It seems like mental health clients can't get out beyond the slog of our own psychic universe; like there's an unbreakable plexiglass dome around us, something torn straight from a Stephen King novel in 2009. We get stuck in this thick, self-loathing molasses up to our thighs as we rush toward life or love but something provincial keeps tugging us back. In and out of inpatient hospitals and day-treatment facilities, a raven caws, “Help them, David, why not help them with what you’ve already learned?”
The revolving door squeaks a maddening refrain; Admitted, discharged, admitted, discharged, admitted, and on and on. Family members study their siblings and Nanas suffocating under the heft of mental anguish, which traumatizes. If it were a film, they’d call it Nightmares R Us. Some data from NAMI help with clarity, although it’s bracing truths. One in five adults experience a mental illness each year. And a devastating note: Suicide is the second leading cause of death among kids 10-14.
I recall feeling trapped for a decade plus, like a claustrophobic fuse was pulsing in my skull set to blow. But on Sunday, April 26, 2009, brilliant sunlight entered my life for the first time in years. I met this young woman named Amy, first online, and then at the Beardsley Zoo in Bridgeport. On that first date, we were surrounded by these proud, magnificent peacocks, lovely indigo and teal and turquoise, wild feathery creatures strutting around, doing their thing with panache and flair. After a decade at a group home on Broadway in New Haven, getting to know Amy was magical and lovely. One date turned into many more as my life began to change for the better.