Saturday, May 9, 2009

Support

I am dedicating this post to my parents. I believe without them I wouldn't be where I am today. I am today a happy almost thirty something woman handling my disability better than most. I know that some say with age mental illness gets better. I think this is true because I noticed with age that I am more mature in handling the signs of my illness! Last time I wrote about my beginnings. That had ending so horribly with me court order to a mental health unit basically because I didn't know what the symptoms of my disease were. It's getting easier over time, but I did crash again in 2001 because again I ignored the signs. I didn't go into the hospital that time mostly because of the support of my family. They may have not understood it at first, but they embraced it with loving support. At nineteen, court order to the mental health unit, I found my Mom had ridden a plane from Chicago to Indianapolis, Indiana and then rode the hour to Muncie, Indiana. My father was the one, the staff at the hospital, was communicating with and he was on a business trip in Guadalajara, Mexico. When my parents brought me home to Chicago after a three day stay in the hospital and a week in the recovery house on campus, my parents support didn't end there. I would often see visual delusions in the form of eyeballs in the wall. My first three years after being diagnosed, I must have called my therapist once a month My parents endure me crying, pulling my hair, and often times trying to pull my skin off my arms. I truly believe I couldn't make it without their help. Still to this day sometimes I need help from them.
I have seen many people with mental illness as I am very active in my mental health community in my county. I don't know any statics on support. However, I know through people's personal experience that when they have loving people in their life they do much better. It could be parents, a very close best friend, or a spouse. We all need life lines on this earth. Humans as a species are very social animals. I can't tell you how good it feels to have a hug once in a while, a tender smile, or encouraging words. We were not meant to be alone. It is very hard with this illness because often times we isolate, wanting no one around us. This is something we must endure to get out of. We need people. The only was to survive with this invisible disability is to make ourselves visible.

7 comments:

  1. Hello Lady_Amanda,

    Like your parents, my mother acted as a great support. She visited me almost daily in the state hospital and joined support groups for mental illness awareness. I am very thankful for her strength, love, and support.

    I agree with you, we all need someone to support to us.

    Ashley

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  2. By the way, can I add your blog to my list of schizophrenia blogs on my site?

    Ashley

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  3. Hey Ashley I am so sorry that I haven't gotten back to you! You left me three comments already and I haven't even wrote back to one. Please forgive me. Yes, you can add my blog to the your list. Thanks also for becoming a follower of my site! I am so happy you have your Mom for support. Parents are pretty cool like that. You can be eight and bruise your knee and they pick you up and hug you. Or you can be twenty - eight lose your mind and they will still come pick you up and hug you!
    Thanks,
    Amanda

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  4. Hi Lady Amanda,

    Thanks for the comment you left on my blog. You asked for tips...Hm...Blogging is such a personal thing, I think, so it's hard to give general tips. It depends a lot on what your purpose for blogging is. For everyone it's different, and you don't have to know right now, right at the beginning!

    My advice: be honest. Do what you can, when you can. Don't let anyone dictate to you what to make this blog into, or dictate to you what you put on it. It's YOUR space! That's all I can think of right now.

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  5. Thanks Wondering Coyote. I think it's always important to be honest! Everyone not knowing me in real life also makes it eaiser to be honest. Only one person, the person that got me to this blogging spot, knows that it's me. What I mean is that I don't treat this like a facebook page or something where I want all my friends to know about. I want to help people and connect with people in kind of a less risky fashion. I want to be brutally honest with out having to worry what anyone thinks of me. So thank you for approving.
    Hope you stop by again,
    Amanda

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  6. I was told by my brother's social worker that my brother's prognosis is better because of his family support. That meant so much to me because sometimes you feel like the love you give doesn't make a difference, but it does.

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  7. Yes, Amber. When you are really sick. I mean so sick that you can think that the only option in life is to die, it's love that keeps us going!

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