Welcome

Considering how prevalent mental illness is, why do so few bloggers talk about it?

The aim of this blog is to write about my experience with mental illness, developments in my life as well as issues in the field of mental health all the while keeping a feminist framework.

I hope you can take something from this blog, whatever that may be.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Vacation

I will be going on vacation on wednesday so I wont be posting until late next week. For now Ill just let you know that I am talking with the police tonight about the break in, and leave you with a post on gender and mental illness:

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Mental Illness and Gender: Some Musings about S.E.X

I am constantly thinking about sex. (Shocking I know as I am a woman! (sarcasm) But nonetheless true) Unfortunately, my musing are often about how little I am having . Psychiatric drugs are the ultimate sex drive killer. They do not, however, kill my desire to want to have sex - I miss my sex drive!

Something I find interesting, however, is the way this side effect intersects with gender. Stereotypes dictate that men have an unlimited and always existing desire to have sex; women on the other hand, are believed to generally not want to sex. There is also an understanding that in hetero relationships it is women's 'duty' to fullfill their man's sexual 'needs' putting thier lack of drive aside. There for, withholding sex was an intentional act used as means to control men and/or gain influence in the home - which may very well be/have been to women's advantage especially if this was/is the only means by which they could acquire this power - but this belief remains a stereotype.

Things in the social world are always much more complicated (much, much more) than stereotypes allow. First of all, some women may have a higher 'drive' for sex than some men; some men may use sex to gain influence, some women may not; some individuals may not have sex at all; some women may be in relationships with other women, some men with men, or some people may have relationships and sex with a group or groups of people. What do we even define as 'sex'? I think of it as the umbrella term for all intimate acts of a sexual nature (assuming that 'sexual nature' are based upon physiological responses). These acts vary from penetrative sex to sensual massage.

But I digress.

Women (and men) on psychiatric drugs and other medications which lower sex drive exist in a world with these assumptions on how they should act in regard to sex. I find that when I have little to no sex drive guilt creeps up and makes me feel as if I am 'failing' because I am not fulfilling my partner's sexual needs. Plus, I fear that I will be precieved as using sex as a means to acquire power in my relationship.

Rationally I know that these things are NOT true, yet these ingrained stereotypes eat away at me resulting in an even lower desire for sex; plus I can imagine how hard it must be for men dealing with the stereotype that they always want sex when they do not.

Along with dealing with internalised stigma regarding mental illness in general, assumptions about the relationship between gender and sex make those taking sex drive killing drugs a little bit harder.

Med Thief Update

Well I regained some of my confidence in my sanity this morning. I found we were missing about $20 worth of rolled coins (though they were kind enough to leave $1.50 in pennies... thanks?). At least now I am confident that it was someone else and not just me going crazy... Thank God.
Dealing with my building manager and soon the police. Ah well.

Part of me is just sad for this person as they are motivated to steal meds that dont have high retail value (do they know someone who is sick, or are they desperate and HOPED they would be valuable); they stole $20... obviously they NEED $20; this person spent A LOT of time in our apartment (the coins were in a drawer in my kitchen with my tea...)
I d like to meet this person just to ask why they took what they did, what is going on in their life to act this way. And if they are just a royal asshole, then I like to be able to tell them off! ha

I hope to be posting an actual mental illness/feminist post ASAP

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Med Thief? This makes no sense

So last night I go to get my many many pills out so I can take them as well as to get out the ones I will take in the morning. I sit on my bed, open the drawer of my bed side table and reach in and grab…. Nothing. ALL my pills (the bottles and all) are gone: the ones I was using, the extras I have for later this month, a box of sample meds I was trying out and sleep meds that I don’t often use. My vitamins are still there along with a couple other things (pen etc) but its like the meds were never there because the drawer is arranged in the same way just there are spaces that are empty! I do a double take, get a big wave of the heebs (heeby jeebies) and boot it to where my partner is. Im like, 'all my pills are gone', hes like, 'what?' And im like, 'their gone, all of them', he stands their quiet, contemplative and starts to look worried. I tell him, 'don’t freak out, if you freak out ill freak out'. I am getting very worried and begin to think I may cry. We go in to the bedroom (me already looking over my shoulder paranoid) and I show him the empty drawer. Then he asks me, 'are you sure you didnt moved them?', 'no' I say. I ask him 'did you move them?', he says 'no'. Then he says, 'that only leaves one thing', and im thinking 'oh god someone was here'. We check to see if anything else is missing and nothing is. All our valuables are there. Nothing is stolen. I get him to check all the closets and under the bed (ha) for this pill thief and find nothing. We take time searching to see if one of us, I don’t know, slept walked and hid them… NOTHING. Now we are wondering if someone stole them to sell on the street? (a bit of a stretch in least)... but how would they know I had them and where they were!? We don’t think they are even worth anything! We are both thoroughly confused. We decide to call security in our building even if it is just to give them a heads up that Possibly there was a theft. Of course the guy on duty is confused too. Everyone I have told is confused and eventually gets the 'you probably just moved them' look on their face - but I honestly didn’t! I never move them because I only take them before bed and the morning plus why wouldn’t I have moved my vitamins too?

So all this means one of three things:
1. someone broke in – this is very bad
2. my partner took them and is denying it…hence some bad stuff going down in our relationship
3. I did it in some sort of 'out of it' state and don’t remember, and therefore have some serious mental awareness problems that are cause for alarm.

I think 2. would be the best hey?

Of course I was unable to take my meds that night or this morning and was having withdrawl before I was able to get to the Pharmacy, I had to pay for more drugs a few weeks early and missed work due to this little field trip. Sucks.
I am pretty stressed but at the same time I am shockingly calm because as for now I dont know for sure what happened so im in this weird state of limbo denial... mmm feels good

Ill update later

Monday, August 17, 2009

Limited View

It is amazing that even with my numerous years of experience I am still able to down play my symptoms when I am between episodes. Perhaps this is a tendency which contributes to the number of people who have a mental illness who do not seek and sort of help. For example, in my last post I mentioned how the side effects of my new meds were making it hard for me to rationalize my use of them and that hypomania was preferable. Of course this weekend on a particularly symptom heavy day I thought, okay these side effects are better than experiencing this hypomania all time. In both cases I saw my past experience in a much greener light.

Considering when you have a cold and you suddenly realise just HOW NICE it is to be able to breath easy out of your nose, with mental illness when the going is good (between episodes) or particularly difficult in a one sided kind of way (side effects) one may down play the worst of things and think, 'it really wasnt so bad'. Some times it shocks me, especially considering how many times I have been suicidal, one would think I would be cognisant of just how bad it was!
Is this not about down playing one's experience, especially when it comes it is stigmatized? We need to give ourselves more credit for enduring they diagnosis and experience of mental illness. It is difficult; even if we justify this solely by the fact that often one of the most important diagnostic factors is whether or not symptoms disrupt ones daily life. So how do we do this? How do we give justice to our experiences? Generally I would think keeping a journal during those hard times to remind ourselves would be an effective strategy, but I would be afraid that may trigger an episode or at least make me very sad and potentially ashamed. Perhaps reminding myself how deserving I am of this recognition for my strengths by repeating a relevant mantra or saying would be sufficient?

Friday, August 14, 2009

Oh I can really feel the effects of these drugs... well just the side effects

So Im trying out a second anti-psychotic trying to control my hypomania. Not going so well. In fact, I should mention that if this post doesnt make much sense its because im drowsy, groggy and generally a little confused.
I now understand why so many people with mental illnesses go off their medication. Having suffered from only moderate depression (compared to those who are hospitalized with severe symptoms) I havent had to take ridiculously high levels of any drug. Now that I am on this cocktail of drugs Ive been blessed (sarcasm) with a plethora of side effects. Not only do I have no sex drive I have dry mouth (which caused 4, count them 4, cavities), headaches, dizziness and other effects I cannot remember at the moment. Now I can add drowsiness and a general feeling of confusion and out-of-it-ness (okay i know thats not a word, but it does describe how i feel!)
Considering I can have these new symptoms OR be hypomanic, I choose the latter! (Well at least until i can get back to my doc at the beginning of next month.) I know that I need to deal with my up swings to ensure these swings do not get any worse, but this experience sure has given me the experience needed to understand why people in manic stages often do not take their meds.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

A Rant: (Bear with me)

My psychiatrist has diagnosed me three times at three different appointments, each in a frighteningly short amount of time. I was referred by my doctor because of how complicated my major depression was. That appointment she agreed with my first doctor and increased my dose of my already prescribed anti-depressant. On my second (or third) appointment she told me that I seemed to have 'bi-polar tendencies' that she was concerned about. She added an anti-convulsant to my regime to help ensure I did not swing into a full manic episode. At this point I felt this was all very reasonable BUT was concerned at how fast she would diagnose and treat. She had not known me for any more than three sessions (so MAYBE 1.5 hours) and she was giving me a drug that has very serious rare, but real, side effects. A month later, still convinced of her diagnoses of Major Depression with Bi-Polar tendencies, she added another anti-depressant to offset the negative side effects of the first one as well as to raise my dose in general. Not a month later, when I felt another increase was needed she started discussing with me Borderline Personality Disorder. Convinced that this is what I had she said that therapy would work better to treat it than drugs and so would not increase my dose. I asked her why I was on drugs at all then and she said it wouldn't hurt so might as well stay on them as they may end up helping.
I didn't see her for about three months as she felt my therapy would be a better resource. When I did go back and discussed the problems I was having she uped my dose of the first anti-depressant. My check up appointment 2 weeks later I told her about the hypomania I was experiencing because of this change - she added an antipsychotic to help. When these where highly sedating to the point i was so drowsy i couldn't function at work, she decided I needed a different brand. I am starting those today after I go for blood work as these have a risk of increasing something in my blood (cant remember what) that can potentially be very harmful. She wants to get a baseline measurement of my levels of this components so it can be monitored.

What the fuck!? It really pisses me off, and worries me, that her seemingly baseless 'diagnoses' give her the justification she needs as a doctor to give me mind altering drugs that all have side effects, minor and severe. I am not saying that I do not appreciate what she is doing, because I do, and I'm glad to have a doctor who specializes in these drugs so i have the best chance of having a stable and functioning life but common! I know that in the future Dr's and patients will all look back at these practices with horror (as every generation has - lobotomies use to be common practice and now we are appalled by such treatment). Essentially the treatment I am undergoing now is the class shot gun method: "because we do not know exactly how drugs like these work, we will see how they effect you and then adjust from there... okay you seem to go a bit manic so we will add this...we will see what happens now..."
I feel like I am a tower of china. Imagine someone who is trying to stack all the china in their house; it wobbles and sometimes they have to hold their breath hoping it wont fall; when they think they are finished they walk away slowly so as not to disturb the tower but inevitably it begins to falter so they take off the most problematic pieces and think of a different strategy for adding them to the construction.
Do the limits of our knowledge for the treatment of mental illness mean that we are always bound to fall?

Mental Illness and Gender: Some Musings about Gender Roles

Having a mental illness is taboo and those with one (or more) is a group who experiences discrimination. But of course we are not ONLY our mental illness; there are many other factors which make up our identities. I identify as a young white woman who is able bodied and is of the middle class who has a mental illness. Being as such I encounter certain issues that those of different genders, age groups, races, abilities and classes. Being a member of the privileged group, save for gender, being a woman is the one characteristic that I find to have the most effect on my experience of mental illness. While thinking over this during my weekend I came up with some thoughts. I plan to make a few installments for this topic so look for more in the near future:

~gender roles:

you may agree that the traditional role of women in the many cultures of Canada is to be productive (especially in the home), nurturing, polite, happy/sweet, and generally giving of themselves for the benefit of others. I can tell you that I am hardly any of these things when severely depressed, making it all the more difficult to function. People, including friends and family, may not realise that they make assumptions about women regarding these traditional gender roles but when I am in a state where I am not productive, and instead I am selfish, rude, depressed and in need of serious support, often people will merely distance themselves. Of course many people distance themselves from anyone, man or woman, who is selfish and rude, but I think this tendency is exacerbated by how our cultures' expect women to behave.

additionally, being a discriminated group, women are often unheard (regarding their wishes, needs and even their opinion), unseen (in many different spheres), and underestimated (in what they know, what they can do etc). When I am undergoing treatment and there is a power differential (think of when you go to the doctor and he/she has much more power to make decisions and emphasize or dismiss symptoms etc) I find that common (discriminating)assumptions end up occurring much more frequently and with greater consequences. I have often felt doctors where not listening to what i said but rather putting their education (and what they learned from books) above my personal experience, they dismiss my role in my treatment and instead want only to work with doctors, and often underestimate my strength and ability to help myself and to be a productive part of the treatment team. (Hell I think the patient should be in charge of the treatment team's direction, not its Ginny pig!)

I think this is an interesting intersection of identities that is highly complex and unique for each person. This is also highly relevant for feminist and mental health activism as well as for the call for more individualized care which needs to work outside the constraints of the DSM categories.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Shame on you

Just this year my psychiatrist discussed with me my 'bipolar tendencies' (read: "you don't really fit into our categories so I am just going to say you mostly have major depressive disorder but you sometimes have manic-y symptoms"). Its been an interesting (?) addition to my experience of mental illness. I had suspected that something like that had been going on but had never really spoken to an 'expert' about it. It was shocking how hard it was to deal with the 'diagnoses'. To me what it meant was: I will have to deal with mental illness for the rest of my life (a realisation I had denied for years and was some how forced to face then) and that it could all possibly get worse. But i digress
Lately, because my anti depressants were increased, and that can trigger manic episodes, I have been having hypomanic symptoms (I have never had a full blown manic episode). This weekend I decided to cut my hair - myself. Never a good idea. I had done that last spring but I spent a good couple hours on it and it ended up looking pretty sweet. Well this time, while I wasn't able to stop myself from doing it in the first place, I was so ashamed and embarrassed that I was doing it/had done it that after I chopped haphazardly at it I just left it. Tomorrow I am going to get it fixed (definitely going to tell my hair dresser what happened so that she isn't like "who cut your hair like this!?"). I had to remind myself that just like my depression, its not my fault that i feel this way sometimes. It is something that I should work toward controlling and avoiding, just like my depression, but not something to beat myself up over.
This is such a hard task. it took years to accept myself and my depression (and even this acceptance is quite superficial) and now i have to accept this too... grrr. I know that this is part of why mental illness creates shame - its hard to accept that you cannot be in complete control of yourself. I know another side of it is internalized stigma - I know that some people think its 'crazy' to act this way. But I think because I have no experience with these new symptoms I am having a hard time with how 'funny' these symptoms can be seen to be. My partner kinda laughed and while he had no malicious intent I was so hurt. I mean it is kinda funny... if I decided to cut my hair one day because i was too cheap to get a hair cut or something and it turned out bad that would be something worth laughing about. In this case, of course, its a bit different as i really didnt choose to do it. I didnt tell one of my friends cause i knew she would make fun of me. plus I just cant help but think how 'stupid' i am for doing something like that.
Besides repeating 'its okay, I am not weak, this is not something to beat myself up over,' what more can I do? This isnt the kind of thing that doctors often talk about - the mental consequences of the experience of being on drugs that change your behaviour in ways you cannot, and how your self perception changes when you have been dealing with mental illness and even diagnoses themselves.