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Other Psychosis

ags1

Bronze Member
Years ago, I was targeted for relentless harassment by a group of transphobic youths. They would call me a pedo, make offensive gestures and even throw rocks at me. The local police did not take effective action. Eventually the adults in the neighborhood joined in. I couldn't move away because the housing market was bad and we were trapped in negative equity.

After a few years of this, I had a nervous breakdown and went psychotic. I simultaneously felt that I was mentally ill, and that the universe wasn't real and that there was a plot by aliens to kill me. Despite my experiences, I was very trusting of other people - the aliens wouldn't make their move if other people were around.

I was off work for several months, initially diagnosed with anxiety. I was mostly calm, reserved and detached when talking to other people, except for the very occasional flare up of panic, so people had trouble believing I was delusional and paranoid. However eventually I was placed on antipsychotics.

It was like walking into another room in my head and shutting the door on the crazy room. The crazy room was still there and I could (and still can) hear crazy through the walls. But I was no longer compelled to go into that room. I realized how tired I had been for decades.

The intense fears of my psychosis were not new. I had been gnawed by such terrors my whole life, at least since I was a teen. What changed in "psychosis" was those thoughts became more organized and I couldn't completely hide how I was feeling. On antipsychotics, I had the freedom to simply think about other stuff.

I think now that the psychosis was a good event in my life. It enables me, in a confused and nonsensical way, to ask for help. It got me on meds I had desperately needed for decades. It even gave me more understanding of the struggles my schizophrenic mother had and lessened my anger toward her.

While I was recovering, I was made redundant, and the redundancy payment enabled us to move to a safer neighborhood.
 
The intense fears of my psychosis were not new. I had been gnawed by such terrors my whole life,
empathy, ags. i believe i was a teen at the turn of the 70's before i consciously heard the word, "psychosis," but i was around 12 before i started talking. i was bullied into the fear long before i heard the word. the the 60's definition of the word was even harsher than today's definition. or? ? ? perhaps the definitions have lost their power to whelm me.

in the 90's i worked with a veteran's administration nurse practitioner who was on a campaign to de-stigmatize ALL of the psych words. how can psych, psyche, psycho, psychic, etc, etc., all mean such radically different things? they all share the same word root. why are their stigmas so radically different.

i have yet to find good words for the ways her campaign help me loose my fear of psychosis, but they have. one of the many names i have experimented with for this ^it^ is, "grammar therapy."

dunno. . . just sharing my own confusion
 

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