Friday, September 4, 2020

K

It's been what? Two years and seven months, some odd days--


I have no idea why on that particular day that I checked Facebook to see if Morpheus had an account. But he did. He was recently added (a profile that was only a few months old from the looks of it). The only information that can be gleaned from his profile is that he's single and he's grown a beard. 


To be honest, it was too much temptation for me. I sent him a PM. Deleted it. Another PM. Deleted it. Finally, Harry convinced me to just leave up a message long enough for him to answer it. 


So, I wrote this: "Hi, I want to respect your boundaries but also let you know the door is open on my end. May we be friends on Facebook?"


Four days later, I received this reply: "K"

(Facebook then told me that "you can now call each other and see information like Active Status and when you've read messages.")


On August 31st, I sent another message telling him that my contact information was still good. And left my cellphone number and email address.


A part of me wishes I wouldn't have done that. After all, during that two year and seventh month period, he could have contacted me at any point. I don't buy the argument that he was afraid I was angry with him. That wouldn't stop him. 

A part of me wonders if I'm not that ex, the one who won't take a hint, keeps bugging the other person, maybe even harassment. I had to block Elijah. He was treating me with such disrespect that even I was aware of it. He wanted sex without actually talking to me or apologizing for the things he said when I told his father that he was suicidal. My doctors told me to never speak to him again. 


A part of me wonders if I'm pathetic. A long time has passed, and I'm not over him. I still think about him every day, and waiting for a response makes that anxiety worse.

Monday, August 17, 2020

No Coke, Ritalin

 "The drug screen tested positive for cocaine," the ER doctor tells me. 

"I don't do coke," I reply honestly. Who is she going to believe: an impersonal test or me?

 "I'm just saying that using coke will aggrivate your condition."

 But no one really knows what happened. 

 It all started when I was in line at the local pharmacy, and while paying for my father's drugs, I fainted. First, I heard my heart thumping, and then it went dark. I came to on the floor of the grocery store. Two of the assistants at the pharmacy stayed on the floor with me, one of them calmly rubbing my arm. The other dialed my father. 


When I arrived at the ER and explained what happened, I was told there were no beds available, but that the in-take nurse would perform an EKG while we waited for a room. 


She never completed the EGK, she just hooked me up to the blood pressure cuff and saw that my pulse was 195. The in take nurse grabbed a wheelchair, and drove me to the back with one empty bed. Soon, I had doctors and nurses swarming around me. They stuck paddles to my chest, telling me if the drugs they are about to give me don't work, they will have to electrocute my heart. 


"That's sounds scary," I commented. 


"Oh, that's just because you haven't had it done before," the nurse said, trying to console me. 


They started an IV, gave me the drug, and watched to make sure it was effective. After a little while, the room was cleared except for one nurse, and while leaving they said they were watching me through the monitors.  They seemed satisfied that I wasn't going to die or have a heartattack. 


As they were going to discharge me, they said for me to stay away from the stimulants, caffeine for starters, and to make an appointment with a cardiologist. 


While I was in the Stanford hospital, just weeks before, my psychiatrist started me on Ritalin, and it worked very well. I got a boost in mood and in energy. At moments, I felt like myself, the me before the disease got real bad in 2011. But, alas, one of the Stanford doctors, a woman I've known since my first admission, saw that the Ritalin was increasing my TD symptoms (a movement disorder called Tardive dyskinesia), and that the drug was causing the stiffness in my neck, which was causing headaches. Despite these side effects, I wanted to keep taking it. The doctors put me on Provigil for a start while, but I felt no benefits.


My regular psychiatrist decided to try the Ritalin again with a drug that specifically targets TD symptoms. I last left a message with him telling him what the ER doctors recommended, and that while the tachycardia  might be a one time phenomenon, I wanted to be cleared by a cardiologist.

 

 

Tuesday, May 5, 2020

This too shall pass...

The psychologist at Stanford G2P has encouraged me to write. So, write I shall.


The biggest news is, of course, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the government suggested social distancing. My parents think this is some kind of government conspiracy to keep people afraid while our rights are being taken away. However, a few days ago, I read in a paper that the death toll was over 65,000 people--that's a hellva lot more than the flu (typically around 10,000 to 20,000 people each year). Have we see the worst of the coronavirus?


I'm back at Stanford G2P, and the voices have decreased, but the depression and anxiety is still very real.


How did this slide down into hell begin?


Sleep deprivation.


I got a new puppy, Hope, and was ill prepared to deal with a bundle of joy and energy. When I first got her, I thought to myself that I had made the biggest bad decision of my life. Now, I miss her like crazy while I'm in the hospital. But she didn't sleep well at first, sometimes not settling down until 12am and then up again at 4am. Some nights I was up every couple of hours.


Hope has been a great pleasure, but also a lot of stress. After getting her from Gainesville, TX, on February 16th (she was shipped out to California), I noticed my mood dip lower and lower.


So, here I am, back in the hospital, dealing with suicidal ideations and depression and anxiety.