Thursday, December 15, 2022

Terms and Conditions Apply

I was talking about mental illness with someone the other day. We were talking about some things I had seen in online forums in which people were saying that they wouldn't want to date someone with disabilities and/or mental illness. Naturally, the conversation turned to whether or not you should tell a potential partner that you have a disability and/or mental illness. 

I know why many of us that live with a disability and/or mental illness are reluctant to disclose that to potential partners. As someone who lives with cerebral palsy as well as OCD and panic disorder, I'm extremely familiar with rejection and the fear of rejection because of those things about myself. There is still a stigma around both disability and mental illness that quietly says we're too much work, and that stigma can make disability and mental illness a deal breaker for some potential partners. However, even knowing that disability and mental illness might be deal breakers for a potential partner, I would still disclose those things about myself as early as possible. 

Sure, it can be scary to tell a potential partner these things because they might decide they no longer want to pursue a relationship with us. But, let's be honest, someone choosing up front not to pursue a relationship with us because of those things is going to be better for us because they obviously wouldn't be able to be as kind and patient as we needed them to be on the bad days, which would have negatively affected our mental health anyway. It's better to let the people that aren't good for us weed themselves out before we're emotionally invested. 

Also, just from a practical point, by keeping our disability and/or mental illness from a potential partner and entering into a relationship with them, we've basically ensured that we're going to have an unpleasant time in that relationship. A partner can't help us or accommodate us if we don't let them know that we need that from them. This is going to possibly put us in danger of ending up in situations that we shouldn't be in or literally can't be in without unpleasant consequences related to our disability or mental health because our partner didn't know about our mental health or disability limitations.

For our partner, when they find out that we live with a disability and/or mental illness that we didn't tell them before they agreed to be in a relationship with us, it could damage the relationship. Finding out that we kept such important information from them like some dirty little secret is likely going to make our partner feel hurt, lied to, and even betrayed and that big secret will more than likely break the trust we've worked to build in the relationship. It may even leave them wondering what other important things we've kept from them.

Each partner needs to be able to give consent to enter into a relationship, like informed consent is required before any procedure or research. A relationship is basically a contract between two people that has terms and conditions that apply (usually called their deal breakers and boundaries). Just like with any contract, people have to know ALL the terms, conditions, and risks of that contract before they enter into it, or the contract is no good. Mental health and disability are part of the terms and conditions that a potential partner needs to know about before they can give the required informed consent to enter into the relationship contract.

I'll end with this: Finding good, healthy relationships can be difficult for everyone, but it can be especially difficult for those of us that live with disability and/or mental illness, which can often make us want to hide those details about ourselves from our potential partners. We really shouldn't hide those things from our potential partners. Giving them all the "terms and conditions" is so important because this allows our partner to give actual informed consent to try out the relationship with us, and it allows us to select a partner who is willing to make the necessary room in the relationship to accommodate our disability and/or our bad mental health days to (hopefully) ensure the relationship is fun and healthy for everyone involved.

Thursday, December 1, 2022

It's a Full-Time Job

Most people tend not to think about their mental health until they go through a period of poor mental health. Most people think of mental health as something you only really need to devote any time to managing if something goes wrong. They view mental illness in the same way, meaning that they think you don't really have to devote time to actually managing mental illness unless you're struggling with that mental illness. This isn't really an accurate way to think about managing mental illness or mental health in general.

Managing my mental illness is a full-time job, at least for me. I have to do things every day to manage the symptoms of my OCD and panic disorder. The list of things that I have to do includes making sure I'm getting enough rest, making sure I'm eating the right foods, making sure I'm exercising, making sure I have enough "wiggle room" in my schedule to deal with a sudden unexpected spike in anxiety or a full-on panic attack, and making sure I'm using the healthy management strategies and coping techniques that I've learned in therapy. In addition to that, I also have to keep up with my therapy appointments and make sure I'm working on the things my therapist and I talk about in therapy while I'm between sessions. 

In addition to all the things I mentioned in the previous paragraph, I always have to take my mental illness into account for every decision I make. I have to ask myself, "Will doing X negatively or positively affect my mental health, or is this something I won't know until I try it?" If the answer is that something will negatively affect my mental health, then I can't do that thing no matter how much I want to. If the answer is that I don't know if something will negatively affect my mental health until I try it, I have to ask myself, "Do I currently have the internal resources to be able to safely manage any possible negative mental health consequences if I try this thing?" (Because it's never a good idea to forge ahead with something when you don't have the internal resources to manage the possible negative effects.)

This is EVERY DAY, whether I'm in a period of good or poor mental health and whether or not I'm experiencing symptoms of my mental illness. (I do even more things to manage my mental health on the bad days.) This isn't something I can take a day off from or only do when I feel like it. (And, yes, managing my mental health and being a paralegal can feel like I have a full plate depending on how well I'm doing with my mental health. It's like having two jobs at the same time.)

When I don't treat managing my mental health like the full-time job that it is, I always regret it. When I don't do the things that I need to do every day to manage my mental health, I don't function at the level that I consider to be my normal. I experience more spikes in the symptoms of my mental illness, and I end up existing in survival mode. I can lose days and even weeks in a blur of anxiety, panic, and unhealthy spirals. I'm also unable to be fully present in my life and my relationships with other people because nobody can be fully present in the external world when they're literally fighting to survive their internal world.

I know it can sound daunting when I refer to managing my mental health as a full-time job. It may even seem tedious to have to think about this THING every day and do stuff so this THING doesn't severely impact your ability to thrive and fully experience life. But...we all deserve to live as fully and as happily as we can, and we deserve to be able to be fully present in our lives as often as we can instead of just surviving. 

I'll end with this: People tend to think about managing their mental health as more of an occasional hobby instead of a full-time pursuit. This isn't a good way to think about managing your mental health for anyone, but it's an especially bad way to think about managing your mental health when you live with mental illness. A mental illness that you don't work on or think about until it's interfering with your ability to function can derail your whole life for months or even years. Adequately managing mental illness so that you're not constantly fighting to survive it requires work EVERY DAY, like it's a full-time job.