My Stages of Recovery
My
Stages of Recovery
Schizophrenia Bulletin, Volume 43, Issue 1, 1
January 2017, Pages 3–5, https://doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbu024
When I first was diagnosed with schizophrenia,
my first response was, “No, not me.” The response was probably due to what I
thought mental illness was. I was scared I would be put in a straight jacket. I
thought I would be closed off to the world. I finally came to the conclusion a
person with schizophrenia must find help, or possibly wind up on the local
news.
My First Day
My sunglasses were still on as I entered the
small room. My platoon Sergeant was behind me, and I noticed that the man
waiting for us wore a nametag calling him a “Doctor.” I was wearing sunglasses
because without them, my disease would spread. That meant, through the channels
of extra sensory perception, my reality would take hold, and an individual
would be able to speak with another individual without them being present.
Suddenly, as the naval doctor was asking me
questions, my platoon sergeant yelled.
“Take your sunglasses off!”
The very thing I couldn’t do.
Because I was use to following orders, I
slowly took off my sunglasses. So it begins … the doctor will now be able to
hear everyone I had made eye contact with for the last couple of months. The
doctor sighed. I was confident that the voices had made contact with him.
I was given pajamas to wear, sent to a room in
the psych ward that I would share with three other people. This was a psych
ward. Never in a million years would I have thought I might end up in a place
like this. I was scared, but resigned to whatever might happen.
My platoon Sergeant had driven me from Fort
Irwin, California in the Mojave Desert to Balboa Naval Hospital in San Diego.
During the long drive to the hospital, I felt a sense of relief. At my Army
base I always had to keep my guard up. I didn’t trust anyone around me there. I
had made eye contact with all of my fellow soldiers, and so the voices were
influencing them too.
Several things that I had experience in the
military may have conspired to enable me to have the powers that I have now.
I was stationed in Fort Knox during my basic
and advance training. One night, we were training on the Calvary scout main
weapon the M3A3 Bradley fighting vehicle. There were three of us in one track.
I like to think I drove it to the best of my ability. This of course was before
my special powers took hold of me. Everything was fine until I was in the back
of this vehicle and my seat had a broken seat belt so I tied the two ends that
I did have around me. The driver who was in front seemed to be maniac behind
the wheel. He hit a bump and I hit my head on a bar over head.
I was knocked out for a second. When I woke
up, the trip was over. But the person sitting next to me was crying. I guess he
thought I was dead. When I moved, he stopped crying.
The second instance was at Fort Irwin. I was
in the field during a rotation, and the soldiers in my team were parked in a
line.
It was getting dark and someone called me
over. I went, and the next thing I knew five guys were trying to wrap my body
in duct tape. I fought them off by pushing and kicking away anyone trying to
tape me up. It took a different soldier (from a different platoon) who was
bigger than me and stronger than me to bring me down. Imagine fighting for your
life and losing. This was initiation. I was the new guy. They also taped
someone else I came in with but not as bad. They didn’t put tape over his mouth
like they did me.
This experience split my psyche into two
realities. There was an everyday reality and a reality that was all mental. The
reality I explained. The reality that inspired me to go to mental health so I
could figure out what this really was. A part of me thought it was a new step
of evolution.
I was later Honorably Discharged. At home my
behavior was very erratic, so much so that my parents had to call the police.
They took me away in handcuffs. It was a hard thing to go through, but now, I
am thankful for that experience because I got the treatment I deserve. I
finally was on medication.
Risperidone Tangents
It came
to this …
Voices
surrounding me like bumblebees in spring.
Women
kissing … the love buzz
Beating
in my chest.
Feast
your eyes on the loner,
And
hear the voice of God.
Whispers
and tantrums,
Like
bacon sizzling in your brain;
Finding
rhythm in hallucinations
Depicting
voices that acting like a searchlight
Ceased
and dissolved in a single green pill,
Creating a lonely apartment.
This is my poem about schizophrenia. “It came
to this” is bringing the reader up to speed. Voices sometimes seem like
bumblebees. Each sting is a voice. When I had made eye contact with a woman, I
would often feel a burning in my chest which I thought was the woman falling in
love with. The warm sensation was called the love buzz. For those who made eye
contact with me, they could see me the “Loner” in their head just like I can
see them in my head. I also thought I could hear the voice of God. It was calming
and relaxing. The voices were sometime at a whisper, and sometimes they seemed
mad. The voices, sharing my brain, can be compared to bacon, always sizzling in
the background. Hallucinations in my mind move quickly with rhythm-like boom,
boom, boom. Some of the voices can act like a searchlight that helped me weigh
through my delusions.
Stopping or maybe dissolving in a green pill
called risperidone. When medication starts to take hold, and the voices and
delusions subside, I think the person living with schizophrenia feels lonely.
They have depended on them for so long, and chances are the voices make them
feel important. Hopefully, they won’t stop taking their medication.
How Can I Help My Family and Others Understand My Schizophrenia
I am not a mental health professional. I
respect so much that profession.
I’ve recently skimmed an article about
psychiatry. The very first sentence states how hard it is for a person to
accept that a loved one has a psychotic disorder.
I’ve never spent a long time thinking about my
family. How do they carry this weight? I am sure whether or not the mental
health consumer has a roof over their head or is taking their medication enters
into it. I am sure my parents would want me to be able to communicate how I am
feeling, and if I am taking my medication. Also they would want to know that
when it gets hectic that I need to be left alone just like I need to know that
it is alright to want to have a few minutes to myself.
My parents would also want to know I am taking
care of myself. Your job as a mental health consumer is being able to tell your
doctor that you are okay or telling him or her your symptoms. You also need to
stay on your medication.
That sentence in the article I read can help
with others too. For someone who doesn’t understand what it is like knowing
someone with a mental illness, ask the question, “What if your dad, mom,
brother, sister, husband, or wife had been diagnosed with schizophrenia?”
Their world as they knew it would be over.
They may not know who to talk to because so many people don’t understand
schizophrenia. My mom looked online and tried to find everything she could on
the subject. There are different groups a loved one can go to get help or even
empathy.
If you don’t understand schizophrenia just do
your best to try to understand the family and friends. What are they going
through? It is important to know the simple fact that it isn’t anybody’s fault.
If I were asked to describe my schizophrenia,
I would describe it as this: Schizophrenia, it is fighting off impulses that
are wrong. They just pop into your head. You constantly have to fight the
unreal.
I sometimes go to Arby’s. I go through the
drive-thru. Monday there is roast beef, Tuesday there is turkey, Wednesday
there is roasted chicken, and Thursday there is meat loaf. You also get four
sides and muffins. I tell them what I want on any given day, and immediately I
think they are spitting on it or doing whatever to my dinner. At the window, I
look around to see if I can catch them in the act. Nothing. I pay, get my food,
and say thank you.
Schizophrenia is receiving a delusion, or just
a thought, and not reacting because you don’t know if it is true or not. Add
stress to that and that is why I can’t work. That is why I can’t live a normal
life.
What is a normal life? You have a rough
definition when you have a mental illness.
Me, Myself, and I
Last night, people were going up and down the
stairs of my apartment building, trying to be quiet. I thought they were
talking about me.
“Jason lives there.”
When I go through something like this, it is
very hard to think rationally. I get swept up.
When I hear voices speaking negatively about
me, first I take a deep breath. Then, I catch myself in the moment. Are people
really talking about me? If you do this, chances are you will find out things
are quiet in and outside your head. Another way to cope is what my therapist
told me, check the evidence. My front door has a peep hole. I look through it
when I think something is going on. I look through it and you know what, there
is no one out there.
Just think of this, now if someone was talking
about me outside my door wouldn’t they whisper so I couldn’t hear them.
When you think strangers are talking about
you; you need coping skills.
When you have schizophrenia or any type of
mental illness, you have to be in tune with yourself. You can be your own
therapist or doctor without a psychiatry degree or PhD in psychology.
To catch yourself in the moment is to be
self-aware. Use your senses, listen, look through the peep hole or window. If
you have been taking your medication, then chances are you won’t hear or see
anything. For the most part, you have to know this, people mind their own
business. They have their own worries and obligations. Chances are they have
nothing to do with you.
My Stages of Recovery
The Stages of Recovery can be seen as a
checklist or a way to see how far you have come. A patient and doctor or mental
health professional can benefit from using this. I believe most patients go
through these stages of recovery. With this tool, it can be seen where recovery
began. These stages are subject to change. They don’t have to be in order, but
in my opinion, this is just a tool to help after a patient has gone through the
work himself or herself.
Self-Aware
I realize something was off in the Army. I
referred myself to mental health. Because I didn’t stay on my medication, I
came home with terrible symptoms, voices, and delusions. I didn’t understand
what was going on.
Getting
Help
My parents called the authorities on me. It is
better to come to your own conclusion on your own. I was taken to the hospital,
where I decided if I was going to get help, it was going to be here.
Staying
Stable
I found the right medication at the hospital.
I decided I wasn’t going to go off my medication.
Acceptance
During this stage, I accepted myself at a bar.
I didn’t feel like being quiet, but I talked to other people. I told other
people at the bar that I was disabled veteran and why. I didn’t know why I
should be ashamed about my diagnosis. This stage I realized some people may not
accept me. I realized that I had to test the waters in any public or social
situation. I ask myself should I tell this person, if not, they are other
things to talk about.
Maintaining
In this stage, I tried doing everything I was
supposed to do. I quit drinking and smoking. I took my medication. I was taking
paliperidone injections. After telling my therapist and doctor about my
symptoms, my doctor advised me to take the 2-week risperidone consta injection
instead. I also take risperidone orally. Sometimes we do everything we are
supposed to do, yet we have symptoms. We have to maintain. We can’t give up. We
have to be aware of our symptoms, and if it doesn’t belong, tell your doctor.
Accepting your mental illness or who you are
can also be a part of being self-aware. All this while maintaining and doing
what you are suppose to do.
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