16 May 2017

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE NEMESIS

https://fightorflights.com/2017/01/30/panic-disorder/
The following is the most accurate depiction of what Panic Disorder is in my life!! Written by Kelly Wynne at her blog: Just Cut the Bullshit. Each paragraph brought memories closer to the surface than they have been allowed for a long time, and my heart rate increased accordingly. I dropped out of higher education due to panic - only to fight back and gain a Masters Degree - I beat that sucker down!! My job exposes me to the inexcusable behaviors of others and my commute puts me in the middle of them, but I also have an ADA that allows me to run from the Nemesis when necessary (I am NOT wonder woman!). I carry a lot more than just one little pill for emergencies and I am not embarrassed to whip that little canister out in public when necessary - because this is MY war and I hold the command codes for a full on attack. You think you know me - this is Kelly's story - not mine.  It just happens to be the best introduction to my Nemesis - the one I know so well....
  Anxiety is an invalid excuse. I just got back to my room after a failed attempt to go to class. I’m sitting here, writing this, trying to think of something to email my professor to sugarcoat what I’m feeling, to really drive home the point that class today was unbearable for me. You see if it was the flu or a bad head cold this would be easy. I would simply relay the symptoms and be excused with a general “feel better” and a hidden relief that I wouldn’t be getting anyone else sick. To send an email saying I just had to take a breather on a 4th Ave. step because my lungs felt as if they were collapsing and my body was shaking so badly I could hardly walk doesn’t do the trick.
   Anxiety is an invalid excuse. I was supposed to go out to dinner with my friends a few nights ago but couldn’t get myself out of bed due to some unwelcomed existential dread about nothing in particular. No, it wasn’t something my horoscope said. It wasn’t something I was anticipating in the upcoming week. I wasn’t “nervous.” I was simply incapable. “But it’ll be fun,” they said. “You never go out with us.”
   Anxiety is an invalid excuse. I fear having to tell people I’m on medication because the second I do, I see my fears written across their faces. The fact that I have to take a dose of something with an unpronounceable name twice a day just to make me feel like I’m residing on some middle ground that makes me capable of mandatory human function immediately sets off alarms that I am a lesser person, lacking independence and radiating unpredictability. All of a sudden I’m the crazy, mentally unstable girl completely incompetent and incapabe of any mundane task in front of me. I don’t even dream of revealing I have a Xanax in my bag in case of emergency, because the one time I mentioned it, the faces of my friends were the same as I’d expect if they saw me shooting up heroin in the bathroom of the bar.
   Anxiety is an invalid excuse. In the eyes of others, it makes me a liar. Lazy. Inadequate. Delusional. Crazy. I can’t say I have a diagnosis because everyone I tell is conditioned to think I’m either a deranged psychopath or I’m faking it because I’m simply too fragile to face life like a normal person; underwhelming unable to walk through a typical routine without having an upper to keep me stable. Do they think I pity myself so much to induce a self-hatred strong enough to keep myself so far from mental catharsis? Do they think I find this fun?
   Anxiety is an invalid excuse. I’ve begun to believe it myself. Every time I feel my chest get heavy, my hands get sweaty, my vision become disconnected, I tell myself to suck it up: that it’s all in my head. Maybe it is. That’s certainly where it lives. But tell that to my body when I’m locked in my room, unable to move or think or breathe. Tell that to my ears that simply decide to stop hearing and scream with hollow ringing that disorients me to the point of defeat. Tell that to the girl who has sat on grimy floors in restaurant bathrooms and called for cabs with no goodbye because, for a few moments, she can’t remember how to exist.
   Anxiety is an invalid excuse. They say there’s a science behind it. That it’s just how I work. They say it’s a sickness, real as cancer. But how am I supposed to believe it when I can’t convince myself it’s not self-induced? How am I supposed to survive an illness I’m not convinced even exists? How am I supposed to love my mind if I constantly doubt its ability to decipher reality from fiction? 
   Anxiety is an invalid excuse. I know this because my school only allows three absences per semester. My only saving grace is that the school psychiatrist believes me. I’ve officially been categorized, embossed, labeled with the word “disabled.” I feel like a sick scam. Who am I to say I’m hindered when there’s nothing visibly wrong with me: when some days I function at 110 percent and nothing can hold me back. I feel like a disrespectful fool calling myself disabled when I have a condition so loosely defined, so casual. I have no right to categorize myself as someone with real life problems. There are many who have it much worse than me. And because my vices cannot be seen from the surface they’re perceived as fake. It’s a bittersweet sentiment knowing my flaws are beautifully misunderstood in a way that allows me to pretend they don’t exist while someone is watching. I thrive in the precious moments I spend being normal. I cripple in the instances I must try to explain the place I’m coming from, the place no one will ever truly understand until they feel their heart stop beating in their chest only to accelerate far past a normal rhythm, blood rushing to their head until the whole world fades away to a crystallized screen of silent white. I’m sure the letter sent to each of my teachers makes them think I’m just a student with low self-esteem who whines and pouts my way through life, looking for shallow excuses to half-ass my work. But I want to succeed. I want to live. To live comfortably. That's my dream.
   Anxiety is an invalid excuse because I can’t convince myself I’m not insane. I can’t get over the possibility that every trigger, every panic, is rooted deep in my overactive imagination who happens to be a spiteful little bitch that likes to see me squirm. It’s in the calm moments I feel it most. When I’m finally content and that sharp jab of terror hits the sweet spot in the middle of my throat, closing in until I’m choking on invisible tribulations. It’s so vivid I can see the muscles contracting, turning purple as I fear…what? What is it that I fear? It’s the imaginary evils that sneak up and get me in the moments I least expect it. It’s the seconds of doubt that turn into gut-wrenching reservations and claustrophobic convulsing that drive me right back under my sheets until a glimmer of light breaks through the stitching. It’s the darkest days and the brightest nights because sleep is the only time I can fully escape it.
   Anxiety is an invalid excuse. So I refuse to let myself give in to the impulses. I’m a fighter. I hate the guilt I feel every time I have to step out of a room, find the little, hidden stash of pills in my purse and sneak one out of view of anyone I know. I don’t know how anyone enjoys that high. It makes me sad, the lowest I’ve ever felt, feeling incapable of performing in my day-to-day life without an artificial aid. But I’ve come to terms with the idea that sometimes there is no other option. I hope one day I’ll be okay with that. 

17 November 2015

BEWARE THE CHILDREN



Those who know me well know that a change in plans usually causes a bit of angst. I ruminated over this experience through the night on Saturday. Then I ruminated again the following night. Guess who worked from home on Monday?

After spending time at a friend's home, my hubby and I went to a movie. Instead of movie snacks, I suggested we grab a sandwich after the show. Following the movie, my hubby asked if I was up for something other than Subway Sandwich - you know, the one right next to MY theater, in MY mall where MY nerves usually behave. I'm tough. We went to a small sandwich shop that I had never been to.

On a late Saturday afternoon, my hubby and I joined one other family. Only I can't be certain the other family was a mom and dad with their kids. You see, there were a lot of kids - OK maybe not so much for Utah, but I can tell you that they were too close in age to actually be siblings. Perhaps they were cousins. There were probably 6-8 children with a dad who could have been an Islander or Latino, and a mom who was as pale as I am. Think vampire pale.

After we ordered, I observed one of the girls (possibly 7 years old) at the door of the shop. Between her body and the door was toddler, maybe 18 months. What floored me was that she kept reaching down and moving the toddler's hand, then pulling the door closed and trying to lock it. Now, I logically can guess she was attempting to keep his hands away from the opening, but that IS NOT WHAT I SAW. I am suddenly on Hyper-alert. You know what is going to happen....

The toddler's hand gets pinched in the door. As the toddler squealed and pulled his hand back, the girl twirls away from the scene. She passes me smiling while sing-songing "sorry, so sorry...". Dad picked up the toddler and took him out to the car. That left mom with the rest of the children and she stood and glanced around as though surrounded by wolves. My hubby asked if I wanted to pick a table, and I informed him I was feeling quite anxious. He asked if he should change our order from stay-in to a to-go order. I went to sit at the table right next to doorway girl because I really wanted to....well I won't admit what I wanted...

Two other little girls were at the table with doorway girl. She now entertained herself with a toy phone and turning chairs over. Little girl2 asked little girl3 if she could have some of her chips. So the third little girl offered her some. But that wasn't enough. Little girl2 offers little girl3 a cup to put the chips into. Since little girl2 is bigger than little girl3, she gets to hold the bag while dumping the chips into the cup. She then proceeds to maintain possession of the cup, which causes little girl3 to whine. When mom starts moving toward the table, little girl2 gives in to the smaller child and gives the cup to little girl3 before mom arrives. Mom then gets after doorway girl for having one of the chairs tipped over onto her lap while she is playing on the phone.

In the meantime, two older boys who were probably early junior high school age, jump up from their table and head over to the display of chips. The older boy has a bag already open and is eating the chips. He grabs another bag and offers it to the second boy. Mom notices and says, "No more." But the older boy taunts her by pretending to exchange his open bag for a new bag, to which mom replies, "I said no more. No" She is quiet and seems a bit nervous about where all the children are.

The older boy then folds the open top of his chip bag and while tipping the display forward, acts as though he is going to put his open bag at the back of the stack and take another bag of chips. This is when I let my thoughts escape my mouth. I was mild. I said, "He is EATING those chips." So mom moves closer to the boys and they scatter. But the older boy looks up and around and actually says, "What? I don't see no cameras!" As mom tries to herd the boys toward the tables, I spoke up. Yup. But I was calm. "You can tell him I am a Live Camera, 'cause I see. I've seen it all." (and I glanced at doorway girl) I soooo wanted to tattle on the little brat and let mom know that she purposely shut the door on the toddler's hand, but....I'm good. Instead I start talking to my hubby. Just talking so I will stop seeing every thing!  Within moments, dad comes back into the shop and sternly tells the boys to "Sit Down!" Everything changed when dad returned. All the children sat at tables. Mom was saved.


Sometimes I don't know who I want to smack more; the parent or the child. I am dismayed at the bullying that takes place right in front of our noses!! I am outraged a teen though this acceptable behavior, if there are NO CAMERAS! I am sickened that it cost $30 for what would have cost $15 at MY Subway Sandwich at MY mall, where MY nerves usually behave! UGH! UGH! UGH!

OK....My hubby and I went to a sandwich shop. It was just the two of us and one other family. It ends there....'cause I desperately need some sleep!