Ketamania
Bluelight Crew
So I was talking with my uncle the other morning about the meds I take for my mental illnesses. He is older and doesn't understand the "new wave" of mental health research.
Anyways, after we got through understanding that Bipolar (and other certain mental health diseases) are a life lasting illness, he says he hopes that my PTSD can be "cured" because it was so long ago.
I just felt that was so wrong of him to say. Just because my PTSD stemmed from when I was 12, doesn't make it any less significant.
In addition, he wanted to know if I'll be on my meds for life, and said he hoped that I wasn't. First of all, I told him Bipolar is a life-long illness, and going off my meds (as I've previously experienced) can lead to very bad consequences/episodes. I understand some people can get off their meds, but I'm content on mine and have found the right cocktail.
How do I respond to somebody who doesn't think/want/believe I should be on meds for certain permanent mental illnesses? I have Bipolar 2 (might be Schizoaffective disorder very soon), PTSD, ADD, and social anxiety specific GAD.
In addition, I think he doesn't take mental health seriously like my aunt does.
The other night I was hearing things while trying to sleep, so I went to the living room to calm down, take a xanax, and chill. However, my uncle was watching the news, and it was talking about killings and my PTSD stems from my dad being murdered by my mom. I asked him to change the channel politely, but he said it's "his tv" and he wouldn't change it. He didn't understand that the news was triggering me alongside my already stressful experience of just having hallucinations. How do I handle a person like this? My aunt is much more understanding and let me sit in her office to calm down and fall asleep while watching calming television.
Anyways, after we got through understanding that Bipolar (and other certain mental health diseases) are a life lasting illness, he says he hopes that my PTSD can be "cured" because it was so long ago.
I just felt that was so wrong of him to say. Just because my PTSD stemmed from when I was 12, doesn't make it any less significant.
In addition, he wanted to know if I'll be on my meds for life, and said he hoped that I wasn't. First of all, I told him Bipolar is a life-long illness, and going off my meds (as I've previously experienced) can lead to very bad consequences/episodes. I understand some people can get off their meds, but I'm content on mine and have found the right cocktail.
How do I respond to somebody who doesn't think/want/believe I should be on meds for certain permanent mental illnesses? I have Bipolar 2 (might be Schizoaffective disorder very soon), PTSD, ADD, and social anxiety specific GAD.
In addition, I think he doesn't take mental health seriously like my aunt does.
The other night I was hearing things while trying to sleep, so I went to the living room to calm down, take a xanax, and chill. However, my uncle was watching the news, and it was talking about killings and my PTSD stems from my dad being murdered by my mom. I asked him to change the channel politely, but he said it's "his tv" and he wouldn't change it. He didn't understand that the news was triggering me alongside my already stressful experience of just having hallucinations. How do I handle a person like this? My aunt is much more understanding and let me sit in her office to calm down and fall asleep while watching calming television.