One phrase that often crops up in conversations with professionals is my level of insight.
I changed psychiatrist and care coordinator after my second hospital admission because I had lost trust in them. The new psychiatrist was very traditional and old school psychiatry and I wouldn’t have been surprised if he was nearing retirement. As a Psychologist I was not fixed to the medical model of solving what was going on with me but he was.
One day at an outpatient appointment I explained to him that just because we don’t agree on my mental health does not mean I lack insight. He responded with”So what would you say is wrong with you?”. I replied “Nothing”. He retorted “Well there you go, you lack insight”.
It has been hard for me throughout this journey to accept that anything is wrong with me but that is what everyone around me was saying. If there is something wrong with me physically; that is, my brain, what does that say about me. I’m flawed? I’m broken? I’m not good enough? Why did the word “wrong” have to be used at all?
So why did I not seek help from a fellow Psychologist? Most likely pride but also fear of being found out by work colleagues. I could have sought help out of area but the risk of being found out was still there. The psychology world is a small world. Plus I didn’t think they would tell me anything I didn’t know already. I decided to try and do my own therapy.
With a clear head I did a timeline of all the events that had happened to me and wrote a psychological formulation based on Garety et al. (2001) model of psychosis. To me this explained better the experiences I was having rather than there being a chemical imbalance, which my new care coordinator said it was. The truth is, a combination of both explanations was more accurate…
And whilst I am able to reason this, it did not conclude with complete acceptance. I still fell into a vicious cycle of acceptance followed by denial.
When I was entering recovery I was more accepting that I was unwell although my recollection of my unwell-ness was foggy to say the least. As time passed I would start to think I didn’t need the medication and I would be fine without it. I become a broken record and would say this to my care coordinator every time she gave my depot. Poor woman went through dejavu every month with me.
A mental block was always reached where I denied I had a problem and everyone else was failing to see my point of view. I wanted to try other non-medical ways and couldn’t accept medication was needed. The medical perspective was that medication, when I’m concordant, correlates with me being well and when I’m not taking the medication I become unwell. I couldn’t fully accept this.
I would go through the acceptance and denial cycle several times to the point my marriage was at risk…