Dear Vincent,
It is Mental Health Awareness Week and now I am going on 33 years old
and just about two decades striving to earn my Mental Health Certificate, or,
even better, my Mental Health Prize. Some might say these perpetual and
frequently neurotic efforts have made me far too obsessed with myself and quite
frequently, I would tend to agree. And then every once in a while I think, well
and oh well, all this had made me a reasonably eccentric and vaguely lovable
and fascinating creature with very Shiny Chrome and almost impeccably clean
windows, and liberating fashion sense, and an interesting sentence every once in a while.
These days I am thinking about how if you are suicidal or deemed
psychiatrically at risk, you are more or less stripped of your human rights and thrown into
a room all by yourself for 72 hours, often restrained. I doubt this is very
helpful at all. In fact, I think it is terrible.
And I am not really sure about Borderline Personality Disorder. I kind
of think that Borderline Personality Disorder is like the irritable bowel
syndrome of psychiatry. When I eat too many carrots, I get diarrhea, and this
does not mean there is anything particularly disorderly about either me or my
bowels. Something similar happens with too many grapes, or spoonfuls of coconut
cream, and chocolate covered almonds, and all of the legumes. I won't say anything else about
this except that, I have a saying that goes, Clap Loud If You Believe in
Borderline Personality Disorder. The correct response is, a whole bunch of
devastating dad jokes.
The other thing I feel very aware of is that everything can change in a
flash and though you might have all the champion strategies and an excellent
network in place, life might still unravel rather tragically.
On Tuesday, as I sat in a park, I saw three kids playing with a bright
yellow sponge bob square pants ball. They thought that it would be a brilliant
idea to throw the ball into the middle of the pond. One of the little girls
changed her mind about the brilliant idea and when she saw the beloved ball in
the middle of the pond, she let out an indelicate weep. The little boy say,
"Don't worry it will come back." But he didn't do anything, he just watched. And in
fact, one or two times the ball did come back and the children giggled with
delight. Then the third or fourth time, the ball got stuck a couple metres from
the edge of the pond. So Indelicate Weeper sobbed some more and Don’t Worry
It Will Come Back shrugged his shoulders and just waited. But the other little
girl, maybe 4, said “I’m gonna find a stick.” With the stick, she could reach
the ball, and everyone giggled in delight again. And this went on until after
one throw, the ball ended up just a little too far for I’m Gonna Find a Stick to
reach it. So Indelicate Weeper sobbed and Don’t Worry It Will Come Back
shrugged his shoulders. But four-year-old I’m Gonna Find a Stick wouldn't give
up and she found some bigger kid and asked her, “Can you help me get the ball?”
And the bigger kid said yes, and she could. And the ball came back to the edge
of the pond and everyone giggled in delight until it was time to throw the ball
once again.
What I want to say to people who struggle, and this is a lot of us, is,
keep reaching however you can.
Love, Erica.
Reach out to me, or to Imaginary Vincent at ericaschmidt85(at)gmail(dot)com.
p.s. Vincent is my therapist and I have that thing where you love your therapist, and I get to see Vincent every other Wednesday.
p.s. Vincent is my therapist and I have that thing where you love your therapist, and I get to see Vincent every other Wednesday.
This is your strange and beautiful life Follow Erica J. Schmidt on Facebook Exuberant Bodhisattva on Facebook Twitter: @mypelvicfloor I Let Go Bodhisattva Business Ventures: Deep Cleans by Erica J. Schmidt (@deepcleanswitherica) Instagram: @deepcleanswitherica Guillaume, Part Two Dear Vincent, Thank you for responding to my hysterical phone call. Dear Vincent, This is a hungry ghost. Dear Vincent, This is what the Dead Inside Man says about killing yourself. |
It is not so hard to just wade in. ;-)
ReplyDeleteNot necessarily a metaphor...