I’m starting to sound like an evangelist. “Meditate and you’ll manage your mental
illness.” “Be mindful and you’ll stay
present, even as your mind pulls at you, trying to take you toward the abyss.” Well, for years this has worked,
most of the time. But it’s not always so
simple.
For weeks I’ve been slipping. I’ve had physical sensations- tingling,
agitation, sweating, poor sleep- that read like the side effect profile of the
two medicines I take. But I’ve been
taking them for years without issue. So
I worry about what will be the long-term effects of taking such powerful CNS
altering drugs. I’ve also been terribly
depressed, interspersed with spikes of hypomania. It’s as if I feel the earth move against my
steps. The sky is heavy, the air humid
and oppressive, and I can’t get comfortable anywhere. My thoughts are dark and confusing, I have
social anxiety, and subtle impulses not to go on.
Meditation sessions are especially difficult. Why place such effort on staying fully in the
present when the present is so awful?
And then the kicker. Study this
stuff long enough and you begin to realize that mindfulness meditation’s
proponents aren’t only asking you to remain in the present moment, they’re
either implying or overtly stating that you must accept the present moment.
The idea of staying present is difficult enough. If I am always fully in the moment, doesn’t
life become a succession of disconnected moments? Fantasy and thoughts of the past or future
drag us from this moment, but what if I want to think about the future or
review the past? Well, mindfulness can
help me there, too. Yes, when I am doing
dishes I can be fully doing dishes. When
I am playing with my daughter, I can be in the present, only playing with my daughter. But this doesn’t preclude planning and
thinking long-term. Mindfulness enhances
this. For when I am planning, or
brainstorming, or sure, even wishing for things to have been different I can be
fully present and attendant to these things.
I can still review and learn from my mistakes. And I can still prepare for what’s to come.
But acceptance poses a much larger problem. I am mentally ill and at present the disease
is assertive. I’m very sick and not sure
I can go on. As I meditate and remain
present these feelings are even greater and these thoughts are even louder. There is no way in hell I want to accept
this. Several years ago after my most serious
suicide attempt and back-to-back hospitalizations I hit rock bottom and moved
in with my parents. At that time my
father was battling an autoimmune neuropathy that had crippled him. He was wasting away and the doctors could do
little more than treat his symptoms.
They thought little of his life was left.
He vowed to overcome his condition. He patently refused to accept that he was
sick and wasting and continued to work, suffered but never stopped walking, and
kept an attitude that emphatically proclaimed that this disease would not
defeat him. He did everything the
doctors told him to do except accept their prognosis. And he got better.
At this same time I looked at the prognosis for a rapid
cycling, mixed episode bipolar one patient with multiple hospitalizations and
suicide attempts. I saw unemployment,
disability, homelessness, possible jail, more suicide attempts, more
hospitalizations, and death by about age 56.
I also saw my father as my model and refused to accept that seemingly
inevitable future. We fought
together. It was almost a competition to
see who could be healthier. We never
once quit. Each wouldn’t let the
other. Acceptance was the equal of
surrender. And we both recovered.
Yet here I am writing that acceptance of the present moment
is a key to recovery. How do I reconcile
my enthusiasm for and dependence on mindfulness with my own experience? More in the next post.
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