I was clinically diagnosed with panic disorder and OCD in 2015. Since then, I've been on a mission to normalize talking openly and honestly about mental health.
Wednesday, September 30, 2020
Walking on Eggshells
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
You're Allowed to Ask
Wednesday, September 9, 2020
Is Love All You Need?
Person with a mental illness exists and has symptoms of their mental health condition. Then person with a mental illness meets someone, they fall in love, and suddenly, the mental illness disappears. Happily ever after happens and the mental illness is never mentioned again because love conquers all. I feel like we've all seen that trope in at least one movie or TV show.
Even in normal, non-Hollywood society, there is this expectation that, when a mentally ill person gets into a (healthy) romantic relationship and the two people fall in love, that the mental illness will suddenly just become better. The other person's love will magically "fix" them. Then if the mental illness is still present, people usually say the other person just doesn't love them enough or that the mentally ill person isn't trying hard enough to be "better".
I feel like I shouldn't still have to say this, but...you CAN'T love someone's mental illness away, whether it's an anxiety disorder, depression, a mood disorder, or a substance abuse issue. A mental health condition, like all other chronic health conditions, is a thing that exists outside of external factors or situations like a romantic relationship or a deep friendship. It exists as a result of internal factors. That means a person's mental health condition has nothing to do with their relationship status and everything to do with that person's brain chemicals (and possibly past traumatic experiences). Love is powerful and life-changing and great, but it can't fix a person's brain chemicals, and expecting love to be this cure-all especially when it comes to mental health is yet another facet of the mental health stigma (because this idea means we're still not taking mental health as seriously as we should be. I mean, nobody thinks they can love diabetes away...).
I also feel like I shouldn't still have to say this either but...if you're in a relationship with a person that has a mental health condition, it IS NOT your job to "fix" them (or even to stay with them at all, especially if they aren't getting help or are refusing help and/or medication). I know this one, in particular, is hard for a lot of people. It's the mentally ill person's job to work on themselves, to go to therapy and take their medications and change their lifestyle to a healthier one. No matter how much you love them and want them to be "better" you can't force them to do the things that will make them better. (You can definitely encourage them and support them, but you can't force them.) They need to be internally motivated to begin a wellness journey and keep it up for, you know, the rest of their lives.
A person can have the "perfect" life. You know...perfectly devoted and loving parents, did well in school, got their dream job in their dream location, found a soul mate, and all those great things that seem to (objectively) make a life "perfect", and they can still have a mental health condition and regularly experience symptoms of that condition anyway. It doesn't mean their partner doesn't love them enough. It doesn't mean that their partner isn't trying hard enough to "fix" them. It doesn't mean that their relationship isn't the "right" relationship. It doesn't mean that the mentally ill person isn't trying hard enough to be "better". It's just the nature of a mental health condition. Symptoms wax and wane independently of how great someone's life is and independently of how much other people love them. (Although stress can exacerbate a mental health condition.)
I'll end with this: Contrary to what pop culture and the mental health stigma wants us to believe, mental health conditions are serious health conditions. You can't cure someone's mental health condition simply by loving them. You can't love a mental health condition away, just like you can't pray it away. Also, if you're in a relationship with someone who lives with a mental health condition, it IS NOT your job to "fix" them. They're decision to begin and continue on a wellness journey needs to be internally motivated, not solely motivated by their partner or relationship status because it's a journey that should last a lifetime and not just while they have a partner.
Wednesday, September 2, 2020
The Blame Game
I used to blame myself for experiencing the symptoms of my mental health conditions. Every time I had an anxiety spike because of my intrusive thoughts or every time I had a panic attack, I blamed myself for it. I had obviously done something wrong in the way I managed my mental health, or I wouldn't have had symptoms flare up, right? I even used to go to my appointments and conclude the details of a bad time with, "I know I did it to myself..."
My therapist was always quick to interrupt that thought. Then she would ask me something like, "What makes you feel like you did it to yourself?" Then I would have to ashamedly tell her how I had caught myself trying to "out-logic" my intrusive thoughts, or doing some kind of mental compulsion, or kept going to a worst-case scenario sort of place until I caused myself to panic. When it wasn't something like that, I would have to tell her that I had watched or listened to something that I found to be triggering, but that I forced myself to "hang in there" despite an increase in intrusive thoughts and/or feelings of panic. So, basically, if I hadn't done X,Y, or Z, I would have been fine, which just made me feel guilty and ashamed.
My therapist never blamed me, even if I did do something that caused a flare-up in symptoms. She always explained that old habits of how I dealt with my mental health condition (like trying to out-logic the thought or mental compulsions) were hard to break. Of course, I would go back and fall into old habits sometimes because I was still learning and creating new pathways in my brain that weren't as familiar as the old ways. My anxious brain craved the same old routine, and that would be the place it would try to go to. Sometimes I'd catch myself and redirect, but then sometimes I'd slip up. It didn't mean I was doing it to myself on purpose, and so I didn't need to blame myself. I needed to forgive myself and move on.
As for the external triggers, she would ask something like, "Did you know it would be triggering beforehand?" Usually, my answers was something like, "Well, it wasn't triggering before." Or, "The last time, it only bothered me a little and then the anxiety dropped after the first couple of minutes so I was waiting for it (the anxiety) to drop this time, too."
Triggers, especially when we're dealing with something as unpredictable as panic disorder, can vary. Sometimes a past trigger may not feel as intense, and so I might not have a panic attack. Sometimes something that wasn't a trigger before suddenly becomes a trigger, but then it isn't a trigger the next time. (Panic and OCD are different like that. I know my OCD triggers, but I may not always know if something is going to trigger a panic attack until it does.) My therapist understood that and she would always re-affirm the idea that panic triggers are unpredictable, and so I shouldn't blame myself for not realizing or spotting a trigger before the attack starts every time.
I even still catch myself combing back through the day to see what I did wrong on a bad day, but I eventually (mostly) stopped blaming myself for the slip-ups. I shake it off as best I can, promise to do better next time, and move on. Old habits, especially if you've had them for a long time and especially if they helped you manage something as traumatic as a mental health condition, can be hard to break. The point is that you're TRYING to break the old habits and redirect to better, more helpful ways of managing symptoms.
I'd also like to point out: Sometimes we can do everything "right" in the way that we manage our mental health condition, and we will still experience symptoms. That doesn't mean we did anything wrong or that the symptoms flare-up is our fault. It's a chronic health condition, and symptoms come and go sometimes, no matter how well we've been managing it. So, instead of blaming ourselves for it, we should strive to handle the situation with compassion and understanding. (Having compassion and understanding toward myself is also something that I still struggle with, but I'm working on it.)
I'll end with this: As with all trauma, it's so easy to slip into looking for someone to blame. With mental health conditions, the person we land on to blame is usually ourselves. That's not okay, friends. We don't need to blame ourselves for our mental health conditions, for experiencing the symptoms, or for the little slip ups that may cause symptoms to present. The old coping habits and management techniques are hard to break, and we'll all slip up sometimes and go back to them. The point is to recognize the slip-up without assigning blame and to try to use a better strategy next time.