Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Hospitalization #2

I have been lucky enough that I have only been hospitalized (thus far) twice in my life. The second, being the most recent, was longer than the first and I had impeccable timing...

It is quarter to seven on Mother's Day. Instead of making my mom feel special - she'll be visiting me in the hospital. I have been a major source of stress for the majority of the people in my life - but especially my mother. With the various ups and downs - and down doesn't even qualify where I've been - she has been standing by me. When I have been unable to help myself, unable to do things for myself, unable to go on - there she is.

She is the rock and heart of our family. She is the carbon that holds the bonds together.

I have at various points called her Super Woman, but even Super Man had kryptonite. My mom had a lot on her shoulders. She was a part-time single mom, because as my dad did his "fatherly" and "husbandly" "duty to provide" (his words not mine) - she not only "provided," but also took care of my sister and I. She drove us off to day care, went to work, went to the gym, picked us up, mowed the law, cleaned the house, paid the bills, all with time to tuck me in at night and read me a bed time story. The fondest childhood memories that I have of my mom is her reading me stories. She didn't do funny voices or all that crap you see parents in movies doing. She just read, but she explained every picture. Taking the time to capture every detail. One of my favourite books was a Disney version of The Little Train that Could. Goofy was the conductor and he was driving this train up the hill. She would explain: "There's goofy in his train. he's the conductor" or "There's goofy trying to make it up the hill."

I think I can, I think I can...

Goofy made it up the hill - slow and steady. Now I feel that this is a mantra of my life. "I think I can." Sometimes I'm very slow and not so steady, but I always try and think that I can achieve something even with this bizzare thing hanging over me.

When I was a little older, maybe 9 or 10, my dad was gone a lot. My mom made my sister and I listen to Aretha Franklin, Marvin Gaye, Otis Redding - all the motown greats. At 9, I knew all the words on the Motown Greatest Hits album and in cliched form, the three of us would take up our respective microphones - a hair brush, mash potato masher, and a ladle - we would dance to The Supremes "RESPECT." We had an entire choregraphed routine by the end and we lip synched all the words and when my dad came home, we'd perform it all in front of him. These are the moments that I remember. My mom did her best to make sure my sister and I felt the love of two parens - even when there was for the majority of the time - one.

Here we are Mother's Day 2009 and I am in the hospital. I am not even in the psych ward yet. I am in the emergency holding cell. You know the communal ward where every patient in limbo - between admissions and actually having a room - wait. There are geriatrics screaming, a dude with a swollen arm, and me all healthy physically, but mentally battered and bruised.

I haven't slept and I am still feeling the madness wash over me. The depression is coming on strong. I feel deflated, flat. I feel like my limbs are filled with lead. I can't sleep, but I'm not awake.

I think the best analogy for mental illness is that of a shadow. For the most part you can go on your daily routine. Your shadow is there, but you hardly notice it. It's just there - serving no real useful purpose. Suddenly, it's midnight and you hear a creak run down the hallway. Your once safe bedroom looks scary as it casts its own shadows. The clothes hanging in your closet take shape and suddenly someone is in there. You close your eyes trying to make these visions disappear. You stare into the darkness and you see a figure. You swear it's a person - an intruder - ready to strike. Your heart rate increases, your left arm tingles - okay it's just a panic attack. You take a deep breath. Your heart is now pounding out of your chest and it's all you can hear in your ears. Your body breaks out into a chold sweat and you shiver as you try and hide under the covers - just like when you were six. You hide until you've calmed down enough to rationalize with yourself: "My eyes are playing tricks on me. It's my own over active imagination." So you sit up - clutching your knees to your chest - you slowly turn your head and just as you do head lights shine into your bedroom window and suddenly your shadow is seven feet tall and ready to strike.

You are frightened by the shadow of yourself. It's you, but not. It's you, but distorted. It's your face, blacked out. There you are face to face with yourself. A cut-out of yourself. An empty reflection of yourself. But in this shadow you are more frightened than if it was a burglar that broke into your house. Instead of breaking into your house and taking all your wordly possessions - it breaks into your mind. Suddenly, the place that seemed secure as a swiss bank account is broken into and turned upside down.

Your shadow doesn't want anything.
It just wants to tear everything upside down.

It throws a vase. Overturns a table. Rips the drapes down. Breaks a window or two. But you try to rationalize with it: "Hey, let's just talk about this. You don't need to do this. There's still time to just turn around and leave."

It ignores you and topples over a table in retaliation. Then it's your book case, with all your beautiful books that are alphabetized by author. As the book case is falling the books start toppling out and hit the floor with a light thud, thud, thud. The book case lands like the lid of a coffin.

Again you try to reason with it: "Please, just stop. We can figure this out. You don't need to make this any worse than it already is." Again, your shadow ignores you and bounds down the stairs, flinging pictures off the wall as he goes. You try to reason with him again: "You know, I really don't have time for this. I have a life and responsibilities. I don't have time to put everything back together, because you are feel like showing up!"

Your shadow turns to you for the first time: "You have nothing. You're a fuck up and a failure. You have ruined everything for everyone and you'd be better off dead. Oh, did I forget to mention you're ugly, fat, and an idiot? Man, how do you even have parents that love you?" He smashes a plate with this last remark. "And another thing," suddenly your shadow has eyes and there is a spark of malice in them, "you don't matter to anyone. Nobody loves you. You think they do, but they don't. Not even your parents. They only pretend because they have to. And your partner - he's just not that into you. He's just waiting for the moment when he can leave you." With this last statement he flips the dinner table over and slams out the door.

And you, you are left standing with the wreckage of your life. Your entire life turned upside down in a moment, in the middle of the night. This is what happens without any warning, without any clue when he will be back, but you are left to clean up the mess and attempt to piece your life back together.

Unfortunately, this happened on Mother's Day. The one day that I'm supposed to honour the woman who brought me into the world.

Instead, I sit in hospital limbo - wondering what I am going to do with this mess.

4 comments:

  1. been there. done that.

    good luck and and all that.

    A little self-prescribing never hurts. well, it does, but in a good way.

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  2. Been there, done that too.

    Hope you find a spark to guide you.

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  3. You know, sometimes we need the rain 'cos the sun on his own cannot make a rainbow.
    Mothers are Mothers and they wouldn't want it any other way, than being a Mother to their children.Whenever, however; forever!

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  4. What is life if not the love of a mother for her child? It is lifes greatest gift in any form or fashion. A child gives us reason for living and a life worth living. You have given your mother the greatest gift of all and that is the beautiful child to bury her love so deep in. Hang in there. Life is so fragile and love is somehow eternal, -d

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