Growing up, I was
always made to feel like a burden. I was certainly unplanned, and I
always felt unwanted. Throw on top of that the baggage of thirty
years of life, a fucked up family, a high stress job, and you get a
general feeling of worthlessness. I’ve never been the type of
person to feel like death is the best option, but sometimes, when
you’re in that moment where the pain is so intense, you’d do
anything to make it stop. For me, the moment passes quickly, and
it’s never more than a fleeting thing. This time, however, it was
much worse. It was as though Nigel Tufnel had turned my anxiety up
to eleven. I found myself in downtown San Francisco, standing at an
intersection, thinking about which car looked like it might kill me
the quickest. I had a powerful urge to walk right out into traffic.
I took a step into the gutter, a car honked at me, and I immediately
stepped back up onto the curb. No one around me really noticed, to
them I looked like an impatient pedestrian, waiting for the light to
change.
I kept repeating to
myself that I was just being dramatic, and that I just wanted
attention. That was the voice of my mother in my head, though. The
doctors in the ER placed me on a 72 hour psychiatric hold, as I had
expected them to. The goal had been accomplished, to get me
somewhere where I would be safe from myself.
If you’ve never been
in the psych ward of any hospital, it’s quite a bit like you might
imagine. The rooms are bare, with no televisions, no electronics of
any kind really. You know, you could strangle yourself with the
cord. The door to the bathroom is short, so that if necessary,
someone can look in on you, to ensure you’re not lying in the
shower with your wrists slit… not that you find a goddamn thing in
the place sharp enough to do that with. Every thing had been
stripped out, except for two beds that sat low to the floor, and a
bookshelf secured to the wall. That’s it. The room was an expanse
of sad, lonely echoes, and a roommate that I could easily deem to be
just the slightest bit more crazy than myself. The first night was
the hardest. They took my phone away. My immediate reaction was
that these bastards must be sadists who like watching suicidal people
get pushed even further to the brink. They also put the words "adult mental" on my bracelet. That was probably the most alienating part of the experience.
What gets someone to
this place, walking out into traffic on purpose? It's complicated,
but I'll say this... I'm not crazy, I just buckled under the weight
of stress. I'll also say that in spite of everything, I can
definitively sit here today and say that I have finally met the
people who understand and care for me better than anyone else has
ever been capable. They are my family. You'll never find an
assembly of people more odd and mismatched, but we work. There's the
blue haired lesbian, the Mormon, the little brown guy, me, however
you may classify me, and there's the dramatic, but loveable redhead
and her nerdy husband. Somehow, we've all managed to find one
another, and help each other through the hard times with nothing but
love and understanding. So... Since I have little positive to say
about the struggles I currently find myself in, I'll focus on that.
I am loved, and that's why I'm alive today.
Note: NOT HELPFUL ADVICE. |
If you know someone who
is depressed, please please please don't tell them to snap out of
it, or get some exercise, or whatever other unhelpful things you may
be inclined to say. Just love them, be there for them, and
understand that there's nothing you can do or say to help, only
things you can do or say to make it worse, and know that depression won't ever leave, it will just come in waves.