There
is Help Out There If You Want It
By
Jessica
We
can't just be happy without a little help
I
am 26 years old. I wanted to tell my story to help others suffering
through mental illness. I would like to give a brief history on
myself but concentrate more on things of late. Now, as I am sure you
realize, there is a stigma surrounding mental illness.
I
had a great upbringing with wonderful loving parents who were always
there for me, and friends galore, as well as a dedicated boyfriend. I
was diagnosed with ADHD and depression by 9th
grade and tried multiple medications before becoming resistant to
taking them. Part of this resistance was in me not wanting to need
medication just to function and definitely not wanting to be labeled
in school. I was never told not to get help from my parents but by
society who said it was bad to be different and that I had
everything— so why not just be happy.
By
22 I went off to college and ended up with a whirlwind of issues from
immobilization due to pain and gaining 70 pounds in one semester to
trying medications that ended up making me suicidal. Once I flunked
out, I spent the next year-and-a-half in bed unable to function and
barely getting up even to take care of myself. I developed
kleptomania and ended up with legal problems and was also diagnosed
with bipolar depression and OCD. I was prescribed Abilify and it
worked wonders for the depression when I would actually take it, but
every time I started to feel better I would forget the need for them
until I started to feel worse.
I
continued this dance with medication while still attending therapy
mostly regularly until finally I realized, more recently, that I
needed more help than what I was getting. In November of 2012, I was
caught stealing for the 5th
time and this time it was a felony charge. I knew something had to
give.
I
went back to my therapist who I’d told none of this to and poured
my heart out, begging for help. I knew I had an impulse-control issue
and had tried medication in the past to no effect, but this time
needed to be different. She increased my Abilify because, in larger
doses, although you can end up with permanent twitches, it’s
supposed to help with impulse control. I was also put on the mood
stabilizer Lamictal, which was also said to help with the impulse
issues. At this time I changed my ADHD medication from my long-time
friend Adderall to Vyvanse since at 2p.m. I would want to just pass
out.
So
here I am finally taking my medication regularly, going to support
groups, and actually doing well. I feel that if I had hit rock-bottom
with kleptomania a year or more ago—it would have been the kick I
needed to take my medication and wouldn’t be facing the potential
to end up in jail. Unfortunately, my rock-bottom didn’t come soon
enough and now, although I am getting better and feeling happy for
the first time since I can remember, I may end up at another bottom
soon enough.
If
you could take something away from my story, I would hope it would be
to seek help and that through trial and error, although
disheartening, you can end up with that right mixture of medication
and therapy that could inevitably change your life for the better.
There are people out there just like you who may also feel the heavy
hand of society expecting them to just be happy without needing
outside help. Had I realized sooner that there was help if I wanted
it, and that there were others out there just like me, my story could
be very different today.
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