The news hasn't stopped. Jian Ghomeshi, a famed Canadian radio personality likes his sex rough. He likes it rough and he chooses partners who like it rough too, per him. Those are his words, not mine. (Not his exact words but you get the gist of it).
Jian Ghomeshi is a practiser/practitioner of BDSM. I am not sure how you say that properly so forgive me any "practisers" that read this. BDSM stands for bondage, dominance, sadism, and masochism. Ghomeshi told the world he practised this in a Facebook status update last week. In this statement he mentions always having consensual partners. He said that issues arose forcing him to disclose his personal preferences because of a scorned ex girlfriend. And finally, he states that he was asked for evidence of consent by his employer, the CBC (the "Canadian Broadcasting Company"). Apparently another news company had information about several women complaining that there was no consent in their violent interactions, some of which were violent sexual interactions, with Ghomeshi. Ghomeshi made his statement on Facebook to the world immediately prior to an announcement by the CBC that Ghomeshi was terminated. Mr. Ghomeshi then filed a 50 million dollar breach of trust suit against the CBC. CBC countered with a statement of their facts for termination. Since all that back and forth, which streamed for days on everyone's TV and computer, 9 women have come forward to claim that they had violent non-consensual interactions with Ghomeshi. To reiterate, they claim there was NO consent.
From what I can gather BDSM is very much about power. One party wants it, one party gives it up. They consent to what they will do role playing out these power positions. The two parties agree in advance to what they will do, what they will NOT do, and a safety word to end the power play altogether. And sexual gratification plays a very big part in this. I say that it plays a part in it, because in many cases, there is no sex. Sometimes it's about BDSM alone, not the sexual activity that can sometimes go with it. In some cases it is about violent activities such as whipping, hitting, choking for example, and there is no sex involved.
As I said earlier, 9 women have come forward, in the news, to say they were harmed by Ghomeshi and they did not consent to being harmed. Many people are asking why these women didn't come forward at the time, and to the police for that matter. Every day women are harmed by their partners and they do nothing about it. I am sure there isn't one person who will read this that doesn't "know a girl who knows a girl", who stayed in an abusive relationship long past the first hit. In many cases these women feel they somehow deserved it, that they did something to provoke it, and they are embarrassed it happened to them. They find themselves asking, "How could it have happened to me? How did I become "that" woman? Maybe if I just go along with this it will stop?" Then factor in that Ghomeshi was somewhat famous and the women become even more scared and intimidated, embarrassed, and unsure. Maybe they somehow led him on? Would the police even listen to them? What would they have to reveal about themselves to win something like this against a man with fame and money? We've all seen CSI and Law and Order. It's not easy being the victim and without even being one we know that already.
When this first came out I thought Ghomeshi was the victim. I thought the big bad corporation had wronged him. I started to write about that. I pulled it from my blog and Facebook because I stopped, just for one second, and thought about the supposed "scorned ex girlfriend" and wondered if she had been physically harmed. If that was the case then was I ever gonna feel like shit siding with Ghomeshi as the victim of this wrongful dismissal. Don't get me wrong, I don't think an employer has the right to fire you for your personal life....unless that personal life is criminal and thus harmful to their brand. And the brand better be contingent to the corporate success as is the case with a broadcasting company. Public opinion not only matters, it's tantamount to their success. Further an employer has a legal obligation to ALL it's employees to keep them from harm. If they are aware of a potential harmful situation they must do something immediately to negate that risk or potentially face litigation from all the other employees. In this case I believe CBC did the best they could. They took the information they had, balanced the risk to liability, and made their decision. Should they have suspended their employee versus termination while the facts came out? Who knows. We likely don't have the information they have, nor do we have their full employee guidelines and practises, their union handbook etc. They made a decision that no one has to agree with. That we can agree on.
Let's review the facts shall we?
BDSM is a personal choice.
BDSM harms no one if both parties have consented to partake in the activities.
Consent means full, true, and plain disclosure of all the facts and an agreement to all facts.
Not having consent means the other party has been given full disclosure of all the facts and has said no or they simply don't have all the facts to say no to.
Not having consent but acting as if you do, removes a person's rights. Their freedom of choice. And will cause harm at a minimum just by the removal of their rights.
With all that information in hand I decided that I had nothing to say just yet. At that stage we had Ghomeshi's word, CBCs word, and the "apparent" word of an anonymous woman labeled by Ghomeshi as a jilted ex girlfriend. I would wait to hear more about the developing story. I read, and I read some more. I looked at the legal side to Ghomeshi's case against his employer. I even read some legal jargon pertaining to whether as a unionized employee could he even sue at all. FYI, they cannot until they have gone through arbitration with their union representative and their employer. In most circumstances, if their case goes to a judge, into a courtroom, the judge will defer back to the arbitration agreement because they do not wish to step into union business. That's a whole other ballgame.
As of today, two women have come forth publicly, to the press and admitted to being alone with Ghomeshi and his causing them physical and/or sexual harm without their consent. They are claiming they knew nothing of the BDSM rules. They did not have full disclosure of the facts. Therefore they couldn't consent to what they didn't know. In addition to these 2 women who've come forth publicly, 7 more have come forth anonymously. They all claim to being harmed by Ghomeshi without consent. None of these women have gone to the police. Until today, doing a little light reading (aka research), I wasn't aware you could even go to the police after two years had passed. In these cases, there is no time limitation for filing charges.
The question seems to remain, why these supposed victims have gone to the press and not the police? I can only assume it is much easier to skewer a person in social media than it is in court. If these women file assault charges against Ghomeshi they have the burden of proof to prove he is guilty. He is presumed innocent of the charges. In turn then, are they not assumed guilty of lying basically? Seriously! Think about it. He is presumed innocent which means the person saying otherwise is lying. Therefore the liar must be proven innocent while the innocent proven guilty. The victim's lives will be ripped apart to prove they are telling the truth. Would you file? Or would you let the people on social media decide his fate?
Did you know roughly 90% of sexual assaults in Canada go unreported.
Of the 10% reported, 1/3 of those are decided unfounded. There is not enough evidence to lay charges.
Charges are laid in about 16% of the 10% reported.
(statistics from a Globe and Mail article, October 2013 "How Canada's Sexual Assault Laws Violate Rape Victims)
I ask you again, would you go to the police?
I was raped in 1989. I did not go to the police.
This is the only time I have spoken of it publicly. Close friends know. My husband knows. My therapist knows. And of course the doctors and nurses at the clinic I recently stayed at know. It's a huge part of treatment for any woman who finds themselves staying in a Mental Health Facility. As per the professionals at the clinic, it is something that has sadly happened to "most women" who end up there. You'd be amazed how many women in the clinic had been raped. It was frightening and sad how many of us there were, most of whom, didn't report it. I didn't go to the police because I was drunk. I was out of control drunk. I should not have been. I should never have been that out of control that I couldn't say yes or no. That laid partial blame in my corner in my mind. With that fact alone I knew better than to go to the police. If I did, I would have to prove it, and I wouldn't be able to. The burden of proof would be in my court. So I put it away, and I went on with life.
9 women have come forward.
They say that Jian Ghomeshi hurt them and they didn't consent to being hurt. From what I have read, none of them are part of the BDSM community at large. BDSM is not their preference or current practise.
1 man has come forward.
He says he did it, yes. He choked these women. He hit these women. He put himself in a physically dominate power position over these women. But he did so with consent. He gave these women full, true, and plain disclosure of all the facts beforehand and they all said yes to all the facts.
9 to 1 odds. I'd take that bet. Would you?
For the record, considering what MIGHT be at stake here, the non-consensual harm of 9 women, these t-shirts are fucking shameful. Facebook and it's Advertising department alongside this tee shirt company should be really ashamed of themselves.
http://teespring.com/teamjian?utm_campaign=TAretargeting&utm_medium=retargetingTA
Friday, October 31, 2014
Thursday, October 23, 2014
It's just MY opinion...don't hate. THAT will save us.
A Muslim, sometimes spelled Moslem, is a follower of the
religion of Islam.
There is no god but God, Muhammad is the messenger of God.
A Muslim is a person who has dedicated his worship
exclusively to God. Islam means making
one's religion and faith God's alone.
The Qur'an describes many prophets and messengers as well
as their respective followers as Muslim: Adam, Noah, Abraham, Jacob, Moses and
Jesus and his apostles are all considered to be Muslims in the Qur'an. The
Qur'an states that these men were Muslims because they submitted to God,
preached His message and upheld His values, which included praying, charity,
fasting and pilgrimage.
With about 1.6 billion followers, almost a quarter of
earth's population, Islam is the second-largest and one of the fastest-growing
religions in the world.
____________________________________________
There is nothing that I can find regarding this religious,
this freedom of religion, choice that says “hate”, “kill”, or “destroy” people
of other faiths. Muslims represent the
world’s second largest populous of humans on this earth. We see random acts of terrorism all over the
world and we condemn this religion as a whole.
This is not fair, not true, and is in fact racist. Something we Canadians do not do.
Every day, white people, black people, Asian people,
Christians, Catholics, Baptists, and Atheists cause this world harm. They kill, rape, steal, and cause mass harm. See Oklahoma City bombing. See Columbine. See Virginia Tech. See Sandy Hook. Have you ever seen the news address these
killer’s religious beliefs? We are condemning
the entire Muslim population, an entire religion, for the acts of some.
These violent people are, and must be called, extremists, radicals, and/or terrorists. They have chosen to use their religion as an excuse for extreme
and radical violence and hate. They have
taken a religion and manipulated it to fit their dark and hateful beliefs. Using it to condone their hate. This is not the belief of the general Muslim
population.
ISIS/ISIL (Islamic State of Iraq and Levant) are terrorists
that believe they should have control over the entire Muslim population of the
world and once they have that, they will take control over the rest of the free world. They
will gain this control through violence if necessary. Obviously they believe this is
necessary. Muslims are not members of
ISIS/ISIL by default because of their religion.
ISIS/ISIL members are members.
They have chosen to be terrorists.
That is not by definition, "religion".
I am not a religious person. I do not follow any religion. In fact, I find religion to be, in many
cases, used by people as an excuse for bad behaviour. If the non-existent (in my opinion) God can
forgive you, than you have done no wrong?
That is typically after you have already done wrong and need
forgiveness. How about we do no
wrong? How about we rely on a moral
compass to determine what’s right or wrong?
But those are my beliefs and mine alone.
I do not begrudge anyone their faith or beliefs. Whatever gives you comfort and peace, grab a
hold. Spirituality is what you make of
it.
What happened in Ottawa, Canada on October 22, 2014 had nothing to
do with religion. It had all to do with
extremist beliefs to cause harm to others.
Those that wish to cause harm, those that follow groups that wish to
cause harm, must be stopped. Let’s not
assign blame to an entire population of people who wish to believe in religion. We gave them that right when we welcomed them
into our free country. They are
Canadians who have a religion we may not follow or understand. What we do not understand we shall not
judge. We are a free country which
prides itself on its rights and freedoms.
It’s what Canada stands in large part for. Take pride in THAT today. Take pride in those people that put their
lives on the line to honor these rights and freedoms. Love this country of ours and all those that love it
alongside you.
RIP Corporal Nathan Frank Cirillo
O Canada.
Our home and native land.
True patriot love in all thy sons command.
With glowing hearts we see thee rise,
The true north strong and free.
From far and wide,
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.
God keep our land, glorious and free.
O Canada we stand on guard for thee.
O Canada we stand on guard for thee.
Monday, October 6, 2014
Things Could be Worse
This morning in the grocery store I found myself telling someone,
"it could be worse, it could be Ebola". I wanted to slap myself
for saying, as always, what popped into my head. And yet at the same
time, a truer sentence was never said. It could have been worse and worse
would be Ebola, as a front page news example. I said this
to the cashier at the checkout. Thankfully she is aware of my sick
humour (or not so funny comments you might say) and she just shook her
head in disbelief. I am sure she wanted sympathy for her announcement of
a cough but I wasn't in the mood to provide sympathy. It was a,
"here's Nicolle's reality" kind of day. The fact is, her cough
could have been worse, couldn't it?
I just recently spent 60 days in a Mental
Health Facility. I have struggled my entire life off and on with
mental illness. Because of this struggle I have been on many
medications one of which recently led me down the vicious path of suicidal
thinking. It was a very dark place, with very dark thoughts. I was more than ready to spend some time in hospital having my
medications rebalanced and doing some intensive therapy and self-care. It
was time, this was obvious. Why am I seemingly so far off the Ebola topic? Because I
found myself constantly looking around the hospital thinking, "Shit,
things could be worse, look on the bright side". The bright side
being, things could be worse. It was everywhere around me. People
suffering from more severe mental illness than I. I was pretty
lucky. Even though I was in such a dark place this year, things could have been worse. I just had to see that. With this being Mental Health Week in Canada I wanted to post some reality. A way for the those suffering to see some light because it's not as easy, "think positive thoughts", as it sounds.
Remember, things could be worse. It's called the bright side for a reason, it's
brighter over there. Reality is, things are sometimes bad. I think
we need to feel the bad to be able to see the good. I am saying that
things in this moment may not be so bad if you take a good hard look at how it
could be worse and say to yourself, "I guess it's not so bad after
all". Trust me, I am not Miss Positive Pants so it should come as no
surprise that I found myself asking the doctors while I was in hospital;
"How can I be positive when I live inside a chemically
imbalanced brain that induces depression?" The response
was unanimous. Positive thinking does not negate the bad things in
life. They will happen, and you need to learn how to deal with them as
best you can. Life will not always be positive just because you
think positive. There needs to be some preparedness for stress, for
anxiety, for pain, for heartbreak, and for all the things that can sometimes
happen in life. You need to learn how to live with the bad, sit in those
moments, feel them, and then do your best to move on. Looking at how things could
be worse can be that stepping stone to moving on.
Let's be honest, if you try saying to a room full of
people suffering from depression or depressive states due to other mental illness,
"be positive, always"..... it's a pretty good way to get yourself a
beating. But if you say to them, "things could be worse", they
can usually see how. Almost everyone can see how their bucket
of crap could be deeper, bigger, a "head under", bucket. They just don't always, in that
moment, see how they can climb on out of it. Telling them to "just do it" is not always the best first step.
I always recommend humour so try reminding those you love that are struggling that things could always be worse....with a giant pimple on the tip of your nose.
Really, that is worse.
I always recommend humour so try reminding those you love that are struggling that things could always be worse....with a giant pimple on the tip of your nose.
Really, that is worse.
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Who, what, where and how do we define "mental illness" and responsibilty....
I’m struggling as of late to make sense of mental illness in
this world. I thought I would take on an
easy topic to think about and ponder.
*rolls her eyes* “I couldn’t just
think about puppies and kittens”, she says to herself. If you’ve been watching the news at all then
you might have heard about the two stories directly relating to mental illness I
am going to talk about here.
On one side there was a man so ill that he lit himself on
fire, literally burned himself to death, and on the far other side of the
spectrum, a man charged with the most horrific murder I’ve heard of since,
well, a long time. My struggle will
become clearer as I write, I think. I
can’t be sure of that as I am still struggling with my thoughts.
We cannot fathom what kind of things were going through 31
year old Cole Hunter’s mind to make him think lighting himself on fire rational
way to end pain. There is nothing
rational about the action he took. I
mean it’s not rational in the first place to want to die. That’s not a rational thought, that’s a
mental illness thought. Then to take an
action that causes nothing but agonizing physical pain. If
you think about it, logically, without emotion, there are many other ways to
die, a lot less painful ways. Perhaps he
was trying to kill those things in his mind, only he could see and hear. Apparently this man suffered from
schizophrenia. He often found himself
battling with voices and images that no one else saw (see his funeral notice). Imagine not just battling with someone human,
standing there in front of you, perhaps someone you can have an intelligent
argument with, but with someone your mind has made up. There is no winning, no rationalizing with
that. That’s just a broken mind
torturing a soul. I can only assume
that, like many of us, when we argue with ourselves, we rarely win. He lived this way full time, all the
time. Poor soul.
Cole Hunter
I think we can all find pity with this man. In so much pain he chose that way out.
Now think of Luka Magnotta.
This 32 year old man, apparently planned a murder. He then acted on that plan murdering a young man. He dismembered
the body of his victim performing sexual acts on the body parts. He fed parts of the body to his dog, and
apparently killed his dog. He then cleaned up, and disposed of the body parts. Some of the body parts he mailed across Canada to various people. He planned and made his escape to Europe. He was caught and brought back to trial in
Canada. It's surreal to just type all that.
Cole, who lit himself on fire was a poor lost soul. Luka is a horrible monster don’t you think? Luka killed another human being, not
himself. He did things that no one can
comprehend doing. He should be put down
like a rabid animal don’t you think? I
have thought so, I do think so. And then....
What’s the same here, between two human beings, is the improper functioning of their
brains? Neither one functioned
right. The guy who lit himself on fire to die was surely not sane. I pity him.
There is no other way to look at it.
But how is the guy who murdered someone, dismembered the
body, saved the body parts, had sex with the body parts, sane? I don’t pity him. I want him punished. Could this man be sane
and do those things? Or does he deserve pity for being that sick? That’s what I
am struggling with. I have no pity for
him, none. The other day I said to my
husband, “I don’t care if he is mentally ill, this is sick sh*t, he deserves
the death penalty”.
If we can’t even remotely fathom doing the things he did
then doesn’t that make him the sickest of us all?
Then we bring ourselves to the question of what to do with
someone like Luka Magnotta. He has
admitted to all he has been charged with.
All of it. At the same time he is
claiming he is not guilty of all the charges because of his mental illness. Does that mean because he is insane he should
not be held accountable for his actions.
I am? I am held accountable
aren’t I? Even morally, I hold myself
accountable to my own actions. If I
suddenly, if all people who suffer with mental illness suddenly started
thinking we could do anything at any time because of our
illness…*shudder*. I can’t even begin to
think how the world would change.
I don’t believe for one second that Luka Magnotta should be
released. He is dangerous, end of
story. Should he be sent to a mental
institution for life? I just left one of
those places and I have to say that I would not want to be on the same floor as
him, let alone the same institution. How
would that be fair to non-dangerous people who are sick? I go in for medication changes and some
intensive therapy and I end up rooming next to someone who can dismember another
human being? Wouldn’t that be a violation
of my rights for a reasonable expectation of safe care and treatment?
Should he be sent to prison?
He did commit a
crime. Can he get treatment inside of
prison? Do we do that inside of prison? If you go into prison with flu, I am pretty
sure you can get treatment for the flu.
If you go into prison with a mental illness, can you get treatment for
that illness? I am not sure this
happens. Not effectively. Please do not get me wrong. I do not believe that this man deserves
treatment and then a release back into the world. As I said already, he did things, no one can even
imagine doing. I am just saying it’s
painfully obvious he was/is, sick. You’d have to be wouldn’t you? To do this?
I would hope so otherwise what does this say about the human race?
So where do we draw this line? How do we draw this line? Make sure the sick are getting treatment yet
fairly and justly punished for their crimes.
If someone goes into a school and mass murders young children is
this person not insane? No sane person
could do that right? I cannot bring
myself to think of them as sane as sane people do NOT do those things. So what do we do with these people? They are sick. But what they have done is
unforgiveable. Then what? It would make it so much easier if they just took
their own lives instead of hurting others wouldn’t it? Had Luka Magnotta taken his own life instead
of doing all this to another human being we would be saying “poor lost
soul” wouldn't we? But he didn’t. He committed grossly inhumane acts
instead. It sure would be easier if
every person who hurt another at least then hurt themselves as punishment for
their own bad behaviour. When the
headlines read “murdered then used the last bullet on themselves” we sigh
relief. We will not have to judge.
When I was in the hospital there were people suffering with
schizophrenia in there. Please note I am
trying not to use the defining term of “schizophrenic”. They are people too. Like my being beyond just white skinned,
blond hair, with green eyes. I have many
other traits. Having Bi Polar is just
one of many. In their case, they suffer
with schizophrenia. I was scared of these people at first. I won’t lie.
From my observations, they typically, while their medications are being
rebalanced, have little to no interpersonal skills. Almost always they pace the hallways. I think because of the voices they cannot
stop moving, they need to keep active to try to distract themselves. I came to learn that most people suffering
with schizophrenia are harmless, with no intent to harm. Many times they harm people only because they
become paranoid about being harmed themselves and act out defensively. I find it hard to believe Luka Magnotta’s
actions were in defense of himself? Or
these mass murderers in the schools were defending themselves? But it is factual that in most cases people
with schizophrenia strike out, lash out, in perceived defense of
themselves.
I became somewhat friendly with two people suffering with
schizophrenia in the hospital. One a
pretty young woman who also suffered with multiple personalities disorder. And another, a young man. When I say friendly I mean saying “hello” and
the occasional short conversations in passing.
Both of these people were very sick when I arrived in hospital. The young woman, let’s name her “Jane”, had
outbursts where she would yell at no one sometimes. But she didn’t seem like she was going to
hurt anyone. She was fighting with
someone, or something, we couldn’t see. When
I first arrived I actually called my husband and said, “there’s a woman here
talking to herself as if she was on the phone having a lively conversation, but
there is no phone”. I was making light
of her illness because I was scared of her, of it, the illness and her
behaviour due to it. We often make light
of which we don’t understand, which in most cases means we are scared.
The young man, “John” we will call him, was not socially
interactive whatsoever until near the end of my stay. By the time I left he knew my name and we
would always stop and check in with each other about how our days were going. I once walked out of my room only to find him
lying on the floor, just outside my door, arms linked behind his head casually
looking at the ceiling. I asked,
“Whatcha doin’?” “Thinking“, he replied
innocently as if lying on a hospital floor and gazing at the tiled ceiling as
if it were the sky was perfectly reasonable.
Another day I was telling a story about going to see a gospel choir and
as I can do, I was being loud and boisterous in my telling of the story yelling
out “Hallelujah, praise be, Amen”. John
walked into the room and said, “I needed those words today, Hallelujah
sister”. From then on, we passed each
other in the hallways and said “Hallelujah brother” (and “sister”) to each
other. Others looked on strangely and we
went our way as if this was completely natural.
It was, for us.
Jane was a different story.
I tried to make a point of saying “Hi” to Jane as often as
possible. Sometimes she saw me and heard
me, sometimes I wasn’t there and her voices were in charge. Sometimes I think her personality at the time
was not Jane, but in fact someone entirely different, someone else. One day I came to be walking directly behind
Jane on our way back to the hospital. We
walked for a good five minutes and in that time she spoke entirely in the third
party, as if Jane wasn’t actually her.
The things she said to herself, that happened to Jane, that people did
to Jane, why Jane was sick, ripped me in two.
If any one of the things she said were true, I can see entirely why she needed
to create alternate personalities to deal with her pain. On that day I became Jane’s biggest
supporter. After that, a day didn’t go
by without my making eye contact and saying hello. There were many days that Jane would dress
up, put in hair extensions, wear makeup, and look very different than the day
before. Instead of saying “Hi Jane” on
these days, not wanting to trigger her personality change, I would simply tell
her how pretty she was. In a very
childlike voice more often than not, she would thank me and wander off.
One evening as I was sitting in the lounge two patients
broke into song. They are both
professional singers by trade so they were harmonizing with each other for
fun. Another patient was strumming the guitar. It was all very civilized and not as random as it sounds. I must say, I did find it interesting that
“performers” were suffering with mental illness. Those that look for outside affirmations
through attention and praise for their performances. Performances they put on solely to entertain
others, to make others happy. Makes
sense they’d struggle with their identity doesn’t it?
But I have steered off course. The beautiful singing caught Jane’s ear and
she came into the lounge with the biggest smile on her face. She made eye contact with me so I removed my
knitting from the chair next to me and she sat down. This is basically the conversation that
followed. (I use
the word “hurt” here as substitution for another word which is too harsh a word in reality to
use).
Jane: It’s
beautiful isn’t it? He said you wouldn’t make eye contact with me so you
wouldn’t have to talk to me.
Me: Who said
Jane?
Jane: My
husband. My husband said.
Me: Is he here?
Jane: He’s right
there, next to your husband (no one was actually there).
Jane: They
aren’t being very nice. *laughs* They cheat you
know. On both of us.
Me: My husband
cheats, are you sure Jane?
Jane: They both do,
it’s what men do. They don’t mean to
hurt us, it’s just their way, it’s because they are sick.
Me: I am sorry
your husband cheated Jane, I don’t think mine does though.
Jane: He does, you
will see one day. Just remember when he
wants to hurt you it’s so he can transfer his pain to you. He doesn’t mean to hurt you.
Me: Jane, I am
sorry your husband hurt you.
Jane: It’s
okay. It’s why I am sick you know. He was sick then he gave it to me. He hurt me for 8 years until all his illness
was inside me. Now I am in here and he’s
out there free. I haven’t seen him since
the last time he hurt me. He doesn’t
talk to me, see me, see our son *laughs*, he just left. Funny huh?
Me: Oh Jane
honey, I am so sorry you’ve been hurt.
Jane: Okay, I am
gonna go now. (Suddenly her voice was very childlike and she almost skipped out
of the room).
My breath caught in my throat as I watched her transform
from a woman to child before my eyes. My
heart broke for her.
Upon reading about the Luka Magnotta trial I found myself
wondering what I would think if I found out that either Jane or John hurt somebody? Would I be surprised? Would I pity them as I saw their illness
first hand? Would I want them punished,
or cared for? I guess it all depends on
the heinousness of the crime and how much we know someone doesn’t it? It’s all relative to us, what we think, our
judgements of the situation and the person(s) involved, I guess?
What’s the difference between a weed and a plant? Only the judgement we place upon it…
….(and if
it’s invaded our personal space uninvited I suppose).
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Diary of a Bi Polar Woman DBPW 128 - Can you hear me? I have a Mental Illness!
Well Hi There people.
It’s been a while since we last spoke.
July it appears. There’s good
reason for that, really there is. I
checked myself into a wonderful place called The Homewood Health Center five
days after my last posting, on July 18th, 2014. Homewood (“The Home” we patients like to call
it) is a mental health facility (a hospital) specializing in many fields
including, but not limited to, addiction, eating disorders, and general mental
health and wellness. I had been on the
waiting list for many months, long before all that happened, happened.
Damn straight I chose a picture I thought was flattering, I have Bi Polar, I am not stupid.
If you follow me at all then you know I was diagnosed with Bi
Polar II disorder. A disease which
causes manic (high) episodes where you feel elated, like all things are good in
the world, you are untouchable, you can do anything. Your impulse control is non-existent. In Bi Polar II these highs are typically
shorter lived than in Bi Polar I. The
depressive episodes are usually, typically, much more evident and longer
lasting. Bi Polar I can also have
hallucinations, of which, I have none.
You may have heard the term “manic”.
Typically, in the USA, this means Bi Polar in some fashion or
another.
While I was in “The Home”, Robin Williams died. He died of depression. His death was caused by his disease. His suicidal actions were caused by his
mental disease. Many say he was likely Bi
Polar, suffering from highs and lows which were evident when he performed. He would become very high and manic during
those periods, in that environment. When
dealing with “normal” day to day life, he fell into depression. We will never know entirely what happened as
we do not live in his mind, but I can say this, he died because of mental
illness. No one takes their own life
because of a whim or a bad day. I know
this because I found myself there this year and it was the worst day of my
life. It was also the day that called
for all my strength. All my strength to
say, “Yes, I can actually do this, I can take my own life because of this pain”. It is not easy to take that kind of
action. It takes a great deal of
strength to say, “This is it”. If you
don’t believe me, consider it, think about it.
Think about not seeing the one you love, the dog who greets you at the
door, your best friend, all your friends, ever again.
*sigh* Just this picture makes me smile.
The ONLY reason I bring this up, and mention the lovable
Williams again is because of the volume of people I met inside The Home who
attempted to take their life because of their illnesses. Whether it was addiction or mental illness,
it was more common than not in there to hear how they barely made it. It was amazing to me that almost every person
in there, seeking help, looking for a solution to their pain, at one point or
another tried to end it themselves after years of trying to figure out how, in
any other form, to stop hurting. I
thought myself alone and suddenly found myself surrounded by people who got “it”. When we heard about Williams, we all found
ourselves looking at each other with sadness, many “oh god no” but little real
surprise. So how did we let someone that
famous, that loved, go? Because we do
not sit down and talk about this, about mental illness and how so many of us
suffer. We are ashamed and embarrassed. We feel less than the apparent “normal”
person beside us.
I am here to say again (and often), that I suffer from
mental illness. I will continue to talk
about this, to be open about this. People
need to get their heads out of their a**es about mental illness. The stigma of mental illness will only go
away if people are strong enough to stand up and talk about it. And while I don’t title myself “strong” under
most circumstances, I am strong enough to talk about this. I love to talk about myself on a bad day so
this shit isn’t really that much of a stretch for me. I will not be ashamed of my past and how I might
have behaved because of illness. Perhaps
someone else, someone without illness might have behaved differently. Be that as it may, I behaved my way. I have regrets, but I am not a regret. I have made mistakes, I am not a
mistake. I am Nicolle and I suffer from
mental illness, I am not the disease I suffer from. Are you cancer? Are you diabetes? I am not mental illness. It’s pretty ironic I say that considering
this blog diary is titled “Diary of a Bi Polar Woman”. Maybe a change in title is required? I don’t think so. I am beautiful. Smart.
Funny. A gorgeous, hilarious,
genius really….who has Bi Polar. The
title needed shortening, that’s an awful big mouthful.
Trust me after 8 weeks “on the inside”, there’s more to
come. Stay tuned. In the meantime, if you suffer from mental
illness, talk about it. Talk to me if
you want, I am not going anywhere. Not
today anyways, and today is really all that matters in the grand scheme of
things isn’t it?
Sunday, July 13, 2014
Diary of a Bi Polar Woman DBPW Day(s) 125, 126, and 127 - My time on the "inside" (cont.)
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday were a lot better in the
Loonie Bin (Mental Health Unit) (see previous posts), as better as better can be. I had spent Saturday and Sunday just watching
the clock move in my room when I wasn’t sleeping. When Monday came, and I knew I would have one
on one and group therapy, all I could think was how two hours would pass
easier. At least 2 hours would move
along faster.
By Monday morning I had spoken enough to the other patients/inmates
over meals that I now felt known to them and them to me. So when breakfast arrived late I was able to
offer to “watch over” their food. To be the food police. They all smoked cigarettes and there are only
certain times you can leave the ward to go have them. With breakfast late they were going to miss
their breakfast smoke. God forbid! But they couldn’t just leave their food on
the table. Remember there was one kid in
there, “Shuffles” I called him. Rail
thin, tall as tall can be and already he appeared to get double the meals we
got but still, it didn’t stop him from stealing people’s food I was told. So I offered to stand guard for Twitchy,
Jumpy, Gappy and Dad. And guard I
did.
Shuffles and I ate at the same time. As did all the other non-smoking inmates. When I was done eating I grabbed a crossword puzzle book from
the book shelves just outside the kitchen and planted myself back at the table
to stand guard. It took no less than
five minutes for me to notice Shuffles making his way back into the
kitchen. He checked the tray holder for
extra food then made his way around the table.
As he passed Dad’s tray he casually, as if nothing was happening, picked
up Dad’s muffin and tried to keep walking.
I barked out, “nuh huh, put that back, that is not yours!” He stopped in his tracks, looked at me as if
I wasn’t there and dropped the muffin back on the plate. He shuffled his way out of the kitchen now
understanding stealing wasn’t gonna happen on my watch.
I breathed a sigh of relief when he left, I wasn’t sure how my “no no”
was going to be taken.
When the others returned I told them what happened. I explained to Dad that the kid did in fact
try to steal his muffin and Dad proceeded to cut the muffin in half, butter it, and eat it. I threw up a little in my mouth. The kid wasn’t all that clean. Had he touched my tray I am sure I would have
given him all that was on it. Upon the
urging of the others I went and reported Shuffles behaviour to the Nurse’s Station. From that day forward if someone was going to
be late for a meal or in therapy the Nurse’s would take their tray into the
Nursing Station. I guess this kid was
really out of control with his food. It
was pathological. I could only imagine
what food was replacing in his mind. He was
constantly at the fridge eating crackers and jam. He'd open up one of those little two packs of saltine crackers one
after the other covering them in jam and shoving them in his mouth obsessively
like. All the inmates had actually
started offering the kid their extra food instead of placing it in the middle
of table to try to stop him from stealing.
He never spoke a word, he would just take the offered food and scarf it
down.
It was really strange to me how none of the women or older
men shuffled the hallways but two young men did constantly. It was very obsessive behaviour. They couldn’t stop themselves. Shuffles only went from his room next to
mine, to the kitchen, then the nursing station and back. Baller on the other hand walked every step of
the entire place. From one end of the
long hall to the TV room where he would sit for the count of 3, to the kitchen,
to the patio, to the nurse’s station, and down the hallway again. It was later I was told confidentially (and
probably shouldn’t have been) that both boys were schizophrenic and self-medicating
with street drugs before they came in. Not
only were they sobering up off street drugs but while their schizophrenia drugs
kicked in they were hearing voices. The
hallway walks were because they couldn’t “shut off” the voices. It wasn’t hard for me to say to myself “things
could be worse” upon hearing that. I
think we all can don’t you?
Group therapy was cancelled on Monday. I couldn’t believe I found myself saying, “Damn
I was looking forward to this”. It was
only because it would kill the time really.
Group continued on Tuesday and Wednesday. One was led by a therapist, another by a
social worker. The therapist lead one
actually helped a bit. I found myself
learning things and offering up all kinds of wisdom for the others in the
group. It’s what I do. I found the therapist saying, “That’s right
Nicolle, that’s exactly what I was looking for” more often than not. Yay me!
Not only did I know more than I thought but it was good for the old self
esteem too. The social worker group was
more informational and about all the programs available in the Mental Health Unit
for out patients. And addicts
alike. The hospital offers ongoing
therapy in the group format for mental illness and addiction. I have only been once but will continue to. It’s all one can really find in this
environment these days. One on one
therapy is hard to come by especially with a psychiatrist.
I found it really interesting to discover that 80% of the
world’s addicts are actually suffering from some form of mental illness,
whether it be schizophrenia, bi polar, or plain old depression. Unlike the other 20%, the 80% self-medicate
their illnesses away. It is very
common, more common than not. Think
about it, when you are down doesn’t a nice drink ease the pain? 80% of addicts just can’t stop at one
drink. What about that show
Intervention? Have you watched it? All the people on the show had tragic pasts
leading to depression and addiction and/or suffered from some other mental
illness. I really took in how tragic
addiction is when I was in the hospital, it became so clear how awful a
struggle it truly is. I think it’s why
it became so easy for me to just stop taking the little pain medication I did
take. I wasn’t going to “get there”. Not to where these poor people were. I was able to use that week to just
stop taking all the medications I had been prescribed. There were people in there specifically for
the purpose of giving up some form of self-medication. Both Dad and Twitchy were in there for pain
medication addiction. And I mean in a
big way, not simple old 5 mg Percocet pills like myself but 100 mgs in addition to Fentanyl pain
patches and alcohol. To look
at them both, especially Dad, you would never have guessed that they both found
their way into the hospital because they accidentally lost track of how much drugs there
were taking. Watching them
being weaned off their pain medication was really hard to see. One day they would walk the hallways like they
owned the world, smiles on their faces.
The next day they would be shuffling along, barely moving their bodies,
frowns and in some cases tears in their eyes.
You could easily see how quickly these pain medications become a
problem. I just got lucky. I had a really strong will power and never
gave into the urge to try anything new or stronger. I was just too scared of what I was already
taking.
I never did find out why Grampy was in the hospital. I can only assume there was some sort of
Mental Illness struggle behind his kind old eyes. Gappy was in there because she was an addict
she inferred, not sure of the other struggles in her life, I didn’t ask. But she did mention she wouldn’t be leaving
the hospital until she found a place to live so I can only assume she was on
the streets. Jumpy had tried to kill
herself. For the third time she informed
me casually. She suffered with Manic
Depression, much like Bi Polar. She was
very sweet. I think she’d been in the
hospital for a week at least, with a week to go. Considering the long termers in there, I was
lucky to be out in the 5 days after I arrived I kept thinking to myself. Cusack was obviously in a ton of pain
mentally. He left the Tuesday I was in
there but to see his arms. They were
just covered in cuts. You don’t normally
see a boy cutting, it’s more common in girls.
There had to be a lot of pain in that poor boys mind.
By the time I left on Wednesday I considered the girls,
Twitchy and Jumpy comrades in arms.
Outside of the hospital, I am sure none of us would find the other
having anything in common but inside, through tears we found a bond. Twitchy lent me a book from her personal collect to read the size of a
car. I managed to power through that
bitch in 3 days! It's not hard when you have 10 hours a day to read. Jumpy and I found
ourselves playing rounds of cards on Wednesday as I waited to be sprung from
the joint. As I mentioned before, it was
received with a round of laughs when I shared how ironic I found it that Jumpy
and I were playing Crazy Eights in the Loonie Bin. We both found it hysterical. It’s funny how you can be brought together by
something outside of your control when otherwise you’d have nothing in
common. Our lives were common by one thing, a stay in a Mental Ward. While I am writing about it to you folks to
help you understand all about that world if you should know people suffering,
it’s not really something I want at the forefront of my mind. It’s not a place I wish to go back to save
for the outpatient therapy.
What I learned in the hospital is that Mental Illness is
nothing to be ashamed of. And I am
not. I spent time in the Loonie Bin and
I am okay with that. I needed to. I needed help. My medications were no longer working and had
I stayed home I might have tried to hurt myself again. I was not above the Mental Ward, I was just
like everyone else in there, suffering.
I was in fact lucky to be as well off as I was. On the last day, as I played cards with
Jumpy, Shuffles came in all showered and in washed clothes and he plopped down
right next to us, looked us in the eyes and said, “whatcha playin’?” His medication had kicked in. He was clean and sober. I wish you could have seen the difference in
this kid from even the day before. I had
it alright by comparison. The hospital
have resources in many cases that can help people suffering with Mental Illness
and Addiction that I would never have known had I not gone in. I am going to be taking courses in
Mindfulness and Self Esteem that last up to 8 weeks long. I look forward to them and hope that again, I
can see I am just like everyone else in there, struggling with my own issues
whether I have anything in common with them or not. I am not above anyone and their
problems. Addiction is a tricky little
bitch and I am very blessed to have had the self-control and will power to not
have fallen deeper down that rabbit hole, very lucky. I feel very sorry for addicts, I cannot
imagine giving in to that urge. Actually
I can, and that’s the problem, I can.
What about you? Ever
think how easy it could be to make your problems disappear with drugs or
alcohol? Ever worry you are doing
that? If you worry, likely you are
losing yourself a bit. Look into your
local hospital because they likely have a free group therapy with your name
written all over it. You don’t have to
go all gangbusters like me and get yourself committed. Trust me, it’s not that hard to go to a group
therapy class. It’s an hour out of your
day, how bad can that be?
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