Archive for the ‘Mental Health’

OurBipolar - A new community space for people with manic depression06.07.08

It’s new.

It’s exciting.

It’s an absolutely brilliant idea!

Have you been searching for a place where you can be accepted for who you are not what you are? A place where someone with bipolar can feel safe and secure? Well you have found it. OurBipolar is the first social networking site designed specifically for people with the condition known as bipolar.

Earlier on this week I learned of a fantastic new place on the net where sufferers of bipolar can gather together and form their own little community. It’s called Our Bipolar and can be found at www.ourbipolar.com. I immediately signed up because this is an initiative which deserves to succeed. So if you’re suffering from bipolar/manic depression then get your butts on over and sign up - join in the forums, join in the groups, make connections, find help and support and make new friends. What are you waiting for?

You can visit OurBipolar here: www.ourbipolar.com

Posted in Bipolar, Forum, Mental Healthwith 1 Comment →

“Takin’ Over the Asylum” RELEASED at last!06.07.08

Takin Over the Asylum DVD Cover 

Some months ago I wrote a post all about the best damn TV show concerning mental illness I have ever seen. It’s beats, hands down, any other piece of fictional media on the subject. So forget your films and made for TV telemovies, this is the KING and QUEEN of all fictional mental health television…Takin Over the Asylum is here!

…for years people have been petitioning for it’s release on VHS and then later DVD and finally, it seems, we are a few days away from it being released! According to Amazon.co.uk it is to be released on 9 June 2007 in the UK and I will check with my sources to make sure this is the case.

You can read my original piece on Takin’ Over the Asylum by simply clicking here

OR BY CLICKING HERE YOU CAN WHISK YOURSELF TO AMAZON TO PRE-ORDER A COPY

Posted in Film and TV, Mental Health, mental illnesswith 2 Comments →

My ‘life’ over the last few months06.05.08

My life since deciding to cease writing the blog has been a roller coaster of ups and downs, as is often the case in the life of someone suffering from bipolar. My physical and mental health has been deteriorating, slowly, but I’m working hard to find the strength to keep fighting on and rebuild my life as best I can. I guess the ultimate goal is to find some form of normality which will allow me to feel as comfortable as I am able.

Since writing the last post all those weeks (months) ago:

  • I was (finally) given some medication, which I have been taking for nearly two months now. At this point a combination of Depakote and Citilopram. I am slowly weaning myself off the Citilopram, as per instructed, and am currently taking 750mg Depakote a day to try and stabilise my moods. So far, so-so. I’m still up and down, and right now am descending into a down with the odd glimmer of possibly entering a mixed episode as flashes of hypomania keep recurring. My weight is increasing as a result of the Depakote, a common side effect, and other side effects have been recurrent and continuous  with some fading quicker than others.
  • My brother got married. Although the day was hard for me to get through, with all the social anxiety etc etc etc which has been talked about before, I wouldn’t have missed it for the world. I got to wear a kilt, and I have to say I felt absolutely marvellous all day. I’m considering purchasing one just to wear on a daily basis, they’re that comfortable. All those guys looking stiff and uncomfortable in their suits - and me swaying around with a kilt. Awesome!
  • I am now back in Australia, Melbourne to be exact. That’s really a whole other post which I’m sure will follow in time, but it feels wonderful to be back. However awesome it was to be in the UK again and see places I never thought I would, it made me realise what I always knew - which is that Melbourne is my home now. It always will be. And if I’m going to try and make my life anywhere close to what I want it to be; this is where I want to be.

As for the blog, things will probably be a little different than it was before. Back then I was struggling with so much; severe depression, self harm, bipolar diagnosis, struggling with anxiety and PTSD, fighting for help and medication, trying to come to terms with crippling loneliness and isolation, daily hallucinations and periods of mild psychosis, homelessness and frequent suicidal thoughts. In all honesty all of the above still applies (I have to say, after researching Depakote and learning that a side effect of the drug is recurrent self harm and suicidal thoughts, I can say that this is indeed true!) my life is lonely and frequently I don’t cope, but I am working hard to fight on as I always have. I’m sure posts on mental illness will still be present, but I plan to share a little more about what makes me a person, what makes me ‘me’; Addy.

This is kindof what I had originally planned when the blog commenced, so I guess I’ll just see what happens. See whether anyone still reads, and see what ends up occurring :)

Posted in Isolation, Loneliness, Medication, Mental Health, hopewith 1 Comment →

Ummm, what just happened?06.05.08

I guess everyone’s wondering what just happened…nothing for months and then…BAM…a new blog which had only a handful of posts and then…BAM…nothing…and then…BAM…suddenly this old blog of mine get’s several new posts which all look rather familiar because they’re the ones which appeared on the old blog. Well, there is an explanation, which is simple:

I was having SOOOOOOOOOO many problems getting things to work properly on the new blog which was really just pissing me off, and because I had such a wonderful blog that worked perfectly and correctly (most) of the time I thought…to hell with it…people are allowed to change their minds…so everything’s been shifted across and this is where I’m gonna be writing from now on.

Understand?

Probably not, but then, who does, as I certainly don’t.

All that I am, all that I ever was: My Journey with Depression…continues, a little different, a little more eclectic, but Addy’s back and (other blog/indeterminate problems aside) I may hang around for a while.

Posted in Mental Healthwith No Comments →

Thank You and Goodbye04.11.08

That, as they say, is your lot :)

Sure, there are some mightily depressing posts within this blog, but there is also a lot of humor, positivity and excitement - which if you haven’t already seen, have a wee exploratory dig around and enjoy it. I’m not removing the blog, so feel free to pop back and read all which you may have missed, and re-read all your personal favourites.

Mental Illness is an incredibly destructive force which needs to be understood and accepted far more than it currently is. It is an area of health which is destroying lives and making living - for sufferers and carers alike - so very painful and difficult for millions of people around the world. The misjudgement, misconceptions and stigma surrounding mental health needs to well and truly stop, and I hope this blog has in some way altered your perceptions of this topic.

I’d like to take this opportunity to thank each and every one of you from the bottom of my heart for coming on this journey through depression and mental health with me.

I have learned a lot about myself, and I hope you’ve each taken something away with you as well.

If you’ve only just found this blog the best place to start is with the
INDEX
after that, just have a mosey around and see what you find

This is me saying adios, cheerio, au revoir, good luck and goodbye.

With love and hugs always,

Addy xx

Posted in Mental Healthwith 4 Comments →

Smiles, hugs and laughter (aka - the power of friendship in fighting depression)04.11.08

So here we are, after nearly 6 months, over two hundred posts across three different web addresses, the end is here. So what better topic to write about than what is, in my opinion, the greatest treatment for depression. I should point out that all names in this post have been changed and may or may not reflect gender, aside from mine of course!)

hugs.jpg

For a moment I would like you imagine what it would be like to have no friends. Now I know there are people out there who already know what this feels like so I’m not trying to rub it in, but for those of you with friends, think for a moment about what life would be like without those special people in it.

Think about what it would be like to be completely by yourself.

No one to share smiles with.
No one to share laughs with.
No one to share happiness with.
No one to share drinks with.
No one to share moments with.
No on to share to share problems with.
No one to spend time with.

Are you imagining it yet? No? Try thinking about:

What it would be like to spend your birthday alone; no presents, no cards, no Happy Birthday.
What it would be like to spend Christmas alone; no presents, no cards, no Happy Christmas.
What it would be like to spend New Years alone; no drinks, no laughter, no midnight kisses.

Any closer?

Never any hugs.
Never any giggles.
Never any lunches.
Never any anything.

Just you
Yourself
Always
Alone

Living your life with no-one to share anything with. You get up for work alone and come home alone. You are excited and happy but have no-one to share it with. You receive bad news and have no one to talk to, no one to give you comforting hugs or words of advice or wisdom. You are by yourself, isolated and alone 100% of the time. Can you imagine that? Can you imagine what that might do to your mind? To spend day after week after month after year in complete isolated solitude? Well, let me tell you. It fucks you up.

Isolation. Loneliness. Solitude. Three of the most painful words in the human language. And to someone suffering from depression or another mental illness, they are potentially words which could be written on someone’s death certificate as cause of death.

Over the years I have tried everything I can think of to combat, control and overcome depression:

Alternative therapy
Chinese Remedies
Herbal remedies, such as St John’s Wort
Counseling and psychologists
Self Help books
Russian Therapy
‘Overcoming Depression’ workbooks and audio books
Relaxation therapy
Yoga and Alexander Technique
Massage
Meditation
Anti-Depressant medication
TV and movie therapy

None of them worked!

I have spent the majority of my life alone, in fact I can count on one hand the number of true friends I’ve had in my life.

When I was but a teenager I didn’t really have anyone to talk to. I knew people but I wouldn’t say I had many friends. Not friends I could talk to, not friends I could share my self-harm, depression and social anxiety with. Teenagers are some of the cruelest people in the world anyway, so the likelihood any would have understood any of these things was slim. Thus I was forced to fight all of these things alone, and through determination and at times painful agony, I was able to get the self harm under control. Nothing was working with the social anxiety and depression and I was falling ever further into the abyss.

Once I felt I had the self-harm under control I tried to find ways in which to combat the depression and social anxiety – and my option was to go backpacking. I had discovered hostels during my period as a runaway and wanted to travel Scotland, a country I could afford and loved passionately. The months I spent traveling the country is one of my fondest memories, but I would the evening sitting in the hostel lounge reading books or scribbling in my journal, too anxious to meet and talk to the people I was writing about, giving them obvious nicknames because I was too scared to even find out their names. The SSLWCB or the SFLWCB were, like most people in my life, untouchable and untalktoable – is that a word? When I arrived into Inverness I looked into getting a flat in the Castle Heather part of town where I could settle, find work, and live life alone. My self harm was kinda under control, despite some lapses in focus and frustration along the way, but I wasn’t really making any headway with the rest. So instead of moving into my own flat, I opted to stay at the hostel where I could try building my ability to talk to people alongside the SCLWCB. It kinda worked. Sure, things got heavy in the old mind from time to time, and it was here I began smoking full time as means to keep the self harm under control but the people I met during that period became the first “friends” I’d ever had, more than that, they became my family.

It felt good, but depression and social anxiety continued to infect my actions and I was unable to be – a continuing frustration in my life – the person I know deep down that I am. Episodes of deep depression struck, especially just before Christmas and in early February. A depression which lasted and threatened to debilitate back into self-harm but I kept on with the whole backpacking-to-combat-everything assault and traveled back and forth across Canada for three months. I caught up with a few people, the SCLWCB being one of them, and even met other people I for a while called a friend; Rachel being one of them, as well as another whom we shall but call the SALWCB.

Everyone I met during this time, especially three outstanding, could, given other circumstances, have become true friends. The SALWCB and I had an instant connection which has only been rivaled on two other occasions since, and the other faces of that era still burn bright in my memory.

This period helped me get my self harm under control to a point I wasn’t even committing it any more. Friendship.

Then along came Lucy, who without doubt was the first person who I can call whole heartedly a true friend. Not because others in my past weren’t true friends, but because she was the first person I ever told about my depression, suicide attempt and in a way, my social anxiety. Lucy would have such an impact on my life unrivalled by anyone else I’ve met. Our friendship grew as well as our relationship; I lost my virginity to her, she was my first proper kiss, she was my first everything really.

For the first time in my life I had someone in my life who I could talk to, share thoughts and feelings with, experience my life with. In the first twelve months of our relationship I learned more about life and who I was than I had through the six/seven years of pain, loneliness and frustration which had been my teenage years. Sure, talking to her was difficult, this was the social anxiety and I would often weave in and out of being able to communicate well and not knowing what to say but in a way Lucy understood and would support where needed or give a metaphorical slap on the ass if I needed a wee push.

Because of our friendship, our love was strong. My emigration to Australia was due to this relationship and I worked hard to continue battling my illnesses whilst setting myself up in a new country. Something not easy, let me tell you! As our relationship grew so did our trust, and as our trust grew, so did my confidence. I never told Lucy of my self harm though, still hesitant to the power of the stigma of mental illness. My last moment of self harm had come a month or so before I met Lucy, so after meeting her and through her friendship I had got it under control. The longer I went without self harm, the less I thought about it, and over time it never felt right to bring it up. If I had, it would have just got me thinking about it again, and that could have proved devastating to the progress I was making.

Throughout the six years I spent in Australia I never stopped trying to make new friends. I had dreamed of having close friends since I was a teenager, all of the stories I wrote were about friendship, and I craved it more than anything else on the planet. I never believed having friends would cure me completely, only I could do that, but having lived so long by myself, I was enjoying sharing my life with others.

With Lucy’s help, sometimes even unknown to her, I made huge leaps with both depression and social anxiety to the point that at times it wasn’t even an issue. I met new people and my new life was underway. Sure there were periods of depression and social anxiety, as mentioned here, but I was working my bloody arse off to overcome it all.

Four years after being in Australia I was actually starting to make new friends, and as time slid on I made three of the best friends I’d ever had (Lucy aside); Grace, Tara and Kathy. With them came a potential new social network which I was slowly starting to matriculate myself into. Unfortunately, at the time, things between Lucy and I were strained which – if you’ve all been keeping up – was around the time when everything fell apart and of my second suicide attempt in March 2006.

(It was friendship that saved me. As I explained here, a singular text message reminded me of people who may miss me.)

The collapse of Lucy and I’s relationship and friendship was painful, but after months working hard to rebuild what we’d once had we knew that it was over. There was nothing we hadn’t tried. I blame myself for the breakup of our connection and knew in my heart that it was my depression, which had been severe throughout this year, which had made it so difficult to reconnect. I’ve never blamed Lucy for anything. I’m not afraid of admitting to my mistakes; my depression, self harm and social anxiety cost me the greatest friend I ever had. I think of her often and hope she is happy now, something I was never able to bring to her.

(The last time I thought of Lucy in depth was in fact last night. Whilst taking a stroll along the River Ness, through the islands where we shared so many walks, moments and memories I witnessed something I knew she had always wanted to see. Otters ran through our relationship and I’d always hoped to see one in the wild with her, however it was never to be. As I stared out over the fast flowing river thinking off those days I glimpsed something which I first thought was a duck – but on closer viewed was an otter; in the very river we spent so much time walking along. It made me wish she was still in my life, as I desperately wanted to tell her of this moment. Something I know would have brought a smile to her wonderful face.)

As a result of losing this friendship I was determined, once and for all, to beat all that I’d been fighting. Things were tough though, with the relapse into self harm and my social anxiety taking a thrashing because of the collapse of this friendship.

Moving in with my new housemates I made every effort to be more social; attending parties, heading to pubs and clubs, chatting in the lounge – all things I would never normally have been able to do, and this helped so much in keeping myself under control and though I was still self harming out of addiction was finding it much easier coping with everything else. I was rarely out of contact with people, which was a whole new experience for me. I even organized my own party, for the first time ever! I was slowly but surely overcoming something I’d been fighting since my teens!

My friendship with Grace and Kathy, so often mentioned on this blog, were also strengthening and I was becoming much better at talking to them. Actually sharing information without an interrogation taking place, and this was such a lift for me. Just being able to spend time with people, having other souls to talk to and have fun with, was key.

Grace and Kathy, the slow building acquaintanceship with Sally, and my continuing connection with my housemates and Tara – in addition to the whole new network which was opening up through college and the people I was getting to know through all of the above is what helped me kick depression and social anxiety squarely in the ass! This is how I was able to overcome depression; this is how I was able to beat something I had spent years fighting.

All those smiles, hugs, laughter, tears, times, moments, quizzes, conversations and so so much more is what finally helped me overcome everything. I wasn’t alone, I had people in my life, the solitude and loneliness I knew so intimately was no longer an issue. When I needed to talk there were people there, when they needed to talk, I was there, we hung out, laughed, smiled, had fun; and my confidence was increasing every single day.

Then came the earthquake of February 2007 and my life was never the same.

It was losing all those friendships which hit me the hardest, which made it so very difficult fighting the glandular fever, breakdown, depression and CLL. It was losing my new networks which fucked up the work I’d done with my social anxiety. It was the solitude, isolation and loneliness which I found myself drowning in once more that made everything so much harder to fight.

All those quizzes which I had to avoid, all those sing-a-longs I couldn’t partake in, all those conversations I now couldn’t have…the solitude consumed my mind, bringing back the hallucinations and self harm on a vicious level. It’s what solitude does, you need someone; so Meadhbh made her comeback and everything was lost. I couldn’t hold on or pretend I was sane any longer. Solitude, then loneliness then isolation. All that work for nothing. The abuse was the nail in the coffin.

All those smiles and laughs, drinks and lunches, parties and drunken nights – all of the times I shared – all of those friends and acquaintances. They inspired me. The strength they gave me from just touching and sharing their lives with me. They are what helped me to finally overcome my depression.

So many people take friendship for granted.

You have all your Facebook friends, your MySpace friends, your Bebo friends…you have all your uni, school and pub mates…if you lose one or two along the way it’s chalked up to just being life. Even if that person is someone with whom you have a huge connection with, few people work hard on friendships in today’s society. It’s kinda the same with relationships, if there’s a problem, chuck ‘em, plenty more fish in the sea. Maybe because I’ve experienced true isolation I have come to appreciate friendship, the joy of having someone in your life to share all those good times and bad times with, how important it is to have people there. I appreciate friendship with as much passion as I appreciate all that I have.

But as I’ve written in the past, depression also destroys friendships because of the burden – so I blame only myself for losing my friendships with those five true friends. If only depression wasn’t such a destructive force, if only it were understood as the illness that it is. If only people could have seen past the symptoms at who I am. If only, two of the most powerful words in the English language.

So, for the love of all things sacred, never forget what it means to have a friend. Just pick up the phone RIGHT NOW and call one of them for a chat, don’t take them for granted, don’t think they’ll always be there, because trust me – when they’re gone, you will miss them more than anything in the world!

Forget all your therapies; if you want to beat depression, you need to beat the isolation.

Friendship; the best cure for depression I know, and from personal experience, it works. If only a GP could prescribe it.

For Lucy, Grace, Kathy, Anna and Tara;
Thank you for all the good times,
I think of you all often and hope you’ve all found happiness.

Posted in Depression, Friendship, Fun, Inspire..., Isolation, Loneliness, Mental Health, Self-Esteem, Social Anxiety, Stigmawith 4 Comments →

Starter for Ten: The Finale04.10.08

As the end draws near, the finale of the rather short and randomly intermittent Starter for Ten series. Where the questions which have been perplexing you are answered. So with my fingers getting all itchy on the buzzer, here we go: 

1) How much money have you made in this blogging venture of yours? Surely all this moaning about your life was only for the money?

I have made - taking into account competitions, online costs and internet cafes - minus £143. Yep, this blog has actually cost me money! Woohoo!

I never set out to make any money from this blog, that was never the intention, and even as the blog progressed I never for a moment thought about trying to make any money from this it.

The recent appearance of adverts was a natural addition and any money raised through these adverts were to be donated to charity.

There is way too much self-thinking going on in the world at the moment – way too many people clammering to make as much money as they can for their next great adventure or the latest upgrade in technological advancement. It really annoys me, everywhere I look there’s money making schemes and “how to win it big so you can afford that big house on the beach and mock those less fortunate than you” ventures. And don’t even get me started on The Apprentice. I’m all for making money, we all need it to live, but there should be a point when we stop thinking about ourselves and start thinking about what other people are going through. My main issue with the world as it is today is the selfishness of it, it’s contaminating society, and everyone is becoming more apathetic to other people in their monumental me-me-me-me-me quest.

So to anyone who thinks this blog has made me money, you’re wrong. I never wanted to make money from this blog. I wanted to share my life, the problems I’ve had to face, raise awareness of mental illness and related issues which no-one talks about. Expose myself to the world so that others in similar situations don’t feel so lonely. That was always why I did it and not for a second did making money ever cross my mind.

Whilst I’m on the subject:

Through this blog, £15 has been raised for the Mental Health Foundation. Not much, but something.
And the current total through Stray Visions: The Stray Thoughts Art Shop is £238.

Which I’m quite proud of.

2) What is it you are feeling when you self harm?

Fear. Pain. Relief. Anger. Relief. Fear. Joy. All manner of things really. I’m very proud of (Some) True Confessions of a Self Harmer as well as A Self Interview with a Self Harmer both of which were me trying to explain how I feel when and why I self harm.

3) What do you miss about Australia?

So
Many
Things

Edinburgh Gardens – Walking down Chapel Street – Chilling on the Beach – Cycling the bike paths, especially the Yarra track and along the bay – rainforests – the wonderful food at the VegieBar and cafes of Brunswick Street – sitting by the Torrens – the people – my old friends – the plethora of second hand bookshops – Port Fairy – the ice cream – Adam Hill – the great festivals in Melbourne – Wombats – bikinis – Sean Micallef – the music scene – Carlton Gardens – the Dandenongs – Trivia Nights – the future I nearly had – and so – much – much – more - …

I could go on and on and on about what I miss about Australia, I could write a whole separate blog on the subject of this country, detailing in great length all the things I love, miss and (vice versa) the problems and annoyances with the country. I tried hard to make my life and future in Australia, unfortunately, Australia decided it didn’t want someone like me.

4) What was the last thing that made you giggle? What was the last thing that made you smile? What was the last thing which made your heart skip a beat? What was the last thing that made you glad to be alive?

Giggle? Easy – that Adipose sliding down the bonnet of the taxi.

We need more ridiculously cute aliens. How many people the world over said “I want one!” after seeing this!

Smile? An email I received a few days ago. Yep. That made me smile big time :)

Skip a beat? It’s a bit sad (like my life these days), but an episode of a television series I watched last night had a line that not only caused my heart to skip a beat but momentarily stop as well. The line was “Because you’re breaking my heart,” and it was delivered so perfectly that anyone who says television is an empty void with no redeeming features watches way too much reality television.

Glad to be alive? We have to be going back over a year for that one, so far back in time in fact that I can’t actually remember what it was. Ach, well!

5) Do you think your post talking about your manic phase will alter people’s opinions of you?

Yes, I do. Stigma dictates a lot of people’s perceptions of mental illness, so going into such a topic was a hard choice to make.

I have wanted to talk about it in the past, but was aware that it may cloud people’s views of me. They might focus on the selfish misogynistic aspects of the phase rather than the confusion and danger inherent in the phase. However, setting out to detail my life, I think it’s important to be there as it opens up further knowledge of the difficulties in living with manic depression.

6) If you had unlimited funds and unlimited time constraints (i.e.: past, present, future) and no obligations to fulfill….. Where would you like to go on holiday?

Good question…a bloody hard question as well. I mean there’s the simple answer of the holiday’s I nearly had; the Whitsunday week and South American trip I had planned for last year, they would have been fantastic to do and I’m frustrated things didn’t pan out as I’d hoped. There’s also just the odd countries I’d love to have the opportunity to explore; Italy, Iceland, Norway, Spain, France and New Zealand. Or the cities I’d love to visit; Los Angeles, St Petersburg, Perth, Sienna, Barcelona for various reasons or people.

But with unlimited time constraints?

A Round the World Trip.

Fairly standard answer I think, but if I had no time or money constraints (and we’ll forget energy and health constraints as well) I would travel the entire world in as much detail and depth as I could. Most likely I would go west, as not only is it a kick-arse song which I could adopt as an anthem but I would battle to achieve something I always wanted to do, which was travel the world without stepping on a plane!

First port of call would be to learn how to drive and then obtain a Harley Trike, ever since Billy Connolly took a world tour of Australia on one, I’ve dreamed of circumnavigating the globe on one of these beasts.

Europe would be first; France, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, Sweden, Finland etc etc etc etc before zipping across and through all those wonderful Eastern European countries and then upwards to Russia to join the Trans Siberian Express (a trip I have ALWAYS wanted to do, and pretty much everyone who’s met me knows not only my love of trains but also my desire to traverse this particular route). Then down through China, bumming around all those wonderful exotic Asian countries before dropping down to Australia.

I’d go counter clockwise, most likely kicking off in Darwin round the coast to Perth, all around those Western States and then zipping across to Adelaide, up to Uluru and the red hot centre, then diagonally down to Melbourne (ahhh, Melbourne) where I’d hang out for as long as the sore-bum from the trike took to heal. Catching up with forgotten friends, old haunts and favourite spots, before heading to Tassie by Ferry, exploring this vast much dreamed of island, and then back up to Melbourne before continuing around the coast. If I did a complete circuit I may have to double back somewhere as I’d head New Zealand way next before crossing the Pacific and hitting the States.

There’s people there I’d try to meet if they’d like to, and if I were able to get the trike across, perhaps a road trip USA style around that vast country. Canada of course, of bloody course, would be revisited and then straight down to Latin America; Mexico, Cuba, dancing and music, before continuing further and further southwards into all the South American countries and then heading even further south to Antarctica.

I’d hang with the penguins for a while before tripping up to South Africa, defrosting the bike, and then heading northwards once again through this continent. I’d skip the UK for now, zipping up to Greenland and Iceland. And whilst sitting on a glacier thinking of all where I’d been I would realize I’d missed some places and have to hire a private jet to take my trike to Alaska, India, and wherever else I hadn’t been before heading back to the UK.

Starting in the Shetlands I’d journey the length of the country and then when it was all over wonder what the hell I would do next.

Of course, as I traveled around, I may even pick up a few people who would be welcome to come along for the ride, either on my same trike or perhaps they could get their own (courtesy of my unlimited funds) and we could go for a world “how many harley trikes can we get going around the world” record.

Or something like that.

But to be honest, I’d be quite happy just heading somewhere simple and cheap if I would be able to spend some time with people from my past again or those I’ve never met but would love to spend time with.

7) How hard is it to write about emotional abuse? Doesn’t it just bring it all back?

It’s always been hard for me to write about emotional abuse. Not because it just brings it all back, as I’ve never been able to get over it to begin with, so it’s already there all the time. But because of the reason I wrote first in the initial post on emotional abuse. I always had the utmost respect for the person who subjected me to this treatment, and I still do. I care about her greatly and always will. I’ll never understand why she treated me this way or what she was thinking whilst she was doing it. I talk about it because of how it has affected and destroyed my life and wish this form of abuse was talked about in the same way that physical and sexual abuse are talked about. 

As I’ve said throughout the blog, I have made mistakes through my life, but no-one ever deserves to be treated in this way regardless of their mistakes.

I was taught to forgive and forget as it is the only way people can seek the closure they need and move on. I don’t hold grudges. If someone is frequently being reminded of all their mistakes, how are they ever supposed to change? 

8) Do you think you’ll ever overcome all of the demons you’re fighting?

Short answer – no.

Long answer – noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo.

Seriously, I was fighting the demons for so long that when I finally overcame them in early 2006 I was exhausted, especially with the glandular fever. So to be diagnosed with CLL almost as soon as I’d done so was just a slap in the face, and the resulting collapse of my life has basically taken all the energy and drive from me. To lose what I lost I would not even wish on my most reviled of worst enemies.

It’s not that I’ve given up, as I’ve continued to fight even when my back’s been against the wall and my soul’s been staring into the flaming fires of hell, I’ve dragged myself back from the brink on dozens of occasions in the last twelve months. A point however has been reached when I no longer believe I have the energy to fight as hard as I did for those 14 long years. The demons will always be there, I’ve no doubt about that, I had my chance to be the person I always dreamed of being. I lost that chance.

And we only ever get one chance with everything and one in life.

And that’s it. Only one post to go now and I’ll be honest in saying I’m trying to make it a ‘classic’, it will also be a lot happier and perkier than the posts which have gone up over the last few days.

Of all the treatments I have tried to combat depression with over the last fifteen years this is the only one I have had success with, as such, I believe it to be the greatest treatment for depression…so tomorrow, this will be discussed, in the final stage of Addy’s Journey with Depression.

Posted in Awareness, Depression, Mental Health, QandAwith 1 Comment →

Butts, streaking and fist fights (aka - being manic in Adelaide)04.09.08

It’s October 2006…

(If you have your copy of the album ‘Fallen’ handy, skip along to track 6 – it’s what I was listening to in a room lit with twenty four candles when I started writing the following rough scene breakdown for my novel ‘All Things Must Change’ - aka - “The Ghosts that Haunt Us”)

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A Dorchadas

“If you don’t shut your f*****g mouth you stuck up spoiled c**t I swear to god I’ll come over there, rip out your tongue and force you to perform wild c*********s on yourself whilst I s***w you up the a** with my sword!
  Now, where was I? Ah yes…”
  Leaving Elizabeth speechless Jeremy turned with a casual pirouette and cracked his fist into Katherine’s face - sending her slamming with a cry into the soft, rain sodden mud. He followed it up with a sharp kick to her stomach. Leaning down he grabbed her hair and hauled her to her feet before burying his knee into her stomach, and again into her face, before permitting her to collapse once again into the mud; her deep red blood gushing.
  He takes a few steps back, wiping some of Katherine’s blood from his lips with his sleeve. Shooting his head around to check on Elizabeth she stands staring in disbelief, her body shaking with fear and anger. Her lips move, words hovering on the brink of becoming before she stops herself, sinking to her knees and bowing her head.
  Jeremy smiles, turning his attention to the fallen Katherine, he paces around her bloodied body, smiling. She rolls slowly onto her back and blinks her eyes open. When she opens her mouth to speak, the words come out, barely a whisper, holding none of the power and grace they usually would.
  “Is…”She coughs, blood spitting down her chin. “…is…that all ya got?”
  With great pain she sits up, leaning on her arms, raising her eyes to stare at the pacing Jeremy. They follow him as he walks slowly around her.

(…and it was right about here that I took a small knife and sliced the one part of my body I knew my girlfriend wouldn’t see…)

From far above a flash of lightning streaks across the night sky followed by a deep guttural roar of thunder as the rain increases, drenching the three below.
  “I’m sorry…about…” Again she coughs. “…what happened to Amber,”
  With a fiery speed Jeremy whips down and grabs her throat, squeezing, crushing it with his bloodied hands. “Once more!”
  “Am…ber,” Her eyes stare directly at his, trying to catch a tiny glimmer of the man she knew. The man she loved. The man buried beneath a screen of darkness, grief and despair. “Amber.” She repeats, and there, a spark ignites.
  She catches sight of it moments before she is hauled into the air, gasping for breath, her lungs grasping for air as he carries her with speed by the neck through the darkness. With force he slams her hard against a tree and she hears her shoulder bone crunch under the pressure. She screams, forced back into her throat by his grip so that all that comes out is a silence.
  Jeremy releases his grip and lets her collapse to the floor, her right arm hanging limp from her broken shoulder, her neck bruised purple as she fights to refill her lungs.
  “Say her name again and you’ll be sorry!”
  “Will I..Shay …mi escosesito lindo …” She coughs, spitting the blood to her side. “I can still see you in there. Whatever you’re feeling…”
  He slaps her hard across the face.
  “Whatever darkness is eating you up…”
  He slaps her again.
  “Whatever pain is ripping through you…”
  And again.

(…and it was right about here that I took that same small knife and once again sliced the one part of my body I knew my girlfriend wouldn’t see…)

“I will always love you, Mi escosesito lindo…do what you need to…”
  And again.
  “But remember…I loved her too.”
  And again.
  “Amber.”
  A final slap and Jeremy in one swift movement spins around, rips his Luchair from his back, and slams the wooden staff hard against Katherine’s face which knocks her hard to the ground, her face and mouth buried in the mud. He cracks the wood against her back, shattering her collar bone. He drives the end of it straight down onto the back of her knee, destroying the joint with a thunder muffled crack.
  Whipping a knife from his boot he drives it into her thigh, the blade cutting deep into her flesh, her scream stolen by the storms wind.
  Another spike of lightning, her deep red blood spilling onto the earth.

(…and it was right about here that my own blood was spilling onto a rag I kept handy…)

Leaving the blade deep inside her Jeremy spins her around, the pressure of the ground on the knife’s hilt forcing it deeper into her leg, slicing more flesh, scraping the bone. Her screams echo into the sky, mixing with the thunder which howls back in response.
  “Don’t ever…ever fucking say her name again. Hear me bitch!”

(…and it was right about here that just as I was about to cut myself again I received a text message inviting me out. My girlfriend had been at her work’s staff meeting, they had then all traveled to a ten pin bowling alley, and I was being invited to join them in their drinking festivities. I cut myself again, not as deep, and replied. After patching myself up I went out to meet them, walking a little uncomfortably for reasons you’d understand if you’ve been able to figure out the part of the body very few people in fact ever actually see)

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What has all these badly written fiction got to do with a manic phase? I hear you ask.

Well, the above is an exchange which takes place between two of my most personally loved characters – Shay and Katherine. They have been friends for a looonnnggggg time, and here, for reasons way to complicated to go into given the fact I’d have to go into the intricacies of novel’s plot, Shay has undergone a change in personality and is in the process of – well – causing rather a lot of pain to Katherine, the woman he loves, his best friend. I’ve cut the above just before the most brutal and upsetting sequence I’ve ever written. In fact, as I wrote in rather hefty detail how Shay proceeded to beat, rape and murder Katherine I was not only shaking myself but also shedding rather a hefty lot of tears in the process. Generally my stuff only gets dark when it needs to, and at this point in the story this needs to happen - it needed to be the nastiest murder you can possibly imagine. So imagine that, and then multiply it by a thousand, imagine the person you love is doing it to you, and then multiply it by a thousand again; that’ll get you close to how nasty and brutal this scene gets.

The reason this scene was so painfully emotional for me to write was because:
(a) Shay is based on me
(b) Katherine was inspired (in part) by Rachel
and no matter how selfish and evil people think I am, I never want to believe I am capable of being like this.

So, again, what the frack has this got to do with a manic phase? I hear you shrieking!
Simple. When I’m manic – I’m very much like Shay.

You see to understand my manic phase you have to understand who I am when I’m manic – because I’m not Addy, oh nosiree Bob! When I’m manic there are only two ways to describe me: immortal and god.

When I’m manic I can; have anything I want, do anything I want, have anyone I want and do anyone I want. If I were to jump in front of a train, it would be the train that would need to be rushed to hospital – as I’d be too busy tangoing down the tracks with a couple of passengers along for the ride.

So with that in mind let’s skip on eight months…

…into June 2007. Adelaide. Where things were about to get very interesting!

Or were they…?

You see, looking back on that time in my life, my manic phase actually began it’s gestation before Adelaide. My sudden decision to leave Melbourne was classic manic depression; ill thought out, ill prepared, ill planned. An evening of unabashed drinking at the Sherlock Holmes pub on Collins Street following a day at the hospital which had filled me with antibiotics, anesthetic and god knows what other medical concoctions was perhaps not the best thing to do. Alcohol and medication never mix. Yet alcohol and mania seem to go together like cheese and biscuits, cheese and chips, hell, cheese and anything! Everything I had been doing for those two weeks before I left Melbourne makes me think more and more that my mania had already started, it just didn’t truly explode out of me until a few weeks later…

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…when we duck ever so quickly back into June 2007. Two members of my family are in hospital, one after a suicide attempt. I have no-one I can talk to about how this is making me feel, I have no money, most of my possessions have been stolen, and I’m spending an awful lot of time under a very friendly tree near the Torrens. My mind and emotions are in tatters and all I want is a friend to talk to. Just as things can’t get any worse I suddenly start receiving emails from my ex which escalate as the week progresses into full on abuse over things which I had been asked (by her) to do – which I had done – and was now being abused for in text for actually doing. This was WAY too much. I snapped. I eradicated all forms of communication (i.e. email address and phone) and - as previously mentioned in earlier posts - I lost what little control I had left of my mind; self harming nastily with knife, belt and the aforementioned “friendly” tree.

The next day I wasn’t quite the same. It wasn’t concussion, or a result of the injuries, as I’d had all of them checked out. It was that I woke up feeling completely different; restless, agitated whenever I was sitting still, I need to do something anything and from this point on things get a little difficult to write about – not only because some of my actions were far from suitable for a family audience, but because I don’t remember everything that I did.

(One of the most commonly asked questions from psychologists, doctors and the mental health teams I have seen revolves around how my “friends” viewed this change in me. Commonly whilst in a manic phase you tend to not really remember all that much, which is why they ask about friends, as the people in your life will tend to notice things that are different. Or they should do. Hence, if I’d had friends at the time I probably wouldn’t be finding it so hard to obtain treatment as not a single person I’ve ever met would have been able to be around me at that time without noticing I wasn’t really myself)

The most remembered events of this period were as follows and may or may not have happened in the order listed below (blame my Swiss cheese mind for that one!)

  • After dressing up for a night on the town in a whole new get up obtained from Hindley Street, I walked into a bar in this same street, and sussed the place out. It wasn’t a bad wee joint, not too crowded, people seemed okay. I saw something I liked – in this instance, the third tastiest butt I’d ever seen – walked over to it and slapped it rather heartily. To be honest the woman turned around and slapped me as hard as she could (good for her, so she should have done) but this didn’t stop me from introducing myself with a smile, commenting on the sexiness of her posterior without a beat and that she’d probably enjoyed the slap before buying her a drink without even asking if she wanted one. I grabbed a whisky, downed it in one, and proceeded to talk to her (whether she was looking at me or not) for about an hour and twenty minutes. Now, anyone who knows me should instantly be able to go – alrighty, hold on one wee minute, that pathetic little twat who never says anything to anyone talked to a stranger for over an hour and twenty minutes? – that doesn’t sound quite right. To which I would award them with a gold star, as it seriously doesn’t sound like Addy. But I wasn’t. I was someone else. All I cared about was the fact that the whisky was fine, her butt finer and the syllables escaping my mouth were – without any doubt or question in the world – the most entertaining, witty, important and downright had to be heard sentences anyone in the world had ever spoken ever! Plus, throughout that hour and twenty minutes; no pauses, no thought, no drinks; just me, talking, the entire time. Occasionally she would say something, try to turn around or walk away, but she was completely intoxicated by this incredibly strange guy who had slapped her ass, brought her a drink and was talking to her about really odd (overtly sexual) topics. So when I actually stopped talking she just laughed, for about three minutes, a fit which lasted until I had managed to get her wedged into a booth with me and as the laughter subsided she said “Hi, I’m Sammi,” to which I just said “Hi, I want you,” to which she burst into laughter again, a fit stopped seconds later when I planted a kiss on her. This kiss led to several (dozen) drinks and a whole lot of fun as I kept revving up the conversation to which she found herself having to hurdle sentences in order to keep up with. Upshot, we left the bar, completely rat-arsed, and ended up at the end of a fairly deserted Rundle Mall at God knows what time in the morning.

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    An earlier conversation had been about public nudity…hence the logical leap into public streaking…and within moments I found myself dashing naked through the streets, a couple of socks disappearing into the night air behind me before riding a metallic pig in the nuddy. Police sirens, a couple of cops, a mad dash through the streets trying to escape the ‘law’ saw us end up in a bush in some deserted ruddy cold park away from the CBD. Being in such a confined space, still, ummm, naked, she couldn’t help but see the various cuts and bruises on my body, not that we really talked about those as we had far more important things to do…which I do remember but on this occasion am going to keep totally sthum about. Definitely not for the public eye! Next day; shower at her hostel then just wandered off into the glaze of the Adelaidian sun…never saw her again aside from a couple of Facebook messages, that’s about it.

  • Knowing absolutely nothing about AFL, I ended up conversing with a homeless man in Glenelg about the intricacies of the game, it’s players and general rowdy Aussie rules shenanigans for – oh, about three hours! Player’s names, teams, who did I care if they didn’t exist – this guy didn’t seem to know any different. I wanted to talk; he wanted company, so until I hit the pubs of Glenelg it passed the time. Yep, more pubs, and that night every drink was brought for me. It’s amazing what acting like an arrogant misogynistic prick actually does to women!
  • As the days rolled on and the mood hit it’s stride I ended up striking up conversations with various people all over the place, some just wandered off, somewhat hesitant to talk to a random crazy person in the street, others would indulge me for a while and occasionally we’d end up heading off for the evening.
  • A couple of nights I became a salsa dancing dynamo, another couple of nights were spent tangoing away on the banks of the Torrens with a bargirl from the casino who I had convinced to teach me to tango, in exchange for some lessons of my own.
  • Whilst on one occasion, whilst in mid conversation, I jumped into the road to push someone out the way of an incoming lorry, and then once I’d made sure they were ok scolded them for not looking where they were going and then returned to the somewhat bemused person I’d been talking to.

It’s bloody hard writing about this phase of my life knowing that there may be people reading this that know me. I didn’t really know what was happening to me at the time; my mental faculties had runaway, my inhibitions had vanished, my confidence over flowing.

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As I said earlier whatever I wanted, whoever I wanted, I would get. I was slapped a fair few times from annoyed women (again, good on you, I deserved it) but then Sammi’s arse wasn’t the only one I slapped during that time! As the phase rolled on my actions became, at times, more blasé and uncaring:

  • A couple of books, some food and other miscellaneous smaller items were shoplifted.
  • Plus, on one particular evening, I initiated a fight with someone in a bar in North Adelaide. The week before the mania hit I had gone in there hoping to strike up conversation and meet new people, something I did frequently all through the year – especially from mid February onwards. However, on this occasion, the friend of the person I had been trying to talk to didn’t seem to care much for my somewhat nervous social anxiety drenched attempts at conversation so – in an effort to rid me from his friend – heaved a full glass of beer over my head. Not quite the best thing to happen to someone suffering from social anxiety, whose confidence had already been knocked into near oblivion through months of emotional abuse. So, of course, feeling like the immortal god I was, I ventured back in the following week on the off chance this man was there. He was. I walked up to the bar, purchased a beer, walked across the room, and poured it over his head before punching him and walking out the bar. He followed, some fisty-kicky-heady-etc-cuffs ensued until his friends tore us apart and I vanished into the night. Or rather, a few yards down the street to another bar.

The manic phase was basically one long unending quest to (a) talk as much as I could to anyone who would listen (b) drink as much as I was able to convince people to buy for me (c) bed as many people as I could and (d) do whatever the hell I felt like doing!

I have said before that whilst manic I am the person Sally and Kathy always bitched at me for not being. Sounds like a blast, doesn’t it? Well it wasn’t! It was immensely frightening, scary and at times down-right dangerous. The things I remember doing, the things I remember saying - I’m incredibly lucky not to have ended up with serious injury and/or death – chatting up a woman in a bar is one thing, chatting up a woman in front of their boyfriend another! Running across a road is one thing; throwing yourself in front of a lorry to stop someone getting hit another!

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Manic phases are incredibly dangerous beasts as although you have control over what you want to do, what you want to do is not generally what you should be doing. But that doesn’t really matter when you’re manic – immortal god remember, no inhibitions! The other danger with the manic phase was physical health related.

At the time I was still recovering from glandular fever due to the pressure and stress I had been under all year, so flagrant drinking and athletic activities were probably not the best thing to do. Especially given the damage my liver had suffered. The CLL, also, was not helped through this period – as it wasn’t through all of the emotional stress of last year.

The manic phase was dwindling the weekend I left for Melbourne, helped partly by the beautiful speeches of Gridlock and when I rolled into Ararat on my return journey found myself crashing out for the first time in what felt like weeks. My return to Melbourne was still drenched in mania and anger following the events of the last few months and aside from a trip to an interesting looking club on King Street and a meander to the storage depot to collect some of my items kept myself to myself as I had no idea what would happen were I to meet my ex-girlfriend at this stage, in this phase.

Now, earlier on I said how I became like Shay whilst manic. This is and will always be the case. I still however continue to believe that I am not a danger to others whilst manic, only myself. Granted I started a fight, but many guys have, and that doesn’t mean I’m a danger to others. I never intentionally set out to harm someone unless they consented to it, and – like I said – you have control over yourself whilst manic, just because your inhibitions are down doesn’t mean you’re going to become a crazed psychopathic killer. That’s not who I am, that’s not who I’ll ever be, and having experienced one manic phase I’m hesitant to want another – although in many ways I’m secretly hoping for one soon – due to the danger it presents to me both mentally and physically.

As I say, when I’m manic I’m the person Sally and Kathy always wanted me to be, and part of me seriously wants a manic phase to happen right now so I can have some fun for the first time since, well, June/July 2007. Given the fact, as I wrote in November last year, I know my triggers it would be easy to bring one on. The only problem is, next time I go manic (which I know will happen sooner rather than later) it’s gonna do me even more serious damage, especially given my current state.

Hence, why I am fighting so hard against the onslaught of incessant mood swings that plague me whilst keeping those tempting triggers at bay.

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Posted in Bipolar, Breakdown, Loneliness, Men, Mental Health, Reflections, spankingwith No Comments →

Words Cut Like a Knife (aka - the effects of emotional abuse)04.08.08

You’re useless,”
“You never do anything right,”

If I were to sit down with a friend, black eye on display, and tell them that my partner had been physically abusing me it would be hard for them to disagree. The evidence in all its black, red and purple glory would be staring them in the face.

If I were to sit down with a friend, looking just the way I normally do, and tell them that my partner had been emotionally abusing me it would be hard for them to agree. The evidence would be locked away inside my mind, hidden from their view.

Or would it?

When I was in the city a couple of week’s ago I was strolling around one of the bigger book shops checking out all the books I had missed and/or wanted to read if only I could summon the focus to get through more than a page and I stopped – dumb founded – in a section which I just couldn’t believe.

Tragic Life Stories!

“Your photos are so boring, so uninspiring, why do you even bother?”
“You’re just contaminating me with your negativity,”
“You never do anything to help anyone - ever,”

There was crime, science fiction and fantasy, teenage fiction, literature, classics, history, biography, art, politics, adult, photography and then right in front of me in prominent display – tragic life stories. What the hell? Since when did this become its own genre? There were literally dozens upon dozens upon dozens of books all about exactly the same topic. Which is important, don’t get me wrong, but when I hopped over to the psychology section (if you can call it that) I could not see one title which examined abuse of any kind; it was just all comic-esque books about how eating an apple on the 14th July can stop depression for life, or that coloured day book; a collection of cute animal pictures with semi-topical lines derived from self help books (another genre I can’t stand – they’re written for people who are going through a relationship breakdown, of course they’re going to say you can learn a lot from pain. Which you can. But they never say you can learn more from happiness do they? Of course not, as this is the last thing the hurt person reading it is going to want to hear. I can categorically say that I learnt more about life from my happy moments than from all of my painful moments combined - but we’ll get to that in my last post on Friday) Give me The Black Day Book or the wonderful novel Happiness any day; exactly the same thing but streaked through with brilliant irony which teaches far more than a jaunty little sentence of self-help bullshit.

But I digress.

Tragic Life Stories and the complete absence of psychology books about abuse. That’s where I was.

“You never take my feelings into account ever,”
“Your sex is so boring, it never excites me,”
“Get your back waxed, it’s horrible,”

There is absolutely nothing wrong with telling stories about abused childhoods, relationships or lives – especially if it’s about bringing this topic to the fore. Abuse destroys lives. Simple fact. As I browsed the titles, and every single cover looked exactly the same I should point out – virtually identical cover art, font, title, everything – they were all about sexual or physical abuse. It was as if emotional abuse doesn’t exist, as if we can all whole heartedly believe in every form of abuse under the sun except this, or perhaps because we can’t believe in something that doesn’t have any evidence to back up the claims. Both physical and sexual abuse can leave physical evidence that the abuse has taken place; emotional abuse, not a jot.

“It’s not that I find you physically repulsive, it’s more that you’re just not at all interesting,”
“If you were beaten as a child you wouldn’t think like that,”
“You’re such a pathetic retard,”

Hence why if you sit down to tell someone you’ve been emotionally abused chances are they’re not going to believe you. Surely they’re just words taken out of context and if you had a “thicker skin” it would be doing no damage at all? Nope, can’t agree with this at all. Emotional abuse is just as if not more damaging than all other forms of abuse and I’m sick of it continuing to be the Loch Ness Monster of the abuse debate. It causes life long potentially irreparable damage; just as physical and sexual abuse. In fact emotional abuse often (not always) leads directly into physical and sexual abuse.

“You never do anything to care about anyone - ever,”
“You’re always so selfish, it’s always about you!”
“No-one gives a shit about what you’re going through, why should they, it’s not important?”

So what evidence, what damage, does emotional abuse cause? Let’s use me as a case study (I mean, who else am I going to use, this is my insipid ramble here!) What are the consequences of emotional abuse?

(The quotes you are reading by the way, weren’t just said once, they were said on multiple occasions throughout and after my relationship. The reason it is so hard to get people to believe in emotional abuse is that it just looks like you’re not taking criticism well, but they just don’t seem to realize how frequent and repetitive this criticism is that’s being thrown at you.

No matter what you are doing. No matter how much of yourself you’re putting in. No matter how honest and open you’re being. No matter how deeply and positively you believe in something. No matter how you are saying something. No matter how it’s being done.
It
Will
Be
Attacked.
There is a list on this blog which I wrote in mid 2006; everything on that list was attacked and criticized by my abuser with the knowledge of everything that was on the list as I had told her about it and shared its content with her.

The other problem with simply retyping comments that were said to me throughout this post is that their context is lost, and with emotional abuse it is often the context in which something is said that elevates it from mere criticism into overtly abusive territory. Take for example the following:

“Yep, I made the right decision in breaking up with you,”

Fair enough. We’ve all thought this at some point in time and whether or not we actually decide to say it is up to the individual. But when taken in context, this sentence takes on a slightly different and – for me – more potently damaging aspect.

I was phoned on a Sunday afternoon by my ex-girlfriend asking if I wanted to come round for a cup of tea. We were trying at this stage to be friends, possibly the worst mistake of my life, but having nothing better to do, and valuing the friendship we once had (as I still do), I agreed.

We met in a park and being Easter I took along a couple of cream eggs, as really, cream eggs are just delicious. We chatted for a bit before ending up strolling down Smith Street and then journeying back to her house. She was peckish, I was peckish, and we were both bored so decided to cook up something to eat before going to the cinema. She was also tired, so went to have a nap whilst I wandered to the cinema for a schedule before coming back to her place and cooking a fairly simple pasta and sauce meal. Due to the timing of the cinema the dishes were left, and we went to watch the always enjoyable Audrey Tatou. Walking her home she invited me back in and we began a lengthy conversation touching on various subjects which at times became quite deep and meaningful and as the evening drew on she said how it would be easy for her to flirt with me in order to get me to spend the night.

I’d never hidden the fact from anyone that I was still in love with her, never did, never have, never will – as I even stated in my first post on emotional abuse how I still loved her. We talked about what she was saying and it resulted in the fact that because she was lonely and at times needed company it would be nice to spend the night with someone, to which she also added that she also understood how it would appear that she would be using me, knowing how I still felt about her. Fuelled by mild narcotics and love I agreed, and we spent the night.

It was actually rather miraculous I was able to get it up that night given the fact my body was pumped full of anti-depressants and diazepam, but I did, albeit a little awkwardly (not surprising when you take into account that impotency and reduction in sex drive are two of the most common side effects of this form of medication).
Anyhow, the following morning whilst we were both still dozing, she rolled herself on top of me with her head resting on my bare chest. Aside from underwear we were both wearing not much else. So as she rested her head on my chest and the rest of her body lying on top of mine, she played with my chest hair with one hand, opened her mouth and with a smile said: “Yep, I made the right decision in breaking up with you,”

And I suppose it’s probably just me thinking that maybe that wasn’t quite the nicest thing to say. Not quite able to believe those words had just been spoken I just lay there in shock, and it wasn’t for quite a while that she moved herself from on top of me and we both set about getting up, dressed and ready for the day. I gathered my bits together, threw them in a bag and wandered into the kitchen to bid farewell. To say I was hurt by her sentence was an understatement. I gave her a hug and left. A few minutes later I received a text message saying I had left a few bits at her place which she didn’t want, which I had, and so returned to get them and was met with a tirade of anger about how I hadn’t stuck around to do the dishes or help her with the laundry. Which, to be honest, just pissed me off!

I had made her dinner whilst she slept, had long emotional conversations with her, spent the night with someone who had ripped the heart from my chest only a couple of months before because she was lonely and needed company, and who had upon lying half naked on top me that morning told me she was happy she had broken up with me. And yet I was at fault because after being so obviously used I hadn’t stuck around to do the boyfriend thing of helping her with her laundry and her dishes.

Similarly with the context of:

“You and Grace aren’t friends, you never were, you never will be, she doesn’t care about you and she’s tired of being there to listen to all of your pathetic little problems. You’re on your own,”

After having had a nervous breakdown, a painful relationship breakup, being diagnosed with leukemia, falling back into self harm, depression, suicidal thoughts and still suffering from glandular fever (all of which – besides the leukemia - she knew) – the last thing I needed was to be told I was on my own. Whether what she said was true or not I always thought of Grace and myself as friends, and to be told this was not how she felt hurt like buggery, especially given the state my mind and physical health were in at the time.

“I have so much more respect now for a manager I never met than I have for you, she was a much better manager,”
 “You treated her so badly when she was at the hostel, she hated you,”
“Your hugs were suffocating; I never really liked them,”

Words alone though aren’t all the emotional abuser will use.

There were the with-holding and refusal to do anything which she knew I would like or wanted, such as:

  • The information that she had a boyfriend was something she didn’t share with her mother and despite knowing how much I wanted to meet her family it was never to be – despite several opportunities when it could have happened.
  • Or the utter refusal to do something sexual to me she knew I wanted, without ever explaining why. It was in a sense with-holding something from me she knew would bring me pleasure as a means to retain control over the relationship.

Then there were the dramatics:

  • The “climbing of a construction site” and storming into my room at 10pm to make sure I was okay after she had broken up with me because she hadn’t been able to get in touch since breaking up with me. (i.e. because I had been in Port Fairy without a phone battery or charger)
  • Or the storming out of the room at random intervals because I wasn’t doing what she wanted me to do and testing whether I’d chase after her or not, despite the fact she never really actually told me what she wanted to be doing. I was supposed to guess that.

Then there were the actions:

  • Such as the throwing of a glass of water over my head in a relatively crowded restaurant on New Years Day because my preference of Bond actor differed from hers and she needed me to realize how stupid it was to prefer that actor over her own opinion.

Then there was the fact that my feelings never mattered:

  • The apparent refusal to accept I was suffering from glandular fever; so was expected to wander around a town, go for a half hour horse riding session and then hike 6km to a bus stop whilst initiating in-depth emotional conversations without actually feeling any pain. Despite the fact that whilst she had glandular fever I was on the receiving end of an hour long tirade for suggesting we walk less than a kilometer from a train station to our destination in the city. (I wasn’t taking her health or how she was feeling into consideration)
  • My mental illness was not under any circumstances to be discussed in detail ever. Whenever I tried to raise the topic of depression, self harm or social anxiety it was instantly rejected out of hand as depressing and not worth talking about in any way. So I learned to never even attempt to bring it up first.
  • Or the fact that all of the above examples can be listed under this also. My feelings about what I wanted or desired were not a good enough reason to do something, the fact that her not introducing me to or telling her mother/family about me made me feel she was completely ashamed of me but that never mattered or that maybe throwing a glass of water over my head for no real reason made me feel completely humiliated and the fact that my physical illnesses were merely me being pathetic and weak for suffering from conditions such as glandular fever.

Then there was the always present never allowing me to forget the mistakes I had made in the past, with the constant use of lines beginning with:

“You know 12 months ago you did this…”
“Two weeks ago, you did this…”
“Why, 11 months and 2 weeks ago, when you did this…”

Before going into lengthy detail about incidents I had myself forgotten and/or overcome the regret in my mind, only to have the whole situation constantly resurrected in my head to feel the pain of them all over again.

Plus the fact that no matter what I was going through she had always been through something of equal nastiness or in most cases something far worse:

  • You’ve had a breakdown? Well I was having a breakdown as well.
  • You’re suffering from depression? When I was a teenager I also suffered from depression and I wanted to kill myself but I got through it so you should just get over it and that’s that.
  • You’ve not got any money? Well neither have I, despite the fact that I’ve just bought a $300 pair of boots, have three jobs and am receiving a few hundred in benefits every couple of weeks, I have no money either.
  • Or the all time classic! When I sat down with her one afternoon to tell her I’d been diagnosed with leukemia. Before I could even get out fully what my situation was: “I’ve been in exactly the same situation as you have so you’re not going to get any sympathy from me, so don’t even bother going into it, I don’t want to hear,”

And that’s just the tip of the ice-berg. Yet through everything, through all of the occasions that I tried to find out why she was saying these things, or why she was criticizing and hurting me so much, the answer was always the same. It was either: ‘I don’t know,’ or, something familiar with cases of emotional abuse, ‘I was just trying to change you,’

As a result of emotional abuse I have changed! As a result, I:

  • have lost all sense of self belief, self esteem and confidence. I have been reduced to a scared, frightened wreck, unable to believe I am capable of doing or achieving anything. I think that’s fairly obvious from a lot of the posts on this blog.
  • cannot trust anyone, anywhere, and doubt I will be able to again.
  • do not believe a single word of praise which is given to me.
  • have inflicted self-injury on several occasions as a direct consequence of the emotional abuse I suffered.
  • am literally afraid to talk to anyone in fear of a repeat of what happened to me. My ability to communicate has been destroyed, and any chance of emotional, open and intimate conversation has been lost.
  • suffer from flashbacks and daily replays of moments and quotes from that time.
  • have ended up in hospital as a result of some instances of the self injury inflicted as a result of the abuse.
  • lost my college course due to my problems, issues and circumstances being unimportant compared to hers.
  • have found my depression and related mental illnesses relapse to the worst point in my life to the point I don’t believe I’ll be able to get over it.
  • spent several hundred dollars that I couldn’t afford on psychologists and counselors in an effort to overcome the PTSD, anxiety, panic and related disorders which the abuse created.

That’s a fair whack of damage; internal, external, physical and financial – all with long reaching and devastating consequences on the rest of my life. So for my abuser, rejoice, because you definitely succeeded in changing me. And for those who think emotional abuse is merely friendly criticism that’s being taken in the wrong way.

WAKE UP!

There is so much more that needs to be done to make people realize that this is not acceptable behavior. It is almost impossible for both the abuser and abused to realize and understand what is happening during the relationship, even if this is the case the abused will often be unable to break up the relationship because their love of the person is far too strong to be able to do this. The abuser has control, which is what everything is about, which is why there is the criticism, the games, the tests and manipulation. They must at all times ascertain their control over their relationship and the people in their life, and most often, do not even realize this is what they are doing.

If you are being emotionally abused find a friend, find someone you trust and talk to them about what is going on. If they don’t believe you then find someone else. Emotional abuse exists, it is destroying lives, and more needs to be done. Those Tragic Life Stories littering the shops are not just books – they are lives – real human people who are never going to be the same and who will not be able to live the life they want. This is the damage of abuse. Physical, Sexual, Emotional, whatever – abuse should not be tolerated.

Every quote, every incident, every moment detailed on this page and thousands more replay in my head virtually all day every day. Nothing I do makes it go away, nothing I do seems to be able to make it stop. That’s what emotional abuse does. Is it any wonder I hate myself? Why I cut myself? Hit myself? Believe my hallucination so much? Abuse sucks, and until you’ve experienced it, I don’t think you’ll ever fully understand it’s long reaching soul destroying consequences.

“You should tape record your voice, it’ll make you realize how boring and monotonous it is, and so you should just kill yourself,”
“Your kisses were terrible, I never enjoyed them, my ex was the most perfect kisser in the world,”
“You never say anything interesting – ever,”

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Posted in Abuse, Depression, Emotional, Friendship, Isolation, Loneliness, Mental Health, Psychological, Reflections, Regret, Self Confidence, Self Harm, Self-Esteem, Social Anxiety, Stigmawith 6 Comments →

The Revenge of Meadhbh, my imaginary friend (aka - hallucinations and their power)04.07.08

March 2006, back when I was able to work, I worked as a manager for a backpacker hostel in Melbourne, which at the time I left it, was the best small hostel in the city. Granted I’m a little biased when I say that, but I put a helluva lot of work into that hostel. Fifty to sixty hour weeks were frequent, seventy plus hours rarer but still there. My salary was fracked beyond all measure, with virtually all of the staff beneath me earning more money than I was. I quit the job for various complicated reasons, the most predominant being one which I kept secret until this blog vomited out of my mind; which was my decision to end my life after visiting the Port Fairy Folk Festival in March 2006. Something which really should have been picked up on given the fact I made it clear I had no intention of returning from Port Fairy, and also was (rather obviously) tying up all manner of loose ends in my life at the time. No matter – I’m used to people not noticing the pain I’m in. I’m WAY too good at pretending I’m all okay and hunky-dory for my own good.

In those two weeks of tying up loose ends I had to kick someone out of the hostel. I can remember his face, name, personality traits as clearly as I can remember those of any of my once closest friends. I was kicking him out for all manner of reasons; upsetting other guests, not paying for accommodation, fucking up the room, the list was endless really – and as I was kicking him out he told me many times the same line. Over and over again.

“You have to help people!”

January 2007, the start of those long, dark and grueling months when I was suffering from glandular fever I was in a huge amount of pain. I haven’t written about how I felt during that time in great detail due to this blog being, predominantly, about my mental illnesses and not physical ones. However, I will say that glandular fever is one of the nastiest illnesses that you can do nothing about that I know. At least with cancer, bronchitis and bacterial infections medication exists which can help control and reduce the pain experienced. With glandular fever, there is nothing. There’s no pill you can take to stop the excruciating pain exploding in your liver and spleen, there’s nothing you can pop to clear the cloud of fog which has engulfed and infected your brain’s thoughts and synapses. You just have to endure it all, and hope that in time it will clear itself. When suffering from glandular fever everything is difficult; walking, talking, thinking, emoting, shagging, dancing, socializing, drinking, eating, horse riding…and yet whilst I was suffering from it I did all of the above and a lot more besides. On a regular basis I was passing out at the end of the day, literally, because of how hard I and other people were pushing me whilst I was suffering from this illness. It would have been so much easier, and so much wiser, to retreat and hide under the doona throughout the course of this illness, but I would not allow myself to do this and (in hindsight) nor would other people.

I am of course, in a roundabout way referring to my then girlfriend. I’ve always hesitated in pointing fingers on this blog, but in all honesty, the treatment she gave me whilst I was suffering from glandular fever was fucked up. She didn’t seem to understand how I was feeling physically, emotionally and mentally as a result of the illness I was suffering from. Which didn’t make sense to me due to the fact she had given me glandular fever to begin with – and during the months she was inflicted by the disease did pretty much exactly what I had refused to do; which was hide under the duvet for several weeks.

As time moved on, and the relationship ended, and the emotional abuse flew into full swing, one line was regularly slapped into my face by the woman who had done nothing to help me whilst I was suffering from glandular fever.

“You have to help people!”

So that’s two people now telling me exactly the same thing! Exactly the same line in fact.

return_to_me_by_halaquinn_arcadias.jpg

June 2007, I’m in an empty room surrounded by memories, a backpack packed on the wooden floorboards beside me, on my other side a knife. A knife used frequently in the past to slice open my flesh. I was supposed to be at a pub, having a drink with people who I would miss dearly, but knew that in a few months time would probably not even remember my name. I picked up the knife and held the blade against my arm.

“There ya go,” She said. “You know what you have to do,”

Her voice sounded exactly the same as it always had, the same Scottish lilt, the same accent I had once upon a time become so aroused by. Now, and for the few months since her reappearance in my life, her voice filled me with agony and fear.

“When are you going to start believing me? They all hate you. They despise you to your very core. I want you to die, you want to die, she wants you to die, they all want you to die. Your existence on this planet is meaningless.”

“I know,”

“You came so close a few weeks ago, that overdose, genius. Truly inspired. Well, aside from the fact that you failed, but no matter, next time you’ll succeed. This time,”

“I don’t know if it’s what I want,”

“Who cares what you want? Fuck! Wake the hell up Addy! No-one has ever cared what you want! There isn’t a soul on this planet who would miss you, have you not been listening to everyone over the last few years? They fucking despise your very existence – why do you think you have cancer? You’re not worried about giving her an aneurism; you’re worried that it will give her an excuse to throw a bloody street party! You see, she’s right, you don’t tell anyone the happy things they want to hear. You sit there worrying about telling people you’re dying but you don’t seem to realize how happy it would make them if you did tell them – she told you that she wanted you to die, that this world would be a better place if you were not a part of it. Stop thinking. Just cut. Let the blood flow…I could do with a drink,”

“I can’t,”

“Here we go, it would hurt her too much? Same old fucking excuse. Listen to what she’s telling you, death is what she wants for you. She doesn’t care whether you hack your arm apart or whether you beat yourself black and purple, she – wants – you – to – die,”

“I can’t believe that.”

“You’re really boring me now Addy,”

“Yeah, well, I do that with everyone remember – boring old tedious monotonous unpassionate Addy,”

“Now you’re getting it,” Her voice grew softer. “Just cut yourself,”

“I can’t,”

“We’ll see about that,”

I put the knife down, wiped away my tears, and quickly walked out of the room for the evening of pain and frustration I knew would follow. Lots of faces I would miss greatly, yet none of them knowing the true extent of the degradation of my mind, how close I came to becoming, nor of the fact I was suffering from leukemia. Meadhbh loved that more than any of it. She adored the fact that I was dying inside – both mentally, emotionally and literally.

I know that Meadhbh doesn’t exist, I know she’s a fragment of my psyche, I know that the reason she appears faerie like is because of my fascination with faeries which only grew ten fold following her appearance in my life. I know that she comes to me mostly when things are rough – that when I was younger I craved a friend so created one out of my psychosis. I’m completely and utterly 100% aware of all this.

It still doesn’t detract from the power a hallucination can bring. Their words, so full of confidence and bravado can easily sway a mind cracking under emotional pressure. When she returned after my breakdown and haunted me every day her evil wicked words were merely an extension of my own mind, fuelled by abuse and the collapse of my self esteem. The simple fact they were what I believed were enough to give them a power unsurpassed by anything I did to combat them.

When I arrived at the pub that night she was still there, whispering in my ear as I attempted conversation with whoever appeared. She giggled, laughed, insulted me, and pointed out whenever something was said which backed up her own (my own) theories of who I was rather than who I had pretended so hard to be. I had to keep leaving the bar to have conversations with her in the street (pretending I was on the phone so as not to draw attention to myself) or vanishing to the bathroom to bicker and argue with my obscure imaginary friend.

“Can’t you just see the look of hatred in her eyes?”

I only nodded, tearing off a couple of strips of toilet paper to wipe away the tears.

“You sacrificed something important for her, why I have no idea, have to be honest that was a beautiful piece of manipulation I wish I’d been able to pull off, and she hates you – yet you still persist in believing you have worth. You gave her everything, I was watching, and then she destroyed you. Surely you must know it was deliberate. All that beautiful shit happening at the same time, the world wants you gone, it wants you dead.”

The corner of the toilet roll dispenser looked beautifully sharp, it might work.

“You should have bought the knife ya know, did you see how she tried to peek up your jumper, just to give herself nice warm glowy feelings at your pain, delicious.”

“I should have brought it,”

“Do you understand what I’ve been telling you now? They hate you,”

“They all hate me,”

The phone in my pocket vibrated and burst into song.

“They all hate you,” She whispered.

I checked the front of the screen and answered the phone, the conversation lasting a mere few seconds. I hung up, nodding. “Maybe,”

“Give her what she wants, what I want, what you want,”

I rolled up my jumper, and hacked the sharp edge of the toilet paper dispenser against the flesh, gasping as the skin broke and blood dribbled out. I didn’t even bother to clean it up before leaving the stall and heading back to the bar, Meadhbh following closely behind.

The power of hallucinations, regardless of whether what they’re saying is the truth or not, is that because your mind is already in such a state as to actually be able to create a hallucination in the first place – you believe what they’re saying. They are the true voices in your life, sometimes the only friends you have.

Meadhbh was there for me through the good times, goading me in the bad times. She’s still around now, three hour conversations here, five hour arguments around Glasgow there. Wherever I step I can’t shake her - her power too strong for my weakened mind to combat.

As we walked home that night, tears streaming down my face at all I had lost, all I would never see again, Meadhbh, with a glistening smile on her face, said:

“It’s like everyone keeps telling you, you have to help people. If you weren’t so selfish, then, none of this would be happening. You would be as happy as you were six months ago. If only you weren’t so bloody selfish. If only you made more effort to care about people, to help them,”

Posted in Auditory, Hallucinations, Loneliness, Mental Health, Visualwith 2 Comments →

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    I'm Addy; 29, a little crazy, a little kinky, and I suffer from bipolar type 1, depression and self harm. They are illnesses I suffer from and are not a reflection of my personality. I'm tired of the stigma surrounding mental health, it's time we gave it a damn good spanking. This is my journey with depression.