As I write this post, it’s well after midnight. While most days have felt pretty mundane as of late, every now and then (like today), the day is anything but.
On the ‘anything but’ days, it’s typically a doctors appointment that sends the day in a tail spin.
I’ve prolonged writing this post because I needed some time to ground myself, to seek the Lord and make sure that I wasn’t writing out of haste.
I write this post for advocacy, awareness and perhaps to help someone know they aren’t alone.
My first month of recovery felt a lot like trying to catch my breath. Between doctor’s appointments, meals being delivered and friends visiting, there was a lot going on, not to mention trying to learn this new body.
When week 4 hit, it literally felt like I had fallen off the edge in every sort of the imagination. I felt like the earth had stopped moving and I was just here…in mid air…somewhere…
I tried to distract myself by attempting to create things, trying to “do” all that I knew how to “do.”
It all fell so very short.
I just knew I wasn’t…me.
Cue the vulnerability….
My mental health tanked.
The days grew darker and darker.
Nothing I did was helping.
I called my dr.
We can’t see you until March
Not helpful was my reply.
Go to urgent care.
Was theirs.
We can’t see you.
Was urgent cares reply.
Between what felt like sheer absurdity, one kind scheduler in the dark web of Geisinger found one lone appointment with one lone physician “in my area” who could see me the next day.
I took the appointment, trusting it was what God provided.
I explained the darkness. Told him I didn’t think I was absorbing my mental health pill due to my new system.
Are you going to kill yourself?
He asked.
No
I replied.
Then you’ll be fine.
WE HAVE TO DO BETTER.
With tears in my eyes, I advocated hard with every fiber I had left in my being to get my mental health meds re-prescribed to liquid (ileostomy surgeries are notorious for malabsorption problems).
I write this because had I not been a therapist who knows a thing or two about mental health, I wonder where the non-therapist Tiny House (and big house) girls and boys of the world would be.
Sadly, I don’t have to wonder.
It is absolutely not ok for anyone, let alone a physician to declare the mental health baseline to be death.
I have also since advocated for a complete blood work up and found some other contributing factors to my floating out in the abyss. Which, once corrected will also help my mental health.
I write to hopefully remind us all that we all have struggles.
You are not alone.
None of us can know what others are going through.
Ask the questions.
If your mental health is struggling. Reach out. I’m a huge advocate of talk therapy (yes therapists need therapists!) along with medication.
988 is a valuable resource.
As a society, as friends and yes in the medical profession.
We all must do better.