By Tom Palmer
My parents were
always there to support me
There have been a
few strong influences on my life: alcohol, mental illness, and the sport of
wrestling. For a while, the sport of wrestling was good to me. Several times I
got to pin a guy in front of the whole school. Many of my matches were
executions. However, when I was fifteen I started feeling an intense,
paralyzing fear in all social situations. It was agoraphobia with a vengeance.
My sophomore year in high school was my last winning season.
I started to crave
alcohol because it stilled the intense fear I felt around people. Alcohol
allowed me to have fun at parties. It made me feel good. Before I got put on
anti-psychotic medication, drinking a few beers had an almost narcotic effect
on me. Alcohol is still a problem for me many decades later.
When I was eighteen,
I shocked and dismayed my family by joining the army. I was a national Merit Scholarship
finalist, and thus my family had a different vision for my future. Most of my
friends were surprised when I joined the army, too.
Lately, I have
realized how fear-based most of my life has been. When I was young, I had the
same fear of monsters and the dark that most children have. I never really
outgrew it. Even during my best years, I was very scared at night. I was afraid
the devil was outside my window ready to come in and possess me. The movie
"The Exorcist" had a strong negative effect on me.
I can’t tell an
exact time to pinpoint as the beginning of my mental illness. The intense
agoraphobia that started when I was fifteen was pretty pathological. Then, when
I was at the University
of Oklahoma , I started to
think people could see through the door to my room. I would listen to them talk
outside of my door, certain that they were talking about me. At the age of
twenty-eight my parents decided that I needed to be admitted to the Timberlawn
Mental Health System, in Dallas ,
Texas .
I've never been an
autonomous, functioning adult. I've always been overwhelmed by the ordinary
demands of life. I got out of the army with an honorable discharge, but just
barely. After serving four years in the army, I got out with the rank of private
E-1. I got a Bachelor’s degree at the University of Oklahoma ,
but it was only made possible because of extensive emotional and financial support
by my parents.
All told, I would
guess that I have been hospitalized for mental illness about twenty-five times.
For the past ten years, I have lived in an assisted living center for the
mentally ill. I have been living about as comfortably as I can with my mental
illness. I don’t know what would happen if I didn't have the support I have. I
guess I might be living on the streets and eating out of garbage cans.
I can remember
sitting in my pathological psychology class at University of Oklahoma
listening to the professor talk about the symptoms of various mental illnesses.
I would think, "This applies to me...that applies to me...etc." I believe
that I have three or four personality disorders along with my schizoaffective
disorder.
However, I am
grateful for the support I have. Of course, some things could be better, but
that has always been the case, no matter what.
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