I thought I was doing pretty well, recovery wise. Actually, I take that back, I WAS doing well with my recovery. And then...
I started feeling as though someone was following me. There was a dark shadow at my shoulder, which disappeared whenever I turned around. Then the voices started. Sometimes a mundane kind of commentary, "she's making a cup of tea," sometimes hostile "fat bitch, you need to lose some weight." Or worse.
I started seeing the world through a kaleidoscope of colour. Shifting shapes before my eyes, changing shade rapidly. Then I noticed a smell. A bad smell, rotting, like bins left out in the hot sun. It followed me around, so I reasoned I myself must be the source of the smell. I started bathing and showering multiple times during the day, changing my clothes. Nothing would shift the stench. I had butterflies in my stomach almost permanently. I began to believe I was host to a colony of parasitic worms and that I was rotting from the inside. I could feel them shifting around under the skin of my abdomen - that was the source of the butterflies in my stomach. I borrowed my husband's electric drill and told him I was going to drill a hole in my stomach to get the worms out. Luckily for me, he relieved me of the drill, put it in the shed and hid the key. I was quickly taken on by the home treatment team.
I began to believe that if I took all my medication at once, I'd be well again. I had quite a stash - anti psychotics, anti depressants, mood stabilisers, diazepam and zopiclone. A cocktail of almost- certain demise if taken all at once. I casually mentioned my plan to the CPN from the home treatment team. I had no reservations about sharing my plan because I thought it the most logical solution in the world. He made arrangements for my medication to be dispensed daily, so I didn't have so many meds at my disposal.
The psychiatrist changed the dose of my anti psychotic and recommended I continue to be seen by the home treatment team. And that's where I am right now, battling with the interface between reality and unreality and trying to challenge unusual beliefs with logic and 'common sense.'
I realise that recovery isn't a linear process, A to Z in simple steps. The way I see this is I've wandered down a blind alley by mistake and have to work out how to get out of it. A diversion, if you like. I'm really looking forward to getting back onto the road.
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