@anonymous, it is in no way that simple to get on disabilty. My step mom fought for 5 yrs and still got denied in the end. I have both mental and physical diabilties and doubt I would be approved for disability and all my Drs say I wouldn't be approved. They don't have to legally give you anything.
I have majory anxiety and panic and I disocissate a lot, hurting myself during it and not knowing how I got from point A to point B, point B being the train tracks a few yards from my front door once.
I have a huge terror of people that is so crippling that I would rather starve then go to a store. I disoscciate almost everytime I try to go to a store. I DO need a service dog for that reason amoung other reasons. I have trained him to alert to panic as if that panic is high enough I disocissate and have hurt myself while disossiating. With his alerts, I can sit on the floor where I am, have him lay across me so i cannot move.
I have major physical symptoms due to mental reasons that greatly impact my abilty to work and function. I have fallen alseep out of no where sitting up. I have had dizziness, confusion, blurred and double vision, slurred speech episdes that happened all at once fully out of no where that lasted hours, all of it a medical mystery and all of it while working.
I have lost my abilty to speak (which is what I do for a living) during full flashbacks because I had a customer that sounded like my mom.
I have a major amount of things that impact my job. Both mental and physical. In '09 I fell 3 stories and broke my back. I have a Medtronics drug infusion pump implanted in my right side pumping free base morphine, marcaine, and clonidine through a cathiter directly into my spinal cord just to allow me to walk. I have so much pain that, at times, not allowing that to show in my voice is impossible and tears come rolling down on their own, without me actually crying. I have to tell myself "breath in, breath out" just to keep myself talking and trying so damn hard to keep my voice from crackling.
But, still, I work. Working is very important to me, personally, and recently fought on here about disabilty when I had lost my job. Though I have many reasons to try for disabilty and can accept, to a point, that I am disabled, I knew I could still work. Working gives me more then money and a way to pay bills. It gives me purpose, independence, a way to be a partly functional member of society. It is the best distraction ever as when I wasn't working my mind went wild. I can shut off most of my issues, comparmentalize and numb off my issues, for my job. I knew that, though I am close to not being capable of working, I am not there yet. And I want to work for as long as absoultly possible. And though it is not my dream job, I am working on getting the education need, from home where there aren't people and I can work at my own pace, to slide into my dream job one day...hopefully. But, nonetheless, I get to do what i love partly and that is good enough for me for now.
I work as tech support in a call center. There are many things I cannot do (stand being a big one), but I can sit, take calls, and fix peoples internet, PCs, and phones and I am ok with that.
@Wyska, Saying you cannot work because you cannot do school is like saying you cannot eat an apple because you can't eat an orange. They are worlds apart. The workforce is made up of unnumberable amount of fields and job tasks. If you couldn't do school because of people, don't work around people. If it was because of deadlines, don't get a job with deadlines. I mean, there are so many things one can do that is completely different then school that it isn't logical to say you can't work because you can't do school, in my opinion. Especially if you have never worked before. If you work in a few fields doing a few different things and cannot seem to keep a job due to these symptoms, that would be much different.
Just my opinion. Not making assumptions or judgements at all but rather just opinions going off of what is written here and my own experience. I predict you are young. In my opinion, not at least trying to work is doing yourself a disservice. And vocational therapy is to help you find a job you can do and love. The definintion of vocational is training/"therapy" around a job or jobs in general. It is there to help people work, or to try to. If the vocational therapist tries and tries for a long time and fails, then that, in my opinion, would prove you cannot work. But, don't go into it with that mindset but rather a mindset of "awesome! Someone here specifically to help me find a job I CAN do!"