Showing posts with label mental health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mental health. Show all posts

Monday, January 11, 2016

Shattered Fragments: Anime and Mental Illness

I never set out to be an advocate for mental illness, it was never something I was passionate about because I didn’t understand it. As a matter of fact, it terrified me because of the stigma that is associated with it. It wasn’t until I was diagnosed with depression and anxiety that I really began to understand what it’s like to live with something like a mental illness, what pain really was, and what it’s like to live in a world that fears and misunderstands you. I may sound a bit dramatic, but when you’re constantly told that your condition is something of an imaginary concept and these feelings that you have aren’t validated, you get fed up and want to speak what is in your soul.

It’s hard to explain what it’s like to someone who doesn’t have a mental illness what it’s like to have one. I only know how I feel on my darkest days, and I am very different from someone else with a similar condition, see that’s what makes this so hard: no two people with a mental illness are exactly alike. What works for one may not work for another, it’s not an exact science; it’s mostly trial and error because the human mind is one of the most mysterious “organs” on the body.

The world hasn’t really been kind to those with mental illness, since the very first human came into existence we have feared and mistreated those who suffer with this condition. It’s been associated and portrayed in our society as a negative thing; television shows and movies depicting horrific asylums, crazy killer patients, and perverted psychologists (sometimes referred to crudely as “shrinks”). It also doesn’t help that a stigma has been in place for centuries. While researching the subject, I discovered that the first recorded Lunatic Asylum in Europe was the Bethlem Royal Hospital in London, and it has been a part of London since 1247 when it was built as a priory. It became a hospital in 1330 and admitted its first mentally ill patients in 1407. Before the Madhouse Act of 1774, treatment of the Insane was carried out by non-licensed practitioners, who ran their Madhouses as a commercial enterprise and with little regard for the inmates. The Mad House act established the licensing required to house insane patients, with yearly inspections of the premises taking place. Back in America, the U.S. Library of Medicine states that the mentally ill in early American communities were generally cared for by family members, however, in severe cases they sometimes ended up in almshouses or jails. Because mental illness was generally thought to be caused by a moral or spiritual failing, punishment and shame were often handed down to the mentally ill and sometimes their families as well. As the population grew and certain areas became more densely settled, mental illness became one of a number of social issues for which community institutions were created in order to handle the needs of such individuals collectively.

This scared the crap out of me when I read it because we really haven’t come that far as far as the stigma and treatment of the mentally ill is concerned. It shows in our culture but it’s not obvious like some other issues that we deal with in society, it’s subtle and quiet.

Anime has been the only genre that openly deals with issues like depression, anxiety, psychosis, PTSD, and many other conditions. It unapologetically portrays it in a raw, gritty manner, not pulling any punches and it’s just…real. As someone who has been in this world for some time there is an authenticity to it, an authenticity that you just can’t find anywhere else. Here are just a few characters that I relate to, and characters that I think portray what it’s like to live within this often dark world. The following may contain spoilers so read with caution!



Yuki Takeya: School-Live!

Yuki is a classic case of someone dealing with PTSD and psychosis. The NIMH classifies PTSD and psychosis as so:

“ PTSD develops after a terrifying ordeal that involved physical harm or the threat of physical harm. The person who develops PTSD may have been the one who was harmed, the harm may have happened to a loved one, or the person may have witnessed a harmful event that happened to loved ones or strangers.”

“The word psychosis is used to describe conditions that affect the mind, where there has been some loss of contact with reality. When someone becomes ill in this way it is called a psychotic episode. During a period of psychosis, a person’s thoughts and perceptions are disturbed and the individual may have difficulty understanding what is real and what is not.  Symptoms of psychosis include delusions (false beliefs) and hallucinations (seeing or hearing things that others do not see or hear). Other symptoms include incoherent or nonsense speech, and behavior that is inappropriate for the situation.”
She sees the world as she wants it to be and not how it really is. After witnessing both her classmate Kurumi kill her senpai because he turned and the courage of her favorite teacher sacrifice herself to the zombies, Yuki completely shuts down and enters a psychosis where it is not the apocalypse and everything is as it should be: she’s at school with her friends, she regularly goes to classes, and she enthusiastically bounds through the hallways as if nothing has happened. The most tragic of this situation is her dealing with the death of her favorite teacher Megumi. She still speaks and addresses her as if she is still there, even having hallucinations of her. As the show progresses we find that slowly, Yuki’s world is collapsing around her and she is forced to accept the fact that her favorite teacher is in fact dead, and her life as she knew it has changed. It’s often very hard to watch and even the most experienced doctor has trouble with patients suffering with these conditions because as I said before: no two cases are alike.


Shinji Ikari – Neon Genesis Evangelion

Shinji, like me, suffers from major depression and anxiety. If he’s not isolating himself and questioning his will to live, he’s constantly seeking approval from his peers to make up for his sense of self-worthlessness. Going back to the NIMH, it has several definitions for depression, so I’ve somewhat formed my own: It is a condition where you feel worthless; no matter what you do it won’t amount to anything. You hurt and you want to cry but you have no idea why nor is there a good reason for it. It’s like a dark cloud hanging over you that is constantly telling you how stupid, worthless, and insignificant you are. Add anxiety into the mix and you have this feeling of falling and seeing the floor coming up fast on you—all the time. Shinji is constantly questioning his worth, he’s always worrying about what others think of him, and he’s contemplating that he’s just not worth anything. The creator Hideaki Anno, suffered from depression and psychosis. He actually wrote the original ending during a psychotic break; the show is tied as a projection of the author’s own mental state.

If you are one of the 350 Million People Worldwide that suffer from depression, if you are suffering from anxiety, if you are suffering from any sort of mental illness I want you to know something:
I’m here to say that it is okay to say that you hurt, that you matter very much, and you are no different than someone with any other medical condition; you just hurt in a different way. That’s the key to getting a handle on your Mental Health: remember that you matter, that there is someone out there who does care, and you story is an important addition to this world we live in.

Your story is important; you have something wonderful to give to this world. Sometimes anime can be a mirror of someone’s heart and soul. This is not weird; it doesn’t make you a freak. It makes you human. What are some of your favorite shows? Who in an anime has spoken to you? Let’s have a discussion. That’s how change happens, that’s how stigma’s get kicked out.


If you want to read more on this topic, here’s a great article from BuzzFeed: http://www.buzzfeed.com/jeanlucbouchard/how-an-anime-series-helped-me-recognize-my-depression#.oc9GaEoDL


Monday, December 28, 2015

Mental Health: Why I'm an Advocate

It’s no secret that I am an advocate for Mental Health Awareness; I’ve sort of made it my goal to promote awareness and education on the subject. Mental Health has had a pretty bad reputation since, well people first learned to speak. It’s been associated and portrayed in our society as a negative thing; television shows and movies depicting horrific asylums, crazy killer patients, and perverted psychologists (sometimes referred to crudely as “shrinks”). It also doesn’t help that a stigma has been in place for centuries. While researching the subject, I discovered that the first recorded Lunatic Asylum in Europe was the Bethlem Royal Hospital in London, and it has been a part of London since 1247 when it was built as a priory. It became a hospital in 1330 and admitted its first mentally ill patients in 1407. Before the Madhouse Act of 1774, treatment of the Insane was carried out by non-licensed practitioners, who ran their Madhouses as a commercial enterprise and with little regard for the inmates. The Mad House act established the licensing required to house insane patients, with yearly inspections of the premises taking place. Back in America, the U.S. Library of Medicine states that the mentally ill in early American communities were generally cared for by family members, however, in severe cases they sometimes ended up in almshouses or jails. Because mental illness was generally thought to be caused by a moral or spiritual failing, punishment and shame were often handed down to the mentally ill and sometimes their families as well. As the population grew and certain areas became more densely settled, mental illness became one of a number of social issues for which community institutions were created in order to handle the needs of such individuals collectively.

Imagine being ostracized because you had high blood pressure, or a broken arm. You were so afraid of being criticized or laughed at, or even worse told to “just get over it.” If you had high blood pressure eventually your head would start to feel like it was going to explode before you had a severe heart attack, with a broken arm the bones wouldn’t heal properly without a splint or some other form of support and you would be in pain for the rest of your life from the severely deformed bone. Mental Illness is the same thing, it’s not a physical condition but it is still a medical condition that requires just as much attention as that broken arm. Yes the asylums were horrendous. Yes the patients can become dangerous. But don’t let American Horror Story be your point of reference for learning about the Mentally Ill. When it comes down to it, we’re all carrying around some sort of hurt. Sometimes that hurt becomes a wound that won’t heal but festers and we need help to make it better. How is that a bad thing? Why are we so conditioned to try and do it on our own when it’s nearly impossible to do so? I’m here to say that it is okay to say that you hurt, that you matter very much, and you are no different than someone with any other medical condition; you just hurt in a different way. That’s the key to getting a handle on your Mental Health: remember that you matter, that there is someone out there who does care, and you story is an important addition to this world we live in. 

Anxiety: It's not just "Worrying"

Many people seem to brush anxiety off, saying it’s nothing but “overreacting” or “worrying.” People treat it not as an illness, but as something for someone to just “get over.” The National Institute of Mental Health states that “Anxiety Disorders affect about 40 million American adults age 18 years and older (about 18%) in a given year, causing them to be filled with fearfulness and uncertainty. Unlike the relatively mild, brief anxiety caused by a stressful event (such as speaking in public or a first date), anxiety disorders last at least 6 months and can get worse if they are not treated. Anxiety disorders commonly occur along with other mental or physical illnesses, including alcohol or substance abuse, which may mask anxiety symptoms or make them worse.” A person with anxiety is always second-guessing, always worrying, and always fearful. Here’s how the mind of someone without anxiety works, take for instance turning the coffee pot off or wondering if you locked the door: “I’m pretty sure I locked the door, yeah I did. I just don’t remember because it’s something that’s second nature to me.” Now someone with anxiety: “Oh God, did I lock the door? What if I didn’t? Someone’s bound to notice and break in! What if they’re waiting for me there when I get home? I’d better go double check that door.” It may seem a like the person is over-reacting, but those are, in their mind, legitimate fears that could come to fruition.
I will be discussing the most common anxiety disorder: Generalized Anxiety disorder. The National Institute of Mental Health defines Generalized Anxiety Disorder as this: “People with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) go through the day filled with exaggerated worry and tension, even though there is little or nothing to provoke it. They anticipate disaster and are overly concerned about health issues, money, family problems, or difficulties at work. Sometimes just the thought of getting through the day produces anxiety. GAD is diagnosed when a person worries excessively about a variety of everyday problems for at least 6 months. People with GAD can’t seem to get rid of their concerns, even though they usually realize that their anxiety is more intense than the situation warrants. They can’t relax, startle easily, and have difficulty concentrating. Often they have trouble falling asleep or staying asleep. Physical symptoms that often accompany the anxiety include fatigue, headaches, muscle tension, muscle aches, difficulty swallowing, trembling, twitching, irritability, sweating, nausea, lightheadedness, having to go to the bathroom frequently, feeling out of breath, and hot flashes.”
Now I know you must be thinking: “Why can’t they just tell themselves that it’s all incessant worrying and move on?” The reason is not a question of will, but a question of brain chemistry. Anxiety is natural, it works as a motivator and it acts as a warning system for danger in someone who doesn’t have a hiccup in their brain chemistry. In the 6.8 million American adults with GAD, it’s an inhibitor; the chemicals in the brain are on overdrive and high alert. It’s not something that can just be brushed aside, it needs treatment; just like someone with high blood pressure. I suffer from GAD, and it’s a constant struggle to keep my brain from going mad with worry. I do take my medication every day, but some days it isn’t enough and I need to focus on myself for a few hours. I meditate, do breathing exercises, and avoid loud or over stimulating places. This didn’t come easy; I never thought I could just focus on my breathing when I was in the grips of an anxiety attack. It took practice, and years of therapy to achieve this. I had to learn that Anxiety wasn’t who I am, but just a hiccup in my brain that couldn’t be helped, but could be treated if I wanted it to be.
Now, how can you help? When a person in the middle of an anxiety attack is suffering, the worst possible thing you can say is “Calm down.” What you should say is “What can I do?” Listen to them, even if you don’t know what to say, they need to be heard and acknowledged. Someone who has anxiety already feels silly because they know they’re worrying for nothing but can’t help it. The last thing you want to do is make them feel worse because this in turn makes their anxiety worse. A person with anxiety is just like you, they’re not some medical anomaly, after all you wouldn’t treat someone with diabetes or high blood pressure like that; so why treat someone with a mental illness like that?

I hope that this has opened your eyes to Anxiety; I hope that this has helped those with anxiety. My goal is to do just that: Promote understanding and aid. Mental Illnesses are no different from any other medical condition and should not be treated as so. 

Monday, November 25, 2013

Three South: A short Essay on my time at PRMC

The cold, bright lights pierce my eyes as I came to. I remember checking myself in, but I don’t remember anything else. I have to try. Remember damnit. My thoughts are racing, I can’t focus on anything right now except the smells and how scared I am. This room smells sterile, like bleach and fear; the sterile smell seeps into my nostrils and stays there, mixed with uncontrollable sense of terror. I’m having a full blown anxiety attack, it’s hard to explain how those feel unless you have one so I’ll try: it’s an uncontrollable fear that grips your soul, your hands are shaky and sweaty, and your heart is pounding so loud that you can hear it ringing in your head like a bass drum, your stomach is in knots and you’re nauseated. The anxiety is so powerful that I can’t control my thoughts, all I can remember is I started to feel the depression envelop me as the anxiety set in; because my thoughts were racing I couldn’t think logically which led to this attack. I wanted to kill myself; I wanted to go home and take a knife and slit my wrists or hang myself in a doorway. I didn’t want to but I couldn’t control what my brain was saying. That’s why I’m here. I became a danger to myself.
My only companion at the moment is the camera in the corner that watches me, it’s making sure I’m not going to try to attempt to follow the suicidal thoughts that are plaguing me; they’ve made it nearly impossible for someone who is suicidal to commit to their actions in here: there’s no interior doorknob, the bed has no guard rails unlike other hospital beds, and the chair has no arm rests. The room is fucking freezing, even the blanket they gave me is cold and I’m trembling; of course at the moment I can’t tell if the trembling is from the cold or from the fear. They took all of my things: my purse, my phone, even my jewelry—all except my necklace with my mother’s initials on it, I told them it was the only thing that was keeping me sane. I fidgeted with it, tracing the initials with my fingertips, feeling the smooth gold underneath. It was all starting to become clear now; I was beginning to remember what led me to the ER.
I was walking back from class; it had been a particularly hard day. See when you have depression your days start weird. It’s almost like they start when you’re asleep, (at least for me anyway) if you have nightmares or don’t sleep well then you wake up feeling like shit already. For someone who’s “normal” they just grumble about it and have an extra cup of coffee, but for me it makes the fight to stay balanced even harder. Nothing feels right and nothing makes sense; you’re in a fog, you can’t concentrate, you can’t think, you can’t eat or drink, you can’t even see straight. All you can think about is how fucked everything is, especially you—you, you worthless piece of shit who can’t do anything right, who can’t understand even the simplest concept because your brain is all discombobulated. The struggle for me was that I knew that I could be better. I knew that I wasn’t worthless and that my family was proud of me and I could do this—but my mind was at a constant war with itself. It was almost like there were two different people living inside my brain. I even gave them personalities: One was gentle and compassionate, had the patience of a saint and would always try to build me up (which was a job in itself because I had a very low self-confidence rating anyway). The other was evil, my dark side that manipulated me into thinking that I was all of those things I mentioned. They would tell me to take the knife and slit my wrists, or take the rope and string myself up; they reminded me constantly of the darkness in the shadows at night.
The “darkness” I refer to is the face of the man—the teacher—who molested me—the man who caused me to be this way, who gave me my anxiety and constant fear. He did it when I was at my weakest: five fucking months after the death of my mom. He groomed me, led me to believe he was harmless when really he was the monster that I had always been warned about. It started when I was taking his class, I never thought that the extra attention he paid me was more than just sympathy. I was a stupid fourteen year old girl wrought with grief over losing her mother, what the hell did I know about things like that? It was at a time where that sort of stuff just didn’t happen, people didn’t talk about it.
Anyway back to the present.
As I mentioned before my day was shit already, I had nightmares all night and I was just tired, so tired. I didn’t remember what happened in class, and I felt so heavy, like someone had placed a boulder or something on my shoulders; I was walking back to the parking garage and I kept thinking “Something’s not right…I feel so overwhelmed. Something isn’t right! SOMETHING ISN’T RIGHT!” I wanted to cry out and scream and cry all at once, I managed to make it to my car and I just lost it. My eyes were so full of tears that I couldn’t see, I couldn’t think, my throat was closing up so I was having trouble breathing, every fiber in my body was trembling. The anxiety was so bad that I could almost feel a noose tightening around my throat, constricting me like a massive boa constrictor. I looked down and could see the blood streaming from slices on my wrists even though there was nothing there. I was in deep shit. I knew if I went home I would try to kill myself, even though deep down I wanted to live so bad—I just was so tired. It was so loud.
So that’s how I got here. I remember now. I’ve finally fallen off of this great precipice that I had been struggling to stay on for years. I thought I had finally gone insane and they were going to ship me off to that hospital in Cambridge where they send all of the other crazy people. I was terrified.
The nurse comes in and starts asking me questions about my family history, and then proceeds to get into why I was here:
“How long have you been feeling this way?”
“A couple of days…it just got really bad and I just couldn’t take it anymore.”
“Have you ever tried to kill yourself?”
“No ma’am…just thought about it…”
“That’s good. You’ve taken the first step you know, the first step towards healing.”
“Then why am I so scared? I’m terrified, I can’t think—“
That’s when the tears came; I don’t remember what I said or even what happened after that. I know from my sister working in the ER that they most likely admitted me and were waiting for confirmation from the South wing of the hospital. They weren’t going to send me away, they were going to keep me here and treat me.
Three South. Has a nice ring to it doesn’t it? The official name is the Mental Health Ward, it’s called Three South because it’s on the third floor in the southernmost wing of the hospital. It’s a place where people can recollect themselves, it’s not a One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest situation, the most people stay there is a week. Because PRMC is small, the ward itself isn’t exactly spacious; it only has about ten to twelve rooms and each patient has to share a room with a patient with a similar condition and the same gender depending on the number of patients that were there at the time. After about two hours and one visit with my father later, I was whisked away to Three South. My dad came as soon as he could and we talked about why I checked myself in and what I would need in the coming days. He went home to pack my things and try to wrap his head around why his daughter finally went off the deep end. I wondered what he was thinking; was he blaming himself? I hope not, as a matter of fact he was the reason why I was still alive. I wanted so much for my brain to shut up, to stop confusing me by telling me I was worthless and I should just end it; it was because of him that the knife always fell to the floor or the noose was never tied. I didn’t want him to have to bury his daughter after having to bury his wife just twelve years before.
They go through all of your things when you get admitted, mainly to see if you’re carrying anything dangerous and to see if you’ll need anything out of your bags. They don’t let you keep a bag or anything in the ward, it’s considered a safety hazard because you or someone else could strangle themselves (remember we are in a mental health facility) with the strap or someone could steal your shit. So they keep your bags behind the nurses’ station which is a large, glass enclosed area across from the patient’s rooms. It was the central nervous system of the ward; it contained patient information, medication, and of course the most important element of the ward: the nurses. I was shown to my room and saw that they had taken a few things out of my bag and left them on a desk that was across from my bed. Along with my clothing, she had left my journal and a copy of T.S. Eliot’s poetry. The nurse that had checked me in was a tall, white-haired woman with gentle eyes but a stern disposition (I found that most of the nurses here had to have a firm, empathetic, and gentle disposition), she didn’t intimidate me but I wouldn’t cross her. She meant business but she also was patient and kind, she didn’t take any shit but she earnestly listened to you. She weighed me in (why in God’s name you needed to get on a scale is beyond me) and as she was doing so, a large black woman came up to us.
“Hi. I’m (insert name here), what’s your name?”
“Now (Patient name), let her get settled and then you two can introduce yourselves okay?” the nurse said
“Okay!”
I was relieved that the nurse said that because I really wasn’t in any frame of mind to communicate with another patient at the moment. As she was completing the weigh-in, I got a good look at part of her chart:
Patient name: Lauren Ellen Wilson
Diagnosis: Severe Depression with suicidal ideation; severe anxiety.
Medications: Lexapro (10mg); Ativan (.05mg)
I was shown to my room, I would be rooming with another girl who had been here for two days and had the same condition I did and was around the same age. I was relieved to know that, and even more relieved when I met her:
            “Hi, I’m  (patient name). Looks like we’ll be roomies, you don’t snore do you?” she smiled
            “Not to my knowledge.” I laughed. She was funny and charming, with red hair and big blue eyes and freckles. Her presence was soothing, and I felt myself calming down.
            “Good. I think we’re going to be cool.”
I began to talk with her about the other patients, she told me that your room was really the only place where you didn’t have to deal with anyone except your roommate. The patients were all grouped together in the common area; it was where we watched TV, ate and off to the right was a separate room where group therapy was held. It was controlled, she told me that the nurses were really great and they kept things civil. She said that the food was…okay, but she could not wait to eat what she wanted. The patients were given a menu each day with breakfast, lunch, and dinner selections; you made your choice and that was it.
She introduced me to two other patients that came here at about the same time that she did. One was a man, who had an athletic build, like he played football, and he was real easygoing; despite this, he had a nervous breakdown and ended up here. Like my roommate, he didn’t seem like the type of person you would typically find here; it goes to show that a mental breakdown can happen to anyone. The other was a very sweet older lady who I later learned was manic, meaning she had extreme mood swings, going from elated to depressed in a blink of an eye, but she had no idea that’s what it was. My roommate proceeded to point out other patients and tell me their stories. There was a black man who was a manic depressant and an addict—he was addicted to pills and cough medicine. A guy who had made it all the way from Wilmington on a bus who smelled real bad when he arrived, she wasn’t sure what his issue was but he definitely wasn’t all there. He would sit and stare, fidgeting his left hand and leg while his bottom lip hung from his mouth and trembled. There was a woman who had severe depression; she spent her days in her sleeping clothes, wrapped in a blanket. There were days when she wouldn’t come out of her room, not even to eat; she would just be locked in her room with the curtains drawn and waiting for the darkness to take her. My roommate told me that she had been here almost two weeks. There was another girl who was about my age, possibly older, that just stood and stared; she just stood there staring off into oblivion as if the pain of a thousand sorrows weighed upon her mind. Occasionally she would stare at the wall and randomly bang her head, it was sad—she was trapped within the confines of her illness. Then there was the large black woman I mentioned earlier. We weren’t quite sure what her issue was—we knew that it had a lot to do with hallucinations and delusions—but we did know that we tried our best to avoid her. Not that she was dangerous or anything, she was just so damn annoying. She was loud, often obnoxious, had no sense of personal boundaries, and her comments were often lewd, inappropriate, and outrageous. She talked of her nonexistent husband and how she didn’t need him, she would often sing gospel songs at ungodly hours of the night, and she would often take the food right off of your tray if you weren’t careful. Despite all of this, I still maintained a feeling of empathy because her case was a tragic one; she was not really that person, the person she is and desires to be is trapped within the walls of the illness. That could be said for anyone here, including myself, the person that you want to be and the person that you are is trapped within and you have to figure out how exactly to release them.
My first night was not a successful one. I slept badly. The unfamiliarity of the place, the goddamned construction going on, and the fact that I was terrified beyond any sort of description all contributed to my poor sleep. I refused to take the Ativan that I was prescribed that night, mainly because I was too lazy to get out of bed to go get the pill—I was exhausted and was not leaving that bed unless there was a fire. Another reason was that I'm obstinate, I hate medicine—I was one of those kids that my mom had to literally sit on my chest in order for me to take it. I knew when my anxiety became uncontrollable, and though it hadn't reached the point that I described earlier, I could feel it getting there so I committed myself to my breathing exercises; they took a while but eventually worked. The obstinacy and persistence had seen me through my ailment, and it had kept me off of Lexapro for a while—it also taught me when the meds were necessary, and I learned the hard way to never lie to myself about these things.
My second day there I had my first breakdown. I knew it was going to be a bad morning when I reacted to someone's outburst that led to him becoming highly agitated. It was the manic depressant addict, though I wouldn’t call him an addict to his face as that’s what set him off. He began to scream and swear, banging on the walls and saying how he “wasn’t addicted to any fucking thing.” He was a far cry from the tranquil man I had met just yesterday. The nurses were trying to calm him but their task was a hard one, he was inconsolable. His eyes were wild and he just kept screaming how he wasn’t addicted, he was laughing like a mad man.
I began to immediately feel a Level 10 anxiety attack coming on—the tightening of the throat and stomach, the sheer, unsettled, urgency and terror—I was upset to say the least. I went for the Ativan first—something I never do, this was the sign of my breaking point. The nurse wanted to talk to me and calm me down, she was unaware that I had Ativan in addition to my Lexapro. You see Ativan is in the same family as Xanax, and is classified as highly addictive if you're not careful with the distribution and usage of it—which explains why the nurse was so hesitant about giving me the pill. She took me aside into one of the conference rooms where I told her what brought me here after she asked:
 “What made you feel this hurt?”
“My mom died when I was thirteen you see…and then after that I was molested by my schools bible teacher…I—I just—I’m so damn tired of it all. I feel disgusted and raw, I hate myself, I miss my mom, I know that her being here would make this so much easier. I am just so…tired of everything.”
I did hate myself, I hated that I couldn’t be the person that I wanted to be because of my depression and anxiety. I wanted to be stronger but I wasn’t, I wanted to be more than what I was, which was still that fourteen year old girl who was scared and alone. I had locked her away for so long, trying so hard to be “strong” and “brave” that the shackles that held her finally broke, which lead to my being here in this room with this amazing nurse who doubled as a counselor. She talked with me for an hour, listening and verifying my feelings. I never really had a chance to deal with all that had happened to me, after all it happened so fast: my mother was dead within a month of her diagnosis and not even a year after that I was molested. I suppressed it, not wanting to deal with it—I couldn’t deal with it—after all what does a fourteen year old know? How can someone who isn’t an adult deal with adult things?
After I calmed down a bit she said that I could still have the Ativan if I needed it; I found I didn't need it after all. I retreated to my room to write and read.
Even though I was locked away—the real world was still there, all I could think about was school and the fact that if I missed too many classes my graduation date would be pushed back to December. I tried to put it out of my mind; after all I was here for me. It was just before dinner—I was staring out the window, marveling at the “glorious” view: the graveled rooftop and the piece of sky that the tall buildings allowed me to see; I was watching the sunset—it was almost like I had a front row seat in Monet's studio, watching him paint his latest masterpiece. I know it's cliché but I'm in the mental health unit so I'm allowed to use such clichés.
I began to feel a sense of calm; things were starting to clear up I began to feel like things were starting to make sense. I had made great progress in these two days—I haven’t had one suicidal thought since the first time I was checked in, my desire to live was becoming more and more prevalent as my family came to visit each day. They loved me back to life; I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for them, they reminded me of how much I had to live for and how great I could be. For the first time since I came here, I felt, on that second day, that I was going to be okay.

Day three: I was discharged at noon. How do I remember that? Well my sister told me it was lunchtime and she wanted to take me to get “real” food. We went to Chipotle.