Kaleida
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2015
- Messages
- 2,806
If it was not clear, he would get very angry when my housemates and I would ask him questions about things he said or claimed happened when in psychosis, or when in delusional disassociative states, or when he was into lying and manipulating to himself and others. He would start and stop his medications or take them for a day or two or week and then completely suddenly stop them. When he was on the antipsychotic meds he was not angry, friendly, and relatively normal, not super angry or argumentative, and not psychotic.
Ah, well I can kind of understand that. I don't have that much of an anger issue but I do sometimes get irritable and defensive about my mental shit and it can be embarrassing to talk about psychotic stuff, or sometimes I'm just still experiencing some degree of it and dealing with reality is kind of frustrating or aggravating like when tripping around people you'd rather not be tripping around. Luckily I've only rarely been more extremely delusional to what was happening in the world around me and had limited contact when I did, though I still managed to do some damage to some of my relationships; most of my stuff personally is internal or about self identity and highly dissociative in nature, though certainly still quite intense at times.
I can relate to not wanting to take antipsychotic medication, even if it might be a better idea to. I have a prescription for olanzapine but I've only used it once for a week so far to bring myself down from a psychotic episode that was really starting to get going. I've been told that I seem happier on them, but I would rather not take them at any time I can effectively avoid it (but that's a very critical factor). If possible I prefer to face my internal stuff headfirst and work through it like a trip, but, that's kind of standard for dissociative identity disorder, which is generally treated with therapy; I just also happen to have some issues with psychosis and mania.
The shit I/we go through is actually really weird and I don't think I've actually met someone else who's described something quite like it, though I can relate pieces of it to pieces of what others have described. It kind of feels like what a lot of it centers around is that the way we experience sexual stimulation is readily strong enough that it causes salvia-like effects - though, that theoretically I actually can relate to common ideas about the mechanisms of psychosis and dissociation, considering that dopamine is involved in sexual stimulation and salvinorin A activates the endogenous receptor for dynorphin. It's actually been that way for as long as I can remember but took most of my life until now for me to really start being able to recognize and appreciate it, mostly because it kind of finally sensitized to the point that those dissociative effects have kind of reached another level, and it's harder to just ignore. I have a suspicion that I might have an unusually dissociative expression of bipolar disorder or something, though I haven't been diagnosed with it at this point (though also no one's really tried, I just started getting that olanzapine a couple months ago with mania and psychosis as a reason though).
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