Redefining My Life
By Veronica Feeney
My struggles with emotional and mental problems began at age 12 when I experienced
my first nervous breakdown. At age 20, I was diagnosed with major depression.
By the time I was 30 that diagnosis had changed to chronic major depression
with Generalized Anxiety Disorder. Later, ADHD and OCD were added to my diagnoses.
At age 40, and after three suicide attempts within two years, my therapist
began to suspect that I suffered from Bipolar Disorder. After lengthy testing,
it was determined that I did indeed have BP and my medications were changed
accordingly. I found some relief in knowing why I behaved the way I did and
having medications that seemed to make a difference.
My relief was to be
short-lived, however, as a man I loved very much committed suicide by hanging
eight months later and I was the one to find him. For the next six months
my life went into a tailspin of intense pain and sorrow over his death, complicated
by the divorce I was going through at the time. The PTSD I suffered as a result
of his death took over my life and it became almost impossible for me to function.
Brushing my teeth, combing my hair, taking a shower, or fixing meals were
almost insurmountable tasks most days. Gradually it got better and I was able
to leave my apartment, started doing things with friends again but I still
felt safest at home.
Thanks to a very loving
and understanding partner I was able to work through more of the anxiety I
felt and start living a somewhat "normal" life. This relationship
was to last for a year and a half and was very instrumental in helping to
bring me out of the shadows.
This fall I enrolled
in college again and began work on a second undergraduate degree, double majoring
in Multimedia/Web Design and Computer Graphic Design. I still have difficulty
concentrating, I still have an exaggerated startle response, and I still have
problems with feeling worthless at times. I find myself becoming irritable
when I don't live up to my own expectations and angry about being afraid to
develop a new support network of friends. I am fortunate; however, to have
a very large support network of online friends who are also survivors of a
loved one's suicide and this group has been very important in keeping me alive
for the past three years. I also have a psychotherapist I respect and admire,
who works hard with me to unlock the mysteries of my mind.
I have been blessed
with two sons and a daughter-in-law who are the most precious people in my
life and their belief in my ability to succeed is a driving force for me.
I have a loving family who, even though they may not completely understand
the nature of my mental illnesses, have been an immense source of support
in my struggles to redefine my life and become the person I want to be.
I still wish it were
easier living with mental illness than it is sometimes, but I know I have
some responsibility in making that happen. I could be more compliant with
my medication regimen than I am at times. I need to develop better eating
habits and sleeping schedules. And, I need to avoid sabotaging myself by inviting
people into my life that distract me from the things most important to me.
I am a caretaker by nature and have a tendency to overextend myself when I
find myself in a situation where there is another person in my life whom I
feel needs nurturing.
Life is an ever-changing
process. It is also a growing and learning process. Each day I learn more
about who I am and what I want from my life. On most days I feel I am capable
of making my dreams come true. I don't want to be defined as a mentally ill
person. I am a person who lives with mental illness and functions to the best
of my ability on any given day. Living with mental illness indeed has its
challenges and I want to keep meeting them head-on.