speed-limper
Greenlighter
To be open, I am schizophrenic, diagnosed multiple times from different doctors. Most of them attributed the development of schizophrenia to my use of weed and other "softer" drugs when I was a preteen/ teen. What I never told the doctors was that I have had visual and auditory hallucinations since I was a child, as long as I can remember. The general symptoms of schizophrenia, like the paranoia, delusions, and disorganized thinking have almost always been present for me.
I know mental health is complex and can have many factors, genetic, environmental, and any kind of trauma can add into the root cause. If anything, growing up in a rural, poor, isolated area caused me to get minimum mental health care for years until the suicide of a close friend. I would say I started trying drugs as a way to self medicate before getting any actual help.
Ever since I had reached out for help years ago, most doctors exclusively blame drug use, it didn't matter what kind of drug it was. Rather than acknowledge that with proper medication my drug use would drastically decline or stop all together, I've been told that I'll never have a normal life, and they focus on the drug use rather than issues I've dealt with all my life, making me feel that they almost exclusively believe I have substance induced psychotic traits more so than schizophrenia.
The only issue I have with treatment is antipsychotic medication. The first time I was on risperdone my hallucinations lost color and a certain "warmth" they had with them, making it much harder to distinguish reality from what's in my head. I've developed an idea that most doctors just want people like me sedated to make others comfortable or to make me uncaring about the problems I experience as long as I don't come off as psychotic and dangerous.
It's hard to manage a normal job, raise a child, and have to constantly fight to get Healthcare that cares about your actual problems. They don't care about you being functional and being able to survive in a world like this. I almost lost my job due to being committed and forcibly given haldol injections to be able to leave inpatient. After being legitimately stalked, I was told I was hallucinating and had substance induced psychosis.
Why do other people get to dictate what's normal for me to experience, and get to judge whether or not my hallucinations make me dangerous? I was in AP/ IB in school, accepted into foreign colleges, scored 31/32 on ACT, and a certified welder, registered machinist to certain fortune 500 companies, and hold contractors licenses in multiple states.
If I lead with my achievements instead of what I need help with, most people would march behind me in support of me. If I lead with my problems, Schizophrenia, Depression, General Anxiety Disorder, ADHD, PTSD, and Bi-Polar, people feel like it's amazing for me to be able to make it day to day.
I don't really know what I want to hear, especially since this is the first time I've tried to lay it out like this; I just know I'm not the only person who experienced this kind of mistreatment, or demonizing by other. I just wanna have some solidarity I suppose. I'm fighting to try and build a small platform to talk about the full spectrum of mental Healthcare and the struggles some of us go through just to try and maintain a societal "norm" despite not being the "norm."
I know mental health is complex and can have many factors, genetic, environmental, and any kind of trauma can add into the root cause. If anything, growing up in a rural, poor, isolated area caused me to get minimum mental health care for years until the suicide of a close friend. I would say I started trying drugs as a way to self medicate before getting any actual help.
Ever since I had reached out for help years ago, most doctors exclusively blame drug use, it didn't matter what kind of drug it was. Rather than acknowledge that with proper medication my drug use would drastically decline or stop all together, I've been told that I'll never have a normal life, and they focus on the drug use rather than issues I've dealt with all my life, making me feel that they almost exclusively believe I have substance induced psychotic traits more so than schizophrenia.
The only issue I have with treatment is antipsychotic medication. The first time I was on risperdone my hallucinations lost color and a certain "warmth" they had with them, making it much harder to distinguish reality from what's in my head. I've developed an idea that most doctors just want people like me sedated to make others comfortable or to make me uncaring about the problems I experience as long as I don't come off as psychotic and dangerous.
It's hard to manage a normal job, raise a child, and have to constantly fight to get Healthcare that cares about your actual problems. They don't care about you being functional and being able to survive in a world like this. I almost lost my job due to being committed and forcibly given haldol injections to be able to leave inpatient. After being legitimately stalked, I was told I was hallucinating and had substance induced psychosis.
Why do other people get to dictate what's normal for me to experience, and get to judge whether or not my hallucinations make me dangerous? I was in AP/ IB in school, accepted into foreign colleges, scored 31/32 on ACT, and a certified welder, registered machinist to certain fortune 500 companies, and hold contractors licenses in multiple states.
If I lead with my achievements instead of what I need help with, most people would march behind me in support of me. If I lead with my problems, Schizophrenia, Depression, General Anxiety Disorder, ADHD, PTSD, and Bi-Polar, people feel like it's amazing for me to be able to make it day to day.
I don't really know what I want to hear, especially since this is the first time I've tried to lay it out like this; I just know I'm not the only person who experienced this kind of mistreatment, or demonizing by other. I just wanna have some solidarity I suppose. I'm fighting to try and build a small platform to talk about the full spectrum of mental Healthcare and the struggles some of us go through just to try and maintain a societal "norm" despite not being the "norm."
