Ansel Adams' Oak Tree

Ansel Adams' Oak Tree

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

I Know Me

So I'm Bipolar? So what? It's what I have, not who I am. I'm learning to understand the impact of that statement. For those not familiar with Bipolar, it's easy to sit in judgement and just label me crazy. Well honey, I AM crazy and it has nothing to do with my medical diagnosis. I'm bold, spontaneous, opinionated and assertive. I should follow that with "I am woman, hear me roar" but that is so overused. Instead I'll just say, I am who I am...take it or leave it. If you take it, you're the kind of person I want to be around. You have strength, compassion and the fortitude to accept people for who they are. If you leave, it's your loss. Because even though I've been so lost for so long, I'm rediscovering myself. And I'm definitely a somebody.

The reserve of strength I have is surprising, even to me. I'll thank God for that. Only a Grand Creator could have bestowed such a wonderful gift because it's definitely not something learned or conditioned. By any standards, I should be in the fetal position, crying my eyes out and throwing the biggest pity party complete with confetti. But I'm not. I'm moving forward.

I have spent the day thinking that my life is in limbo, the result of waiting on someone else's decision to propel or deflate my current mood and life course. This is not the case. I am not responsible for others' actions or behaviors. I refuse to be at the mercy of anyone. I can only control me. And I will not crumble or allow my happiness to be decided by others.

Yes, I am a mother and a daughter and a sister. But above all else, I am Becky. A woman who finds humor in the oddest of places. A woman who believes in the power of sisterhood. A woman who can bounce back from anything.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

My Sons

Let me share with you about my children. I have two sons. 11 and 7. The proverbial lights of my life. Even though I threaten to sell them to a family from time to time. They are two entirely different children. Inside and out.

The oldest,Hayden, is very tall with a big build. He wears a size 10 in men's shoes. At 11!! Beautiful green eyes (like mine) and dark blonde hair. His sense of humor is amazing and well advanced although 4th grade boy humor is the norm. He's very witty, jovial, compassionate, kind and sensitive. And he has this giggle...every time I hear it, a lump catches in my throat and my heart swells like the Grinch's at Christmas. He's such a fast learner with an aptitude for science and math. He's obsessed with Pokemon thus I know more about the subject than any 33 year old woman should. He dreams of being a marine biologist. I see him being a wonderful teacher. He's affectionate and loving. People are drawn to him. As a toddler, he didn't know a stranger. Would walk up and shake anyone's hand and introduce himself. We would joke that he was running for office. I'd vote for him.

Roman is my youngest. With a fair complexion and deep blue eyes, he's a heartbreaker. Fair complected is an understatement. He's almost white. I swear the boy couldn't sneak up on a tan. He has a dusting of freckles across his nose and seems to have an endless reserve of energy. He's muscular and athletic. He's has amazing artistic abilities. The child can draw, paint, color and create for hours. He loves school. He's quite withdrawn, not nearly as affectionate as his brother. Unless, of course, it's bedtime. Then he'll get up 3, 4 or 15 times for goodnight hugs and kisses. He thinks he's fooling me. He's still young enough that reverse psychology works on him. Anything green on his plate at dinner that he doesn't want to eat, forbid him to eat more than 3 bites. He'll clean his plate. I'm sure I only have a few more months of this kind of control and the only thing green I'll be able to get in him will be of the gummi nature. He loves Ranch dressing. On everything. I buy it in bulk.

Watching the two of them grow, learn and interact makes me happy to be their mother. They are both destined for great things. I only pray that I can nurture their spirits and expand their worlds. If there is one thing I want them to learn from me, it's the importance of loving yourself. If they love themselves half as much as I love them, they'll be doing wonderfully.


Thursday, February 11, 2010

From Where I'm Sitting

My life came to a screeching standstill on February 7th. After much deliberation, evaluation and recommendation from the administration of a local hospital, I am undergoing group psychotherapy at the nearest mental institution. Sounds grave, doesn't it? Mental Health Facility. That's sounds so much more PC and so much calmer and less scary. Screw that. I'm undergoing a partial hospitalization program at a mental institution! Complete with craft exercises. And cafeteria food. College had to be put on hold as has my job and most of my social interaction except for those in the group. A diverse collection to say the least. Lost souls seeking redirection.

Today was day three. I went in with a open yet broken mind and I'm glad I did. I'm learning a lot. I'm allowing myself the time to heal. I'm not useful to anyone if I don't take the time to fix me. By whatever means that involves, popular opinion be damned. While the doctor scrambles to adjust my medications to levels I can live with, I'm busy finding comfort in purging my demons to 7 perfect strangers and a staff of mental health professionals. My biggest revelation? No...nothing profound. It's just a simple fact that it's so much easier to share with complete honesty with people who are just as screwed up as I am.

I'm okay with making light of the fact that I screwed up. I think everyone is to some degree. Some hide it better than others. Some are heavily medicated. And the rest...they're just fooling themselves. I'm not looking for a "normal" life. I want a happy life as defined by me. And I'm learning that happiness is in the little moments. That moment you find a parking space close to the store entrance. That moment you find money in the pocket of a coat you haven't worn in months. That moment your child insists on a band-aid for a barely there hangnail. Those moments that are few and far between but make you smile from somewhere so deep inside that you wish you could bottle the feeling. Life is everything in between those moments. It's monotonous, tedious, draining and at times, downright hard and ugly. They build our strength and give us character - and on a really bad day, an intense migraine. But ah...those moments.

So I'm focusing on me for a while. I'm sick and like any sickness, I need treatment and time to heal. I don't need gossip and ridicule. I need support and encouragement. I'm not ashamed of my mental disorder. It doesn't define me. It's a part of me. A very small part. As for what makes up the rest of me...I'm still discovering that.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Going Under

I feel restricted. Writing this blog. I had different expectations. That I would write and just purge myself of everything. But I'm caught up in censoring myself....

I'm battling demons. Who isn't? My demons have haunted me for years. For as long as I can remember. And now, at 33, I struggle with daily tasks and managing the spectrum of emotions the human soul is capable of processing. There is no balance, no normalcy, no idealist notion that "all is well". I am bipolar. I accept the label and understand the stigma. My mind races. My body tires. My moods -unpredictable. I'm exhausted and I'm starting to realize, exhausting. I take daily medications and go through bouts of therapy when necessary. A lot of resources have been spent maintaining a life that, from the inside, I don't even recognize.

I'm not who I was supposed to be. I never was.

I'm treading water in a vast sea. There are days I have the strength and determination to keep my head above water. To fight the currents and damn the swells. Those days are fewer and farther between lately. Most days, I struggle. I struggle with tide of emotions, the undertow of depression and endless exhaustion from trying to stay afloat.

Everyone around me is effected by my disorder. The guilt I carry from that is overwhelming at times. And at the same time, these people who love and care about me, have no idea, cannot fathom, how much of the person I was and the person I wanted to be has been forever changed by the years of my inner war. I've tried to learn how to ride the waves. You have to, to exist. But mere existing is not living. It's an injustice to the body I've been given. To my children. To God. But it's hard to hold on to that fact in the midst of drowning.