NovemberStar
Platinum Member
@GWhizz I very much relate to being ignored and dismissed by the emergency psych system. That happened to me a year ago and I'm still recovering from the experience. I'm in the middle of writing an official complaint about the treatment (ie LACK OF IT) over the past 3 years but especially the last year.
Like you, I no longer feel I can reach out, no matter how bad or strong the suicidal thoughts are. There seems to be nothing less devastating to feel suicidal, to reach out to PROFESSIONALS who SHOULD know how to respond, only to be completely ignored, dismissed, invalidated.
I truly feel your pain on that one.
There is always a helpline to phone however - it's anonymous. I've rung them once and the kindness at the end of the phone changed my tears of despair to tears of feeling cared for.
My mother died when I was 10. Growing up without a mother is a life sentence for a child no matter their age. Going to school and having no mother sets you apart from the other children and you are teased horrifically for it (I was told 'haha your mother is in the ground with worms and maggots!').
If you can't feel like fighting for herself, you need to do it for your son. He will blame himself when he is older.
I'm really struggling myself right now with suicidal thoughts and hopelessness. My T is going away for 5 weeks (we have one more session), and I just found out the support that's been helping me is being withdrawn - as of yesterday - when I really needed it to be there for another week - my Psych Dr is away for 2 weeks, my new caseworker works Sunday to thursday, and at the moment I feel it is just too devastating to have the mobile respite taken away for the fri and sat nights I've been using them - right on the day my T leaves. I'll have no one fri and sat and it is severely depressing me. That and I HATE spring and summer and the winter is mild and it's becoming spring a month early.
Anyway - the point of sharing all that is - I like the ideas @ghotiff suggested - I'm staying in bed today. Online, watching utube videos (documentaries) and at the moment eating sugar is the best drug I have. It sedated me, comforts me, triggers a slight high just so the awful depression lifts to make it a plain old unmotivated low mood and not care about much of anything.
Maybe some of those ideas will be helpful for you too - way I see it is - it can't hurt to try, not when it feels like the only other option is suicide.
'Dead' lasts forever (as far as we know). That's a pretty long time in the bigger picture. So while just TODAY feels so awful and hard to imagine getting through it - you can't compare it to the forever of 'dead'.
The other thing about that that stops me is - what if 'dead' isn't any better - what if it is worse? In that you retain all the awful feelings but are in a no mans land alone, and stuck like THAT, forever :eek:
Suddenly 'today' and the notion I am feeling this awful TODAY doesn't seem as bad when I compare it to 'forever'.
Keep posting your feelings. I STRONGLY encourage you to talk to a friend, loved one, family member and tell them what is going on and ask them to support you in getting the help you need. Often the psych system seem to act in a better way if we have someone to go with us. Having a witness to their failings and inadequacies seems to get us 'heard' more than if we try to approach it alone.
Like you, I no longer feel I can reach out, no matter how bad or strong the suicidal thoughts are. There seems to be nothing less devastating to feel suicidal, to reach out to PROFESSIONALS who SHOULD know how to respond, only to be completely ignored, dismissed, invalidated.
I truly feel your pain on that one.
There is always a helpline to phone however - it's anonymous. I've rung them once and the kindness at the end of the phone changed my tears of despair to tears of feeling cared for.
My mother died when I was 10. Growing up without a mother is a life sentence for a child no matter their age. Going to school and having no mother sets you apart from the other children and you are teased horrifically for it (I was told 'haha your mother is in the ground with worms and maggots!').
If you can't feel like fighting for herself, you need to do it for your son. He will blame himself when he is older.
I'm really struggling myself right now with suicidal thoughts and hopelessness. My T is going away for 5 weeks (we have one more session), and I just found out the support that's been helping me is being withdrawn - as of yesterday - when I really needed it to be there for another week - my Psych Dr is away for 2 weeks, my new caseworker works Sunday to thursday, and at the moment I feel it is just too devastating to have the mobile respite taken away for the fri and sat nights I've been using them - right on the day my T leaves. I'll have no one fri and sat and it is severely depressing me. That and I HATE spring and summer and the winter is mild and it's becoming spring a month early.
Anyway - the point of sharing all that is - I like the ideas @ghotiff suggested - I'm staying in bed today. Online, watching utube videos (documentaries) and at the moment eating sugar is the best drug I have. It sedated me, comforts me, triggers a slight high just so the awful depression lifts to make it a plain old unmotivated low mood and not care about much of anything.
Maybe some of those ideas will be helpful for you too - way I see it is - it can't hurt to try, not when it feels like the only other option is suicide.
'Dead' lasts forever (as far as we know). That's a pretty long time in the bigger picture. So while just TODAY feels so awful and hard to imagine getting through it - you can't compare it to the forever of 'dead'.
The other thing about that that stops me is - what if 'dead' isn't any better - what if it is worse? In that you retain all the awful feelings but are in a no mans land alone, and stuck like THAT, forever :eek:
Suddenly 'today' and the notion I am feeling this awful TODAY doesn't seem as bad when I compare it to 'forever'.
Keep posting your feelings. I STRONGLY encourage you to talk to a friend, loved one, family member and tell them what is going on and ask them to support you in getting the help you need. Often the psych system seem to act in a better way if we have someone to go with us. Having a witness to their failings and inadequacies seems to get us 'heard' more than if we try to approach it alone.