Click one of these links Home Health HelpDesk Photo Album Favorite WebSites Space and Planet Earth Welcome To Dems PC Consulting, Portland Oregon!
|
|
I first became
aware of "mental illness" when I was eight years old. My mother began
spending all of her time sitting in a rocking chair-rocking, crying, very
frightened and unbearably sad. No one asked her why she was crying. No one took
the time to sit with her and hold her hand. Instead they took her away to a
mental institution. That's where she spent the next eight years of her life.
This brilliant woman with a degree in nutrition, ahead of her time in her
understanding of the effects of food on the body, deeply caring and
compassionate, was treated with 150 electric shock treatments interspersed with
various experimental drugs available at the time to stop her sadness. She spent
her days behind a series of thick locked doors, sharing a sleeping and living
space with 50 other women, in a dark, smelly ward with no privacy-50 beds in one
room with only the space for a small night stand between. They wondered why she
didn't get better, why she kept crying. Instead she got worse. Instead of just
crying, she started wringing her hands, walking in circles repeating over and
over, "I want to die." Several times she tried to kill herself.
Sometimes she was very different. She would be racing all over the place,
laughing hysterically, behaving in a bizarre manner that made us even more
frightened than we were when she was depressed. I know this
because every Saturday morning for eight years, I went with my three brothers
and sister to visit her. It was a truly frightening experience. This was not the
person we had remembered as our mother. They told us she was incurably mentally
ill. They told us not to bother to come and see her anymore. But we did. She
still remembers that the next time we came to see her after they told us not to
come and see her anymore, we brought her a big bouquet of gladiolas. Something strange
happened. A volunteer noticed she wasn't having these episodes anymore. She was
even helping to take care of the other patients. She still wonders if it had
anything to do with that volunteer who sat with her for hours and listened to
her, even took her for some rides. She says she kept apologizing for going on
so, but the volunteer said to go right ahead. So she kept talking. She talked
and talked and talked. Then she got herself discharged. This incurably
mentally ill woman came home to her family, got a job working as a dietitian in
the public schools, kept that job for twenty years while keeping up with the
activities of her ever growing family of children, grandchildren, and great
grandchildren. She's now 82 years old. Thirty-eight years ago she got out of the
"hospital". On many days I feel as if she has more energy and
enthusiasm for life than I do. She's never taken any psychiatric drugs.
Incurably mentally ill? She will never
remember what it was like when we were little. Her memory of those years was
wiped out by electro shock. She lost 8 precious years of her life and had to
overcome the stigma faced by any person who has spent time in a mental
institution. Sometimes I
fantasize about my mother's life. How might this story have been different?
Suppose when Mom said that she wanted a part time job-just before this sadness
and crying started -Dad had said, "Sure Kate, what can I do to help?"
Suppose her women friends and her lovely Pennsylvania Dutch family had gathered
around, listening for hours on end, holding her hand, empathizing with her,
crying with her-then what would have happened? Suppose they had offered to take
the kids for a day or two, or a week, or a month so she could do some nice
things for herself. Suppose they had offered her a two week cruise in the
Caribbean. A daily massage. Suppose they had taken her out to dinner and a good
movie, a play or a concert. Suppose someone had told her to get out and kick up
her heels, to read a good book, go to a lecture on the importance of good
nutrition. Suppose, suppose, suppose........ Maybe I would have
had a mother when I was growing up. That would have been nice. My brothers and
sisters would have liked one too. I'm sure my Dad would have liked to have a
wife and my grandmother would have liked to have her daughter in her life. Most
important, my mother would have had herself, with all her memories intact. Suppose, 20 years
ago, instead of going to the psychiatrist to be told that mental illness is
hereditary and I have the same disease as my mother, I had searched out my
friends to hold me and listen while I cried and laughed. Suppose my husband had
said, "Don't worry, Mary Ellen, I can handle things. Just take a break. You
deserve it." Suppose the family had pooled their resources and sent me on a
hiking trip to the White Mountains or encouraged me to take some much coveted
courses, or taken me out to lunch and for a bike ride, or to pick flowers, or
brought me a kitten. Suppose the house had been decorated with beautiful
flowers. Suppose I had had my own little space to go to whenever I wanted and do
what I needed to do for myself. Suppose I had known that I had some value and
could do for myself whatever it was I needed to make myself feel better. Go to
every movie playing for a month. Whatever. Just suppose. Maybe I wouldn't
have spent too much of my life in mental institutions looking for ever elusive
answers to my pain, too many years with my brain in a drugged fog, too many
years of deep sadness and suicidal ideation interspersed with periods of
outlandish behavior. It has taken me years to undo the damage. Maybe there would
be no tremor in my hands, maybe some of the relationships that ended for me
during those hard years would still be part of my life. Maybe my career and
reputation would have remained intact instead of having to start all over again
at 50. Through all those
foggy years something was stirring in me. Something that knew somehow that all
of this was not right. Something that caused me to ask my psychiatrist how
people deal with these illnesses on a day to day basis. He said he would get me
that information. (Finally a promise of some useful help) When I returned the
next week in great anticipation he told me no such information had ever been
gathered. The only information he could give me was on psychiatric treatment,
medication and restraint. From someplace deep inside me a voice kept saying
"this is not right". The voice got louder and louder. For the last four
years I have dedicated my life to finding out how other people cope, and the
more I learned, and put this learning into practice in my own life, the better I
felt. I learned that there is a silent but very courageous group of people all
over the country who, like me, have been told that they are incurably mentally
ill. These people have not given up. They have found the way out of the maze and
I have become the vehicle for getting their important messages out to the rest
of the world. I gather the information and spread it as far and wide as it needs
to go. Through seminars, lectures, books, videos and grass roots networking
|