Woke up this morning
Feeling trippy
Where am I headed?
(clonazipam for anxiety. Regular meds changed to olanzapine, and fluoxetine( not yet started). I refused to take lithium. olanzapine was the alternative. )
Woke up this morning
Feeling trippy
Where am I headed?
(clonazipam for anxiety. Regular meds changed to olanzapine, and fluoxetine( not yet started). I refused to take lithium. olanzapine was the alternative. )
Wherever I look now
I see people despising me
I don’t know how to deal with
My feelings of insecurity
This might be part of my depression
So many things making me anxious
I must control my mind’s disorder
Peace is hard to find, so precious
When I’m manic I’m so confident
And sometimes an annoying asshole
Mild hypomania is perfect
I feel so very good and so whole
Now that I’ve gotten paranoid
I’ve decided to confront people
Ask them if I’m right or wrong
It takes some guts, but feels like freedom
I’m sorry if I seem trying these days
I really can’t help it
I know that you have a lot to face
And I’m a handful, I admit
Reading my poetry can bring you down
Reading my poetry can be no fun
It’s all about human contact to me
I’m scared of everything and on the run
Who would want to read such turmoil?
Who would want to read about this guy
Who is so clueless about everything?
I’m constantly asking myself why
So thank you for reading
I don’t know why you’re doing it
But I’m very grateful
And I’ll try to put in funny bits
I once got so broken
I thought there was no hope for repair
Many words unspoken
I tried, failed to unload my despair
I know the way it feels
When everything is dark and hopeless
When there’s nothing that heals
When a fan’s squeak can sound ferocious
When all you want to do
Is wipe everything you’ve done away
I have seen this view too
But then I started a brand new day
The world is just the same
I guess that it was just me that changed
Within me I see a flame
Not exactly hope; more like a new game
I’m gambling on a miracle
And I won’t stop betting
So I’ll write out those IOUs
From dawn till the sun comes down setting
Back in 2009
I cried for help
I told everyone I knew
I was going to kill myself
My father said, “go ahead”
his usual behaviour…
i don’t know what I was expecting!
Anyway…
I did go ahead
I swallowed about thirty tablets
Woke up in my own puke
couldn’t stand up
head spinning
mom screamed
and called the ambulance
Father cried
And kept saying
He was sorry
and that he loves me
(for the first time ever)
i had never seen him look
this weak before
All this while
i was screaming
over and over again,
“why didn’t it work?!!”
thinking then
that my life
would get worse
i do not know if it has
“So doc,” says Patient Zero, making himself comfortable on the couch, “you want to get inside my head. Psychoanalysis me and all that jazz,” he chuckles. “I’ve read your DSMs, you know, one through six. We’ll be sitting here for decades with that approach.” The patient sighs, and then beams a beatific smile, “but don’t fret. I’ve got your back, Doc. I know a shortcut.”
“The problem,” says the patient, “lies in translation. I’ve just got to teach you the syntax, and there’s an easy way for that. Get locked up in solitary for a couple of months. Nah, the wardens haven’t gotten that cruel yet. They’ll probably let you out after a week. Better yet, I’ve got a bunker out in the middle of nowhere, with supplies that should last you a year. I’ll lock you in there for a few months.”
The patient’s voice drops to a low murmur. The doctor pushes his chair forward to hear him better.
“When you’re all alone,” the patient says, “the first couple of days are easy. You think and think and think. You remember, you learn from memories, and you lose yourself in a self constructed fantasy. After that, you grow bored out of your mind. You work out, eat, sleep and sing… You’ll do anything just so as long as you don’t have to think. Once you start getting angry, you’ll know that you’re two steps from hell.”
The doctor shivers. He’s heard worse, but there’s something about the man’s tone and eyes, something completely alien.
“Once you’re in hell, that’s where things get interesting. How would you deal with a cold dark bitter night, when you’re paralyzed and your own thoughts betray you. Seeing your soul in the garden of paradise is nice and all, but encountering it in this place will only fill you with a disgust for everything. Food turns to ashes, that beautiful copy of Monet on your wall turns into something vile, all joyous memories turn hollow, and you relive your mistakes over and over. You feel dark demons creep around you. If you don’t confront this there, slay the demons, analyse yourself and search for the meaning of it all, then perhaps you’ll get lost there forever. It’s in hell where the Light shines brightest, you know. And that’s a good thing for dodos like me, or I’d still be stuck there.”
The patient gazes out the window with a distant stare. The doctor’s cough brings him out of his reverie… “And that’s only the second week, Doc. After that, your mind just goes to places. You may call it madness, but it’s something much more than that. You’re not living only in this world any longer, and you’re not living alone. There are creatures beyond the ether, some good, some bad, and some downright mad. You lose all loyalty to any past identity, as you begin to explore the cosmos of your soul. Now’s the time you should be wary of arrogance, or you’ll fall right back into hell again… It’s a trap, but this time it’s easier to climb out.”
The man writes down an address and nods, “I’ll see you there when you’re ready, Doc.”