psychiatric units

eireann

Bluelighter
Joined
Apr 4, 2012
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788
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kildare ireland
hi i use too work as a security guard in a psychiatric unit in kildare,ireland it was a free public service unit run by the hse,and i have to say it was great,i would live there if i could,they had their own games room with a pool table they had a tv room with the sky world package.they had a room called a green room they would get tokens to enter it you just sit on a vibrating chair[i cant explain it but its great].the food was incredible it was like top pub food they would often get roast beef dinners,steak etc...and on top of all this luxury they were high on xanax and valum,lol

now that would be the life!!!

what are your experiences of these units??
 
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I don't have any experience.

How much did their relatives have to pay for the service? Or was it state sponsored? Although it might sound great to be getting fed and housed and even benzoed all day, it's still captivity and there could be a lot of abuse from the staff.
 
its free dude its funded by the health service executive [irelands medical service] and its not captivity you can leave anytime unless your sent there by a court!!
 
My experience was hell, crappy hospital food, everyone was far worse off than me (except 1 old alcoholic that I managed to become friends with), only a single TV that always showed either childrens shows or some nature programs and I had to share room with another guy. Some old books that looked like they had been read about a hundred-thousand times were present too. Staff wasn't exactly polite either. The only thing to do (as I quickly learned from the old alcoholic I shared room with) was to ask for benzos multiple times throughout the day. Some of the nurses didn't really keep track of how much benzos we got, so we tried to get ahold of as much as possible to pass time. Eating benzos and smoking cigrattes was the only thing I did while in there (thankfully only a week). The roof above the cigarette smoking room had turned yellow/brown in contrast to the otherwise completely white facility. The windows were all covered with metal bars. This place was hell.
 
You know that saying, "If it sounds too good to be true, then it is is too good to be true"? That is the first thing I thought when I read your post. It may sound ideal to be taken care of, have decent food, get benzos, etc but how long would that feel like living? Life is a journey of learning about yourself and the world. Although I completely understand the want to escape the tribulations of that journey sometimes, I wouldn't give it up for anyone or anything.

A far better goal than getting yourself committed would be to be to find peace inside yourself so that everything that hospital provides, you yourself are capable of providing. You are young and have lots of time to explore the world without the fog of benzos.<3
 
You know that saying, "If it sounds too good to be true, then it is is too good to be true"? That is the first thing I thought when I read your post. It may sound ideal to be taken care of, have decent food, get benzos, etc but how long would that feel like living? Life is a journey of learning about yourself and the world. Although I completely understand the want to escape the tribulations of that journey sometimes, I wouldn't give it up for anyone or anything.

A far better goal than getting yourself committed would be to be to find peace inside yourself so that everything that hospital provides, you yourself are capable of providing. You are young and have lots of time to explore the world without the fog of benzos.<3

thanks herbavore..im completely clean now and have a kiddo too...so im totally concentrated on the "real" world but if i had no obligations i would totally love to go to lakeside-psyc unite for a drug induced vacation..its like a 5 star hotel with drugs!! although i remember talking to a nice talented guy and thinking "why are you here your smart as fuck" so i asked him and he told me he set fire to his sisters door and then got a crazy look in his eyes and spuid on about FIRE for 10 minutes,lol
 
i was in two psychiatric hospitals for drug induced psychosis, and i cant understand why somebody would say they would choose to go there? maybe the one you were at was in the bel-air part of ireland.. but the one i was at first, was downtown in the same area as the projects. I saw a kid get stabbed. i slept with one eye open, sleeping in the same room as a kid convicted of stabbing his teacher, and they shrugged it off as 'drug use '.. he told me storys that i will NEVER forget. how he raped animals and ate their eyes..and how he dreamed of doing that to girls one day. i was in a fist fight every day. it was basically a juvenile detention center, while i was only their for a run in with bath salt problems, and continued drug use. While dealing with detox, addiction, and halucinations; i fought for my life for a month and a half

So please rethink your statement, because when your commited, you dont choose which hospital you go to. They choose the one that has an open bed. Better pray you get lucky.
 
i was in two psychiatric hospitals for drug induced psychosis, and i cant understand why somebody would say they would choose to go there? maybe the one you were at was in the bel-air part of ireland.. but the one i was at first, was downtown in the same area as the projects. I saw a kid get stabbed. i slept with one eye open, sleeping in the same room as a kid convicted of stabbing his teacher, and they shrugged it off as 'drug use '.. he told me storys that i will NEVER forget. how he raped animals and ate their eyes..and how he dreamed of doing that to girls one day. i was in a fist fight every day. it was basically a juvenile detention center, while i was only their for a run in with bath salt problems, and continued drug use. While dealing with detox, addiction, and halucinations; i fought for my life for a month and a half

So please rethink your statement, because when your commited, you dont choose which hospital you go to. They choose the one that has an open bed. Better pray you get lucky.

im not an idiot i understand what the situation is like for the patients,obviously some of them are ashamed and in mental turmoil,im talking about facilities they are incredible! and i did know patients who loved it in there.

but your right i also did security in st.brendans in dublin city and st.dipnas in carlow!

st.brendans was something out of a horror movies which had a policy of over drugging patients to turn them in to zombies!
and st.dipnas looked exactly like the greenday video basketcase except it was in a basement it was dark and the paint was peeling off the walls every where!!

im just very impressed with lakeview in kildare and want to know peoples experiences in these units be it good or bad
 
hi i use too work as a security guard in a psychiatric unit in kildare,ireland it was a free public service unit run by the hse,and i have to say it was great,i would live there if i could,they had their own games room with a pool table they had a tv room with the sky world package.they had a room called a green room they would get tokens to enter it you just sit on a vibrating chair[i cant explain it but its great].the food was incredible it was like top pub food they would often get roast beef dinners,steak etc...and on top of all this luxury they were high on xanax and valum,lol

now that would be the life!!!

what are your experiences of these units??

I assume it wasn't a high security unit if there was a pool table, etc. When I was committed into a secure unit I spent most of the time in a cell with nothing but a mattress on the floor to sleep on. I wasn't even allowed a knife and fork to eat my meals with. And I wasn't given any Xanax or Valium - only Haldol, which isn't particularly enjoyable. :\
 
^^^
That sounds more like the one I was in. I mean we werent in cells but it did remind me alot of county jail two people to a hospital room. Then there was a dayroom you could be in until a certain time when you had to go back to your room. Bed checks every 15 minutes shitty food rude staff no good meds. That place sucked hardcore.
 
Same thing both hospitals I went to weren't pleasant. They wouldn't give me shit for meds and I was in withdrawals from oxy 30's. They finally gave me a crushed up percocet which I was supposed to swallow with water at the nurses station. I ended up gagging and throwing up on he poor fellow behind me in the line. Plus what crimsonjunk said with the bedchecks every fifteen minutes. It's very hard to sleep when the door is being opened and closed continously.
 
My laptop keeps freezing up and won't let me edit.

I hated when you beg the doctor to let me go home and he says ok tomorrow. Then Saturday it's a different doctor who tells me that they don't discharge on the weekend. Stuck there for another 2 days and the doctor says "Your hands are shakey. Let's see if you're better tomorrow" Then I was ready to go postal on these people. Hospitals in Ireland sound pretty damn cushy
 
hi i use too work as a security guard in a psychiatric unit in kildare,ireland it was a free public service unit run by the hse,and i have to say it was great,i would live there if i could,they had their own games room with a pool table they had a tv room with the sky world package.they had a room called a green room they would get tokens to enter it you just sit on a vibrating chair[i cant explain it but its great].the food was incredible it was like top pub food they would often get roast beef dinners,steak etc...and on top of all this luxury they were high on xanax and valum,lol

now that would be the life!!!

Oh yeah when I was a teenager I made up all kinds of things... I won't get into specifics but making up hearing voices or seeing things would be a good way to get in one..

It was def worth the experience there was some real drama that went down hehe

Livin' lax and interacting with that many different personalities basically being told what to do when ... doesn't get much easier then that. Your only job is to relax.

I honestly have to admit it was fun at times, except after a while you'll want your freedom.

I almost want to go back, but if do at least not as a patient :)

That was my experience at least, psych units in your area may or may not be hell.
 
when i was a teen i went in and not to get better. because my parents used it as a drop off center. i think anyone who thinks these places..are somehow better than actual society. doesn't know what the fuck they are talking about, because they don't actually need to get better. these places can be traps for both the sick and the unsick.

if you view these places as a vacation spot, it's because you have never known the futility of the truth.

i did need help, but i didn't know what kind of help at the time.

this is why it was so futile to me. it can be futile for other reasons than, i don't need to be there. fuck's SAKE.

i can't imagine using these places to get ahead as a short cut. .sickening.
 
Haven't told anyone this story before but here it goes...

A couple of years ago I bombed out in my course at university due to Suboxone addiction and realized I was going to fail, which means I would be kicked out of my advanced degree (you need to keep up a high average to stay in it) and put in the normal stream, so I was desperately trying to think of a way out. I had worked so hard to get into that course and there was no way I was just going to give it up without a fight.

After going through my options I realized a "psychiatric" defense was the only possibility of bluffing my way out of the predicament as intentional physical harm to get myself hospitalized would probably not end up well. I also knew that a simple "I'm depressed here's a doctor's certificate" would not work, proper hospitalization was the only workable opportunity. So I decided to get myself committed.

Problem is HOW do you get committed to a psych-ward when there's nothing actually wrong with you? I decided to take a large dose of DXM so it looked like I was out-of-it and go to the local doctor and claim I was hearing voices and was thinking of killing myself. He immediately forced me into an ambulance and I ended up at the local hospital's psych-ward (success!).

When you get there they decide what your state of mind is and whether you go to the acute/general/other ward, luckily I wasn't spastic enough to be sent to the acute ward (was subsequently told that it's really bleak and nothing to do there) so was put in the "general" ward. This is in Australia and we have quite good free public health care so the facilities were actually quite reasonable. You get your own room with a couple of chairs, cupboard, desk, etc. During the day you go to the gym, sun-bake in the garden, go to "relaxation classes" where they play trippy music and you there's all these bizarre lights, cooking classes, watch movies, read, etc.

Food was probably around a 7/10, quite decent. There was an English nurse there and she said she was shocked at how good we get it in Australia compared to over there. Because I was in the "general" ward there were no seriously crazy people, only "weird" people, everyone was really nice though, and about half I could see nothing notably wrong with. They also give you benzos at night if you "can't sleep", so would always just say I couldn't so they would dose me with valium.

Unfortunately my guise began to wear off when they realized there was nothing wrong with me and I in fact seemed cheerful, upbeat and fully coherent. So when asked about this I had to lie and tell the doctor I was still considering suicide, which I think by law they have to take seriously (I didn't want to just stay there a couple of days as that may not have been enough time to not get a fail from the university, so needed to make it count). The advantage of this though was that I was allowed "leave" so I could basically leave the hospital, do whatever I wanted during the day, and then come back and sleep there for the night. So I would just go shopping, to the beach, book-hunting, computer place, back home, etc and then just sleep the night.

Also after a couple of weeks I was sent to the "other" ward, which is the best you can get, it's for the people they "trust", and is very relaxed. It was VERY comfortable and modern. Didn't feel like a "psych-ward" at all, the rooms were really spacious and beautiful. The other patients were completely normal and indistinguishable from the nurses. Ie: there was a guy about my age who went to the same university and said he was staying there because he didn't wanna pay rent, lol. I could've happily stayed there for the rest of the year, but was only there for 2 days when they randomly told me I had to go home.

So that was that, and yes I completely got out of my academic woes on medical grounds, allowing me to stay in my course. It was an OK experience overall.
 
My experience with psych docs and facilities could not be more negative. I'll never go near another psych doc or take any psych meds again. Lost too many years stuck in pharm fog and i'm still pissed about certain things that happened.
-izzy
 
I've never been in one personally, but I have visited friends who were admitted. It ain't pretty. Recycled air, shitty food that has barely any nutrition, being subjected to therapies and medicines you might not want, and the sociopathic tendencies of both staff and patients alike, all while being held prisoner.

I think I would rather go to prison than a psych ward.
 
I've never been in one personally, but I have visited friends who were admitted. It ain't pretty. Recycled air, shitty food that has barely any nutrition, being subjected to therapies and medicines you might not want, and the sociopathic tendencies of both staff and patients alike, all while being held prisoner.

I think I would rather go to prison than a psych ward.
agreed
 
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