Showing posts with label creative nonfiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creative nonfiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Buttering Cats on Mars

I tend to be notorious in my classes for two things: raising my hand all the time when I am present, and for frequently, to some people alarmingly, not being present at all. The first is simply because I enjoy class discussion. The second takes a bit longer to explain.


Contrary to what some people believe, bipolar disorder does not mean you change emotions suddenly and violently (unless your medications have been prescribed improperly or you are not taking them the way you're supposed to), and it does not mean you are necessarily more dangerous than anyone else. My own version leans more towards the cyclothymic, which is a milder, more rapid-cycling manifestation. It's a predictable pattern by now, six years after I first began treatment. I spend two to three weeks fairly stable, my emotions directly related to things going around me the way it is with people considered normal.


Then I have three or so days of mania, the "up" portion. It's a bit like being tipsy all the time, I'm told when I describe it to people, though I don't know firsthand because my medications can't be combined with alcohol. Everyone around me seems a bit more attractive. I become obsessed with sex. I'm extra-hungry. My mind fills with racing thoughts and ideas that, however reckless, seem fantastic at the time. No, sublime! No, the best ideas that anyone has ever had in the history of human idea-having! I have to take measures to keep myself from buying too many things online, the cravings for shopping super-intense, ones that have made me fall into overdraft more than once, spurred me chasing after freelance writing jobs in order to support them, and made me the University's record-holder in packages received through the post office. All the while everything in my head tells me that I'm gorgeous, brilliant, brave....Sometimes I laugh for no reason at all. It's fun, somewhat, but there's an undercurrent of danger, and it is exhausting after the first few hours.


Depression for me lasts longer, from a week to around ten days, depending. That's when I'm the most likely not to show up in class, and the main reason I have disability accommodations to reassure professors that I'm not just skipping for the sake of skipping. I want to spare all of you some of the ordeals high school's more stringent attendance policies caused: me sobbing uncontrollably in class over getting a low grade on a test or someone making fun of me, panic attacks of hyperventilation and stammering, the almost irresistible compulsion to curl up in a ball under the desk. Not only do I not learn things very well in such a condition, but no one else does either. A friend who has similar issues once joked with me about the difficulty she has excusing herself to classmates who want to know where she was: "I had to go to...Mars...to...butter my....cat." We've since made that a code when one of us is having a day like that, because sometimes it's difficult to talk directly when you feel like your blood has been replaced with cold paste.


My defenses against these things are many. I take seven pills a day, at different times, and avoid alcohol and significant amounts of caffeine because they might make the medication less effective. I deal with the shaky hands, dehydration, fatigue, and excessively vivid nightmares the medications have as side effects as best I can. I walk downtown to have an hour of talk therapy once a week. I also talk to a psychiatrist on the phone once a month so he can keep prescribing my medication. I crochet, or write, or call a friend, or play silly and mindless games to take myself away from the darkest hours. If I want to scratch or bite myself, I draw (or have a friend draw) butterflies on my arms that I name after loved ones, which I must keep alive by avoiding self-harm. I remind myself that there is a real me that is not chemicals in my head, that is a constant thing even when layers of confusing emotional noise muffles it, when I feel lost and doubtful. Most of all, I never let myself be ashamed, and hang onto hope that each day will be a day I can survive.


Sunday, February 5, 2012

Creative Nonfiction Piece #1

Mind the Gap

You grew up loving nights like this, your Khun Yai, your maternal grandmother, lying in bed next to you and your favorite cousin close by to talk and giggle. But you are now in your teens and so is he, your Nong (term of endearment for younger person) Bom growing tall and quiet and out of that nickname. You will never call him anything but Bom to his face. It would be too much of a break from the children you were, nestling in a cave under Grandma's desk with a pillow barrier and a blanket stuffed partially into the drawers to hold the makeshift curtain in place, chasing one another with Super Soakers to celebrate the Thai New Near where everyone splashes and pours on each other, nationwide all-out water fight for three days. You still call him Bom, an initially meaningless syllable, combining his parents' nicknames of "Burm" and "Om" into a portmanteau that is for you a symbol of fitful communication but slow and steady love. He is getting to be Jakrapon Sanguansook, though, on university entrance exams and military draft forms and a driver's license. You are not sure how you feel about that.


The hotel room is clean and chilled by overly aggressive air conditioning, you and Khun Yai on the large bed and Bom on the unfolded wheeled cot. There was a time when it was acceptable (and realistic) for all three of you to lie in bed together, or just you and Bom, poking each other and whispering jokes long after you were supposed to be asleep. You remember the last time you took a bath together, like the fall of Paradise and coming of original sin: suddenly, the naked bodies that had been so comfortable and easy, even if they were slightly different shape, had become shameful, and you had to hide from one another under bubbles and foam, fig leaves being in short supply in a Bangkok bathtub. American kids mocked you for innocently sharing such memories, differences in culture another reason why you have generally measured your social life in amounts of isolation, but that does not take away from your wishing sometimes that you and he were small again and could fit under the desk, in the bathtub, in the bed.


He's awake. You don't know why you didn't see it before. Khun Yai is doing her usual impression of a gentle chainsaw, so you shouldn't speak; she gets up at three each morning for some bizarre reason and needs her sleep now. It was always her job to reprimand you for telling riddles and stories too late into the night. Not much of a problem anymore.


You have so little time together these days. You live in America now, instead of closer like Laos or China. Your school holidays never synchronize, and his schedule is crammed with tutoring, special lessons, the army reserve training mandatory for all Thai boys and optional for all Thai girls. He is so quiet, now, too, reserved in his smiles. He might even have a girlfriend - he certainly does look appropriately hip with his skinny jeans and graphic tees, fingernails on his right hand grown long so he can strum the guitar with them. You don't know how much you mean to him anymore. He's one of the most important people to you in all your life and you spend perhaps twenty days out of the year with even a chance at glimpsing him.


So you reach across the gap between your beds with a tentative hand. He reaches also and takes it. The air conditioning tries to punish you for going beyond the crisp linens and fluffy comforter, but this is not important. The time is not important. You were allies against his parents and sister - she was always their favorite - and you were each other's anomaly, someone so far removed from everything else in your life and yet a great constant. A friend. His hand is warm. The fingernails press lightly into your palm, not enough to hurt, just enough to remind you that they are there.


Finally, you whisper, "You know you are my brother, right?"


And he says, "You are my big sister."


You are not sure how long you hold hands. The crickets and geckos continue their noise, but you do not say anything else. In the morning your hand is back by your side. You never speak of this to each other.