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

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Dear Pre-recovery Chris

Dopeless Enigmaniac - Recovery delivers everything addiction promises.

Quick note... This entry had been languishing in draft mode since last August. Aside from formatting the html and adding the graphic, I haven't done much else with it. The reason why is because I don't want my story to read like some self-congratulatory heap of crap. Sharing my story honestly is probably going to happen over a course of controlled "purgings." Anyway, welcome to its beginning, somewhere in the middle.


Dear Pre-recovery Chris,

In a few days, events are going to unfold which will drop your arrogant ass into a position of shame and reckoning. I, your future self, cannot reveal what's about to transpire, but in years to come, you'll agree that this event was inevitable. Thing is, there are some nuggets of hope, courage, and wisdom that if you trust in the upcoming process, they will enrich your life more than you can possibly imagine now.

Let's look at the facts:

  1. This double-life you've been running entirely on self-will, is killing you.
  2. You have few meaningful relationships with anyone outside of your microscopic circle of trust.
  3. No amount of any drug, activity, object, or person is enough any more, to drown out the insanity in your head, or to fill that insatiable void at the core of your being. All your crutches have stopped working and you're desperate for an exit strategy. Any exit, even one that's irreversible.
  4. Secretly, you have been wondering if it's possible for you to experience recovery again.

Okay, while this list isn't pretty, it's not hopeless. Please understand that you didn't get to this point overnight. If you choose to get clean again, it is going to take quite some time and work to see improvement. Desperation will not be enough to get you better. Jails, nut huts, and cemeteries are full of addicts in worse shape than you.

Friday, November 19, 2010

BringChange2Mind.org

This is a special appeal to all brothers and sisters in recovery for whom mental illness is anything but an "outside issue." We who are dually diagnosed can help effect positive change within our own support fellowships. This call to action is not about challenging established traditions; it's about validating our own self-worth, individually and collectively, within our recovery communities.

Official website: BringChange2Mind.org

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Being a Bipolar Addict

Preface: This unfinished post was written in late January 2010. Rather than continue to let it languish unpublished, it's my belief that sharing this unfinished entry is preferable to otherwise probably never having this firsthand experience of an a recovering dually-diagnosed addict, come to the fore. We *do* recover. Namaste'


Living with any sort of mental illness is no picnic, regardless of the condition(s). Popular culture, despite claims and efforts to the contrary, appears to find perverse gratification in exploiting the infirmities of others. Mainstream media (MSM) is the most obvious perpetrator, eager to publicize stories which amplify negative stereotypes. Unfortunately, shock value generates revenue, plus no shortage of armchair critics.

It would be too easy to launch into a full-blown tirade along the lines of "how dare you," but to what effect? Doing so would invariably give more ammunition to those who least deserve it. Therefore, this writer's intent is simply to offer some experience, strength and hope.

Disclaimer: I am not a mental health or medical professional, nor am I a certified drug addictions counselor. Anyone seeking professional assistance with such issues is urged to consult their local accredited practitioners within these fields, thanks.

My indoctrination into the mental health industry came at age eight. No specifics will be offered, but I will take this opportunity to indirectly thank an old friend for founding the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN). As a child, my initial diagnosis was good old-fashioned clinical depression. I didn't start using drugs until I was 12. Back then kids weren't recognized as possibly having BPD, and the diagnosis of PTSD was only assigned to war veterans.

There is a growing body of research which strongly suggests that early childhood trauma may be linked to the development of bipolar disorder. Then comes the typical pattern of self-medication in an attempt to regulate the mood swings inherent with BPD, or to stifle the PTSD in some manner, or both. It certainly didn't help matters that I was already genetically predisposed to become an addict.

Hell hath many suburbs. Mental illness is one of them. So is addiction. When these neighborhoods overlap, treacherous war zones abound, leaving no one unscathed.

I self-medicated for several decades, with a few periodic interruptions when one mental health practitioner or another would deem me: 1) a threat to myself; 2) a threat to others; and 3) in need of inpatient treatment. Lovely. I became an FDA lab rat for Nortriptyline at age 13, forced to take 1000mg doses, which at that time was the maximum suggested for adults. It is important to note that as an adolescent I still hadn't even been properly diagnosed.

There were a few stretches of abstinence from self-medication. A few were during various spiritual "field trips" where I experienced temporary zeal for one religion or another. There were also a couple of 12-step recovery test runs. The recovery was genuine, but so was my still undiagnosed BPD. Both recovery test runs lasted over a year each, and provided enough of the valuable experiences necessary to make me want to return.

My last (and hopefully final) tour of active addiction led me to pursue more potent drugs, and in steadily increasing quantities than ever before. It was a deadly cycle perpetuated between an organically skewed neurochemistry, additional external chemicals ingested, and deep psychological illness. Add to this nightmare the concept of spiritual bankruptcy. If Hell's suburbs recognized democracy, the severity of each disease component might have qualified as a voting district within this individual. The item under consideration was whether or not to keep living, and if so, in what manner?

In late 1994, I began to realize that self-medicating was no longer working. One can only trash their dopamine receptors for so long before there's a major gray matter rebellion. For me this manifested in completely reckless, irresponsible, and frequently dangerous behaviors. This was partly because I clutched fiercely to denial of the depths to which I'd sunk, but mostly I'd all but lost hope that my life could ever become manageable again. At that point "getting better" wasn't an aspiration; it was a foolish fantasy.

Relief came in a roundabout way in late January of 1995. My behaviors finally caught up with me, leading to an arrest. My trial didn't happen until late May. Part of the conditions of my pre-trial release mandated that I be enrolled in a court designated outpatient addictions treatment program. I'd already resumed 12-step participation on my own before this legal condition was issued, but 12-step alone was viewed as insufficient by the court system.

By this time my distrust of the mental health industry had reached epic proportions, and with good reason.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Medicated America

CAUTION: Video is NSFW/NSFK (language)

In 1999, late comedian George Carlin performed an HBO special entitled "You Are All Diseased." Recently there was a Newsvine discussion of George F. Will's Washington Post op-ed piece from February 28th of this year. In it Mr. Will offered strong examples that the veritable bible of mental illness diagnoses


*Update* Here's the no-holds-barred assessment of what the implications now ARE for American citizens. Please read and forward this info, thanks!

CONFIRMED: Psychiatric Manual Labels free Thinkers, non conformers as Mentally Ill http://www.federaljack.com/?p=17540