Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 09 Jun 22 - 08:00 PM Ok I have news: my mentally ill homelesss kid is in jail. Arrested on the 5th for lewd in public under some emergency protective thing (I am unclear)... It looks like he peed ON the jail, or something, from the arrest report I saw online. This is likely to be good news. I will update when I know more. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 08 Jun 22 - 10:06 AM Unfun, indeed. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 06 Jun 22 - 06:51 PM In a conversation today with staff who facilitate the group-therapy work and attend to resident patients in general, it came up that since my admission here -- which coincided with the pandemic lockdown for the coronavirus -- the medical office at the clinic, that's the office that is NOT psychiatric but that provides medical care of other sorts for patients, has been through a turnover. By this I don't mean those physicians who give us patients physical exams and treatments. I actually mean the medical office nurse, the medical records keeper, and the office receptionist. This is noteworthy because all three of these, when I was admitted, were women who had been on the job for decades here. And suddenly all three were no longer there. True, one of them had her retirement year/date already set. But another of them, considerably younger, quit outright. So suddenly the clinic found that it had to re-staff this office altogether. This came up because the new receptionist is having trouble fitting in. This new employee knows the job and all, but the culture at this particular clinic is a challenge for them. Earlier today, a fellow patient was positively distraught because the receptionist had left a voice mail for the patient, which crossed a confidentiality boundary, AND a third party was named. It all reminded my fellow patient of the dysfunction in her own family of origin, and right now the patient is deep into the family-therapy work sessions in which her parents are fighting tooth and nail with her and her clinicians, and the stress of it is literally making her physically ill. There's always something to struggle over, seems like. It just gives me something to brood over. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 01 Jun 22 - 08:46 AM Good-O |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 31 May 22 - 11:16 PM Things are calm here, which is nice for a change. People managed to mellow out a bit, over the holiday. Doesn't always happen -- this is my third Memorial Day at this clinic, and at the worst of the pandemic/lockdown, holidays were just as tense and volatile, if not more so, than the usual treatment schedule. But this time things were chill. Somebody pointed out that this is the time of year when bears get hungry and start raiding dumpsters again. And this has happened in summers past, so we will have to keep a weather eye on dumpsters for bears, all over again. Because this region has had a high rate of infection, we are wearing facemasks in common areas again. Our housemate, thankfully, is testing negative and recovering slowly. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 27 May 22 - 09:55 PM My fellow patient/resident, now testing negative for COVID-19, has been released from isolation. Instead of having meals brought to her bedroom door, she may now leave the premises, cross the campus to the dining hall at the big main residence, and eat meals with the rest of us. Her coughing had been very bad -- in fact she is still coughing. She is on antibiotics for the upper-respiratory infection, which are wreaking havoc with her already sensitive (read: irritable) digestion. And when she speaks, she sounds like a frog, with her laryngitis. We patients continue to report for COVID testing every week on campus; the tests are paid for by the clinic, which is real nice of them. Two days a week, normally, we may show up to supply test samples on the spot. One of those days, however, is always Monday. Next Monday is a holiday, the facility where we test on-site is closed. So we will all have to cram our test appearances into one single weekday, later in the week. Could be crowded and confused . . . |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 23 May 22 - 12:26 PM Your nutritionist wants you to stay alive, Mrrzy dear. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 23 May 22 - 10:38 AM Sure. Stay well in there! I am still fine. Stopped losing weight after a long talk with a keto nutritionist, whose advice boiled down (see what I did there?) to 2 words: Eat more. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 22 May 22 - 05:46 PM One of the housemates at my smaller (cheaper) on-campus residence tested positive for coronavirus. Not a false positive either. That was about eight days ago. All week long, this past week, she has been in isolation in her room. Her meals are brought to her. My room is directly underneath hers, and sound, as you know, travels down in particular. I hear her coughing at all hours. She gets medication so she can sleep, at least, and nursing at the clinic are watching her regularly. They say her condition has stabilized sufficiently so that there is no question of transferring her to hospital, she can be treated here. So we are all going about with facemasks on, sanitizing and all, and maybe this coming week the incubation deal will end its time limit and testing this patient can resume, the better to find out if she is testing negative. Can you test negative even if you still have a cough?? |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Helen Date: 16 May 22 - 02:37 AM That's good news about your sleep treatment. I can empathise because I used to have sleep difficulties but now it's more under control. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 15 May 22 - 06:10 PM Have now been a resident for a month and a little extra in the plan on campus, away from the main residence for patients. There have been some rough days, but on the whole, treatment is going well and the smaller residence hall with its privacy and quiet is an improvement ... AND it costs less. Last month, following the sleep study and the diagnosis of serious sleep apnea, my insurance agreed to cover the acquisition of a CPAP machine and I have been sleeping with it every night. It was a big adjustment, and uncomfortable for a week or two. Now the use of the machine in bed at night is part of my routine, I am feeling accustomed to doing this every night, AND when I do sleep, the quality of sleep is improved. Others remark on how I am not as low-energy as I was before. Still a lot of room for improvement, as the quantity of sleep is still an issue, and my sleep cycle timings are off, like dream sleep. But things have gotten better with the CPAP treatment and I don't feel that I am at rock bottom anymore. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 17 Feb 22 - 09:31 PM Hey, keb, congrats! Bon courage! |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 17 Feb 22 - 05:00 PM Next month, through the big medical/hospital complex up the road (with the clinic's medical office coordinating in between), I'm scheduled to take a sleep study kit home from the sleep disorders center, and to use it that night in my bedroom at the clinic. Bring it back to the medical center up the road, next morning. Then a phone consult is scheduled with a nurse-practitioner to go over any prospective diagnosis from the sleep study, and the next step to be taken. If there is no diagnosis of sleep apnea, I will be really surprised, as the symptoms I do have are pretty bad at this point. It means I am deeply fatigued. I have all that I can do not to walk without staggering. And my emotion/psyche level is really low down. The support system in the treatment program at the clinic, however, is doing its part. In the last several days, my clinical 'team' has gathered around me in order to nudge me into starting the paperwork to move out of the main residence, and to transition to another level of treatment. Still on campus, in a different residence, where the patients/residents form a small household. They still come to the big residence to eat in the dining room and so on, but they have more privacy than one has in the main residence, and there are little self-reliance goals they work at in order to prepare for transitioning outside. I have now been in the main residence for two years, and the staff / team are literally saying to me, "It's time." So I've gotten the paperwork started, which needs a whole sequence of different approvals; it will take time. I have to trust that the staff knows better than I what I need at this point. I just know I need to get some sleep. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 14 Feb 22 - 07:44 PM Oy vey. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 13 Feb 22 - 02:09 PM Another pitiful drama coming to its denouement. The patient in question broke the rule about staying off cannabis while in treatment. Nobody listens to me, of course, but I think said patient should transfer to drug rehab. The cannabis abuse was serious and this clinic does NOT do detox. Of course the individual case has many tragic complications, like suicidality and dissociative episodes. It's just really sad to see it all coming to this. The administrative decision, whichever it will be, comes down to an announcement tomorrow (Monday), and emotions are high, intense, and polarized. I joined a discussion last evening to put in my two cents' worth and right away somebody had to announce to the group how angry my words made them ... it was not my intent to make anybody angry ... I feel like I ought to keep my big mouth shut for a few days. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 10 Feb 22 - 10:25 PM Yeah, relaxing sometimes, staying in one's lane... |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 10 Feb 22 - 08:59 PM So now the week ends on an upbeat feeling, and I can't even justify why I suddenly felt so much better. All I did was stop trying to control everything ... oh, wait ... |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 08 Feb 22 - 11:37 PM Hang in there, keb. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 08 Feb 22 - 10:01 PM See, Mrrzy, they never DID answer that question, the staff, they left it up to the patients. They always do, here. Part of the whole analysis mindset, I guess. It would be a different place if they did tell us what to do and how to do it. I'm just in a rather low place tonight. I see that a long-time, highly-valued Mudcatter decided to leave. It made me very sad. But then the sadness was there even before I learned that news. My car, at least, is behaving itself. Just have to chip the ice off. I saw a RED squirrel in the parking lot the other day, forgot to report that. The red ones stay close to the woods and the foothills hereabouts, it is rare to see them come into civilized lawns or parking lots where they would have to tangle with other critters, like the bigger, domineering gray squirrels. So you go, red squirrel. I remember the red ones from my childhood. They used to make me laugh with their jerky speedy movements. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 01 Feb 22 - 03:13 PM Keb, what *are* we supposed to do? |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 31 Jan 22 - 09:17 PM Hearing that Norma Waterson has died really brought me rather low today. And there are more patients, than usual at one time, complaining of suicidal ideation and scaring their roommates and friends with it. There are some of us here in the patient community who literally exclaim with exasperation, What are we supposed to do when we hear stuff like this? Just came from a group therapy meeting where we thrashed out that very subject. It probably left some people feeling better after the meeting, to air these heavy questions and clear the air a little better. I am worried for some of my fellow patients, though. I'll manage, but I am not so certain of the others. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 29 Jan 22 - 09:23 AM Oy. Last seen when I went to hand out soup to the homeless on boxing day. I gave him soup before I recognized him. We spoke... He was unkind but not threatening, which is better, and he could put a sentence together, also better. He didn't make reasonable sense but grammatical sense. Hope *that* makes sense. I ran into an acquaintance, a strange gay hispanic child-molesty homeless advocate dude (SGHiCMHoD) who reports that the other homeless are afraid of him (of my son), and that I should expect someone to beat him up for being belligerent. Frankly, I hope he (son, not SGHiCMHoD) *does* get put in hospital. Even unvaxxed. He might get some help he otherwise refuses, that way. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 28 Jan 22 - 07:03 PM Which reminds me, Mrrzy my friend: what transpired for your son Tim last year? At last report, he was due in court for what happened with his (former) roommate?? |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 28 Jan 22 - 03:48 PM Keberoxu, don't know if it is about you, but the book Everybody In This Room Will Soeday Be Dead is absolutely exactly and perfectly about me. If any of you are interested in what my mind was like before I managed to check into that suicide prevention program 2 years ago, read that book. Spot on. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 08 Jan 22 - 10:00 AM Good on yer, keb. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 07 Jan 22 - 04:40 PM Thus begins another year and soon I will have my second-year anniversary of admission, and I'm still at that same treatment clinic for residential in-patient psychiatric care. I've spent more money in those months than I believe I had done in the whole of my adult life and career. I don't regret the treatment, but my stomach still drops at the thought of the total sum, paid out one month at a time. Just finished consolidating the cash reserves I have, which includes shutting down accounts at a bank where I was a customer for at least thirty years ... having relocated to a part of the country where that bank has no branch locations. I kept that account as a nest egg, earning interest. It was time to sacrifice the funds in that account towards the payment of my treatment bills. So, I had to travel out of state to get the cash and close the accounts. Just deposited the cashier's checks at my current bank this week. My clinical team is pleased with my treatment so far and they find that my recent work is productive. Which means that it hurts like hell. I'm sitting here trying not to cry after getting out of my most recent billable hour of therapy. I hate it when it hurts, I really do. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 04 Dec 21 - 05:10 PM We used to go shopping the day after Thanksgiving before it had that name and got awful. Whole family split into twos and threes, walk around and point out likes and dislikes, reconvene, change groups, go back around for what people said they liked. Kind of a do-see-dough... |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Helen Date: 04 Dec 21 - 03:51 PM keberoxu, I was friends with an American family a while back. They were working over here for a few years, she plays the harp so that's how we met. They invited me over for Thanksgiving one time and I couldn't believe how much food was on the table for three adults and a couple of small children. One thing which sticks in my mind was that she said that she had never prepared and cooked a real pumpkin for the pumpkin pie. I asked what she usually used, and when she said she bought it in a can I was totally incredulous. Pumpkins are really common here. We don't get them in cans, and the other thing which amazed me was that the canned pumpkins are sweetened. Most of our pumpkin dishes are savoury - roasted pumpkin, pumpkin soup, pumpkin scones, pumpkin in stews, etc. All yummy! But the only recipe with a small bit of sugar added - except I don't do it - is in the pumpkin scones. I only discovered this week what Black Friday shopping frenzy is about and its connection to Thanksgiving. The shopping thing cropped up here a few years ago but it seemed to come out of nowhere and it was never explained, and I never really knew what date it was especially since Black Friday means a Friday the 13th to me. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 04 Dec 21 - 01:19 PM Here's the deal with North American Thanksgiving: always on a Thursday, maybe somebody else knows why, I don't, but it's always Thursday. Followed, in the present millenium, by Black Friday, which was NOT part of the original observation. The outcome is a long holiday weekend instead of a mere Thursday observance. Hence, five days. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Helen Date: 04 Dec 21 - 12:04 AM When I said before about a little treat in moderation being beneficial for your state of mind, I definitely wasn't thinking of a 5 day binge. Thanksgiving isn't a thing over here so I guess it was a cultural difference in understanding. Here was I thinking it is only one meal. LOL My car is 16 years old, very reliable (Toyota Corolla), and usually I get her checked over once a year but because I've now retired my usual place to go is too far away from home so she missed out on her checkup a year ago. She made up for it by costing a lot more money than I'd planned or envisaged, but I prefer to know that everything is safe and going properly so I just paid up and thanked the mechanic for being thorough. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 03 Dec 21 - 11:11 PM Speaking of car service... I am not allowed to go back to my dealership where I tried to take my newish car for a recall repair and something went wrong amd I *lost* it and yelled and swore. Then I backed into the door leaving and damaged my new car. Ooh I was mad. Over something minor. That was my fault anyway, it turned out, but I totally assumed it was theirs, given that they had screwed up the last two times and this was going to be their last chance not to screw up again... So um yeah too many carbs. Had long talk with shrink. Turns out his recommendation for the occasional glycogen break was a (one) meal every few weeks, not a whole holiday 5-day weekend's worth every few months. Live and learn. Plus when I told him I lost it he asked were the cops called which no, they weren't, which put things back in perspective... The highlight of the car thing, though, was when the manager, who had not been there, called to say he didn't want me back, I said with emphasis, You are the first person to do your job right at that place. You *should* protect your people from the likes of me even if they *are* screwing up. First time in his career, he said. The highlight of the therapy session was I said I was crying at folk songs and I think I was lonely. He said, one definition of loneliness is what happens when a part of your soul is not being seen by the universe. So, he asked, what part of me us not being seen? And I thought about it, melted into tears, and said Meeeee... |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 03 Dec 21 - 09:03 PM Next week an appointment is scheduled to service my car. To be on the safe side, have asked to reserve a loaner car, in case my car has to be left at the service shop for more than a few hours. There's enough things on the checklist, and worrying details (a dashboard light saying PARKING BRAKE coming on AFTER the ignition is turned off, with a frightening grinding noise underneath) that the work may not be done quickly. Keep my fingers crossed here. The campus provides for my needs well enough; having the car, though, keeps me from going ... you know what. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 27 Nov 21 - 08:13 PM Year-end holidays, like those last year, will be here at the clinic (unless something unforeseen arises). Hopefully this year it will feel like more is possible. Of course it is unnerving to hear about the omicron variant of SARS/COVID and to watch THAT making an impact around the globe. New York State starting to shut things down again -- although the clinic is outside of New York State, that state is but a short turnpike/toll-road drive from here. But there are things going on that weren't happening a year ago: cinemas showing films, concerts with a chorus of live singers even (one of the riskiest things to do when an air-borne virus is on the loose -- they have planned the concert very carefully). If I think ahead to the New Year then I feel overwhelmed, as so much is unknown and cannot be planned yet. So it's better to stick to the present. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: The Sandman Date: 27 Nov 21 - 03:09 PM well said Helen |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Helen Date: 27 Nov 21 - 02:33 PM Well Mrrzy, in my opinion sometimes it's worth pushing the boundaries - in moderation - and living with the consequences. When I bought a house back in 1983 (a big deal, a single female getting a mortgage!) I was talking to one of my new neighbours who told me he had been diagnosed with a serious, potentially terminal illness. He said he could go through a traumatic medical procedure and the long, slow recovery, losing his quality of life in the hope of an eventual cure and a possible extension of his life, but he had chosen to enjoy life, come what may. He chose quality over quantity. He passed away a year or so later, but he seemed happy with his choice, happy in his life with his lovely wife, and it seemed to me (looking at his situation from the outside) that his choice was worth the risks. So we can live a prolonged, less than happy life or we can choose to have a bit of fun in moderation now and then and get back on the health track. The fun bit helps to make the not-so-fun bits more bearable. Like keberoxu playing piano with the other musician. Like my group of friends playing music together during the pandemic even though it has taken a lot of my time and ingenuity to work around the COVID lockdown and post-lockdown restrictions to find suitable locations to play. The fun bits make the rest of life worth living, in my opinion. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 27 Nov 21 - 09:50 AM Ok, so, yeah, yummy stuffing and pie and salads with fruit in them... Thursday night got 3 hours sleep, and Friday cried at folk songs and got a little het up in the mah jongg game (which I won by miles, may I add), then could not sleep till 4 am, awake at 8 something. Also broke the vape cartridge with my calm-go-sleepy-now medical weed extract, so that help is not available... Going to try for a local head shop for that. But not yelling at people, not really labile, ok-ish, just not comfy. So totally worth the pie and the stuffing! |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Helen Date: 26 Nov 21 - 03:19 PM They are yummy - both the cake and the brownies. And the best bit is that they are super easy and very quick to prepare although they need to be cooked a bit more slowly than some other recipes. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 26 Nov 21 - 01:36 PM That sounds yummy! |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Helen Date: 26 Nov 21 - 01:30 PM Mrrzy, regarding carob I was thinking more along the lines of not-chocolate brownies using carob powder. I don't like the carob bars pretending to be chocolate bars. It doesn't work for me. I found a recipe using my fave cake ingredient. I make a lovely gluten free orange and almond cake using processed almonds or almond meal instead of flour. I'm not gluten free but I used to take it to work because one of my friends is gluten free. The orange flavour is a real orange boiled and then processed in the food processor - everything but the seeds. You can also have orange syrup made from fresh orange juice poured over the cake when it is cooked. Or different fruit can be used in the cake instead of an orange. I found the recipe to make chocolate brownies or even orange choc brownies and it was super-yum. It would work with carob, but maybe some cocoa powder as well to provide the chocolate hit. Almond meal brownies Gluten-free brownie Ingredients • 125g unsalted butter, chopped • 125g dark chocolate, chopped • 3 eggs, lightly whisked • 335g (1 1/2 cups) white sugar • 110g almond meal • 30g (1/4 cup) Dutch cocoa powder • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract • Pinch of salt |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Steve Shaw Date: 25 Nov 21 - 10:21 AM Ovaltine is 49% sugar. Enjoy your carbs! |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Donuel Date: 25 Nov 21 - 10:09 AM Ovaltine? |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 25 Nov 21 - 09:41 AM I don't sub chocolate. Just eating less of it... Dessert after dinner, but not after breakfast, lunch *and* dinner. Carob was a thing when I was in college. Tried it, didn't like it. Anybody remember Postum? Might look back into that for caffeine avoidance... |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Helen Date: 22 Nov 21 - 02:10 PM Good song choice, keberoxu. The *other* Aussie anthem (well, not counting Waltzing Matilda). Shaddap You Face - Joe Dolce The interesting thing about the song is that it sounds aggressive when you first listen to the words but it is actually warmly funny and sends the message about being involved and inclusive in your living situation and with the people around you, even if you didn't choose to be here - i.e. a child who migrated with your family to a different country. That song always makes Aussies smile - well, almost all of us. Some people get antsy about it. (An aside: the influence on Australian life and culture from the people and cultures who came here to live is immeasurable. I can't imagine what Aussie life would be like without all those amazing people living here.) Mrrzy, have you tried carob as a chocolate substitute? It tastes very similar to chocolate and can be used in similar ways in cooking. Also, I found that when I stopped eating chocolate bars it was the excess sugar which was addictive and eating dark chocolate with a high percentage of cocoa made it a lot easier to limit my chocolate intake. It was quicker getting the chocolate hit. That's just me, but it worked for me. My current trick is melting dark chocolate and mixing nuts and some dried fruit into it. It gives me the chocolate hit without the high sugar content. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 22 Nov 21 - 11:02 AM Still ok here... Relaxed the keto thing through chocolate because it wasn't making me labile, but then I noticed the number of bandaids I was sporting because of cuticle-picking. So I got back on the diet. Picking compulsion went away. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 20 Nov 21 - 11:45 PM The simplest thing to say about that odd post before this one, is that my old buried anger is coming up -- and the trigger is shame. It's too tedious and messy and private to spill about here. The year-end holidays plan is to spend them here at the clinic. Plans can change, but that's the plan, for now. When my situation overwhelms me with discouragement at times, it is really helpful to consider that had I chosen differently in the past, my situation now would be altogether worse than it is. Helen is right about that one. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 18 Nov 21 - 08:30 PM This is to keep me from giving in to a terrible temptation, I speak tongue-in-cheek but really it's a big distraction. I want to blurt out something in group therapy on behalf of the entire group of us to one patient who is impossible to communicate with. It goes like this, and if it sounds familiar, it ought to: Whatsa matta you?! Gotta no respect! What you t'inka you do? Why you looka so sad? It'sa not so bad, It'sa nice-a place AH, shut uppa you face. This patient attends group now and then. Every time they show up, we never know what to say, because mentally they are just ... somewhere else. Tonight several of us talked in the person's absence about how frustrating it is to try to talk with the individual. One fellow patient used the a-word: Autism. And I had to respond, "I really don't know what 'Autism' means. Does it mean that a direct conversation is too much to ask for?" It's just that I dread telling this fellow resident how I REALLY feel about the invisible gap between us which seems impossible to bridge with words. I don't want to get too specific here, it would invade privacy if I did. But the more any of us try to talk with the person , the more bewildering and hopeless it is -- tonight we were all comparing notes on conversations with the person and how remote and unreachable the person seems to be. So now, maybe having said what I feel like singing/saying online here, there will be no need for me to make a fool of myself by blurting out Whatsa Matta You in group therapy sessions . . . |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Donuel Date: 09 Nov 21 - 09:32 AM https://www.helpguide.org/articles/mental-health/mood-boosting-power-of-dogs.htm |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 08 Nov 21 - 07:53 AM The more desperate the more likely help might be accepted? My version of home. But in the meantime... Yikes. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 06 Nov 21 - 11:56 AM This morning I just sat down with someone at the nurses' station to alert them of a community conflict. Two patients have got a drama going on between them, about which it is prudent not to disclose too much. They are both very young people, close to the minimum age for admission to this clinic. Both are deeply troubled. At least one of them has a history of suicide attempts and hospitalizations. I have hope for one of them, who is breaking the silence now, and coming forward and telling the truth about getting hurt, and asking for support. It's the other one I'm worried about. Not so much malice, but, sadly, impulse-driven, and desperate. I'm afraid that this patient CAN'T stop -- that's exactly what I told nursing. And the kind of neediness and obsession driving this patient is the kind of thing that damages an entire community, one fellow patient at a time. At this point, the rest of us need to protect ourselves and each other, and the impulse-driven patient ... I don't know what hope there is for them. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 26 Oct 21 - 07:31 AM Under the heading of Not Helping... |