimes more quickly than I can account for. At other points I’m stuck on a bus to infinity. I get off on Route 9 and walk the mile to my childhood home. “Stairway To Heaven” plays in my headphones as I cross the highway thinking: I will never die.

When I show up at home, my parents’ reaction is strange. Why are they looking at me like that?

“You’re acting very strange,” my mom says. “Are you on drugs?” I protest, laughing, but then at midnight I wake my thirteen-year-old sister and break down crying and talking at her a hundred miles a minute. My emotions feel way too intense, and I can tell I’m scaring her, but I can’t stop. When I tell my parents, “Nothing can hurt me, did you know that? I could walk out into traffic right now and not be hit. Not a scratch, I’m telling you,” my dad says, “We’re taking you to the hospital.” I agree to it; I don’t know why.

When we get to the hospital, I am separated from my parents and taken to a small white room, empty but for a video camera and two chairs, adjacent to the nurses’ station. The nurse tells me, “Wait right here—a social worker will be in to talk with you in two minutes.” And then she closes the door, and I wait. The two minutes go by and nobody comes. I feel totally agitated, wired and panicked, so I get up to leave the room. Wait—it’s been locked! I’m trapped.

I start screaming. “Mom! Dad! Help me! They locked me in here!” I know they’re sitting right there, but I can’t see or talk to them. This is terrifying. Instead of someone coming in right away to hold my hand, say, “Hey, Bret, what’s wrong?” and listen to me, they leave me alone in the room for half an hour. I start going crazy, hurling myself against the door, banging the walls with my fists, screaming and giving the video camera the finger. I am helpless!

When the doors open, help has not arrived. They have nothing to say.
Instead, they lead me into the hall and stick a needle in my arm.

The pain is terrible, and instantly, I go into convulsions. I’m dying! I panic.They’re killing me! They’re actually killing me right in front of my parents!“Mommy, Mommy!” I scream, “Help me, I’m dying!” I feel like a helpless little child. The nurse quickly administers another shot, and I go limp as quickly as I went into convulsions—peaceful, sure this will be the end. But it is an antidote, and the convulsions stop immediately. I look at my parents’ ashen faces. My mother is staring at me. Her eyes are bewildered.

“He is psychotic and possibly a danger to himself and others,” the doctors tell my parents. I am admitted to the psych ward against my will and placed in a sterile white room with nothing in it but a chest of drawers and two single beds. I am in shock. What is happening to me? How can they just take my freedom away? I punch closed fists into the walls until they’re black and blue, screaming, “Let me out of here! Why am I here? What are you doing to me?” My fear is primal and total. I cry like I have never cried before.

The doctors in the psych ward spend two weeks bringing me down from what they call “a severe manic or psychotic episode,” though no one thinks to ask me what is going on. I am so confused—I swallow many different pills, and attend group therapy morning, noon and night. I don’t know what my real thoughts are anymore, and the overall atmosphere is simply bizarre. I hardly see my parents, and when they do come, they don’t know how to treat me. The place is populated by frightening, intense people, all of whom seem completely lost to themselves.

The doctors decide that the next step is to send me to an inpatient clinic in Princeton: So I am still to be imprisoned. I ride there in an ambulance, and when we arrive, my parents meet with more doctors while I sit in the lobby, crushing my glasses to pieces against the tile floor and repeating, “I’m tired of seeing.” My emotions are on total overload. One moment, I feel I’ve seen the light of the world. The next, I’m terrified I’ll be sucked into some vacuum of nothingness. I can’t take it anymore. When my parents come out, they announce: “The doctor thinks you’re bipolar. We’re admitting you to the inpatient wing for treatment.”

That’s when I hear, for the first time, that I have a mental illness.

I feel complete bewilderment. And shame. Because of my now two week-old comment about walking out into traffic, I am placed in the clinic’s suicide ward, in a room with white brick walls. As a fan of the bands Pink Floyd and Nirvana, I have to laugh as I cry: Oh my God—here’s The Wall and they put me on “Lithium.” All day long I hear the incessant click of the air filter in the smoking room and the rhythmic beat of ping-pong balls in the recreation room. Why would they put someone who’s sensitive to sound and slightly paranoid between these two awful, clashing sounds?

But I also find a saving grace: my roommate, Aaron. A Princeton student, he has just gone through a very similar experience to my own, and we share the absurdity of it all as we try to cope. He has kind eyes, and a reassuring voice. My parents bring me a stack of books, including Whitman’s Leaves of Grass.Aaron reads me passages from it in our room. I’ve never had a guy read me poetry before—it is intimate and caring in a way I’m not used to. I think we both save each other, during our first weeks in the clinic.

When I left the clinic six weeks later, I dragged a new and heavy self. My self-confidence, self-worth and self-esteem were totally destroyed; and it was the first time I had ever experienced the devastation of the partner to severe mania—bipolar depression.

For the next ten years I was in and out of the psych ward six times; dosed with a variety of meds; deeply depressed; and addicted to marijuana, which brought on manic episodes every time. I lost the love of my life during one of these episodes—I told her, “I never loved you.” It wasn’t true, but I couldn’t take it back. Regret and unrequited love plunged me further into depression, and drug abuse—I smoked more pot to deal with the emotional and psychic pain. It was a vicious cycle, true insanity; smoking pot over and over again and expecting different results, only to end up in the psych ward again and again.

I was able to finally turn it around at twenty-nine, when I got sick and tired of being sick and tired—sick of depression, not having friends, being in the hospital all the time. One day I thought: You have to quit smoking pot. And you have to take your meds. Do it for a year, and then reevaluate.

It was the right leap of faith. Things slowly got clearer. I could be better, I could still follow my dreams. I started feeling excited about life. I’d been through it all in psych wards, and in all these programs that basically warehouse people. But when you’re young, you don’t want to talk about your illness, even though that’s usually when you’re diagnosed. You don’t want to get help. It’s a terrible irony. When a friend told me about a program of study in psychosocial rehabilitation, I wanted to be part of a new way of treating mental illness, to be part of a proactive, compassionate care I didn’t get when I needed it most.

I would have loved to have someone like me talk to me when I was twenty.

I realized that helping others was a path to helping myself. Revisiting Joseph Campbell, I realized that the hero’s journey he describes was my journey; my odyssey down the rabbit hole of mental illness was like some postmodern suburban vision-quest filled with magic, mysticism and initiation. The hero’s return is in self-mastery, which is ultimately the freedom to live neither anticipating the future nor regretting the past. Looking at myself through a mythic lens, I realized slowly but definitively: Experiencing a mental illness does not mean being an illness. It is not eternal punishment, but a blessing in disguise. I’m a survivor.

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Resteemed, thanks for an awesome post Brett! Wish you best of luck on steemit platform, i'm sure you will find a nice following here. I will probably move over completely to steemit too eventually. Cheers!

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