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09-24-2005, 08:47 PM
Editor's note: Carrie and her family, who have lived in the Bighorn Basin for nearly 30 years, wanted to speak candidly about her illness, but did not want to deal with the social repercussions in small-town Wyoming. Her name has been changed to protect their privacy.
CODY - Carrie's emotions were like mismatched puzzle pieces - they didn't fit the world around her. She laughed in the wrong places. "Normal" responses eluded her. By the time she was 12, Carrie and her mother knew she was different from other kids. But when the diagnosis came back "rapid-cycling bipolar," Carrie bucked. "They were basically calling me crazy," Carrie said. "So I decided that I would rather be known as a drug addict or an alcoholic than mentally ill," Carrie said. "I started drinking and doing drugs." Carrie's life has been a roller coaster of soaring highs and plunging lows. Now 25, she has two children, works as a beautician and loves art, writing and rock collecting. She has been in rehab four times. Only recently has she accepted her dual diagnosis as bipolar and a substance abuser. An episode in March drove the point home. "I was on a Robo-high (combining Robitussin and marijuana), and the television started talking to me. I thought I was Lucifer and my family was driving off to heaven and I wanted to go with them," Carrie said. She shaved her head, called a friend and said she had killed her family. She hadn't, but the cops came to check. "By that time, I was ready to listen," Carrie said. She agreed to a voluntary commitment in the Wyoming State Hospital in Evanston. But she never got there, said Carrie's mother, and what happened next inspired her to activism. "The state hospital always is full," Carrie's mother said. "So they kept her waiting in Cody. I knew in my heart that if they were doing this to mine, that they were doing this to people all over the state." Carrie sat in the hospital under 24-hour guard for a week. Dr. Christopher Loewther called the governor to complain. Then state hospital officials said they would release Carrie. "The state hospital said, 'She's not homicidal, she's not suicidal, so we're going to release her,' " Carrie's mother said. "My daughter clearly needed help and they were trying to slap a Band-Aid on a cancer." Carrie eventually got a place at the Wyoming Behavioral Institute in Casper. Then she was discharged and was back in the "nowhere zone" of Cody, her mother said. "It's a zone where there are no available psychiatrists," Carrie's mom said. "There's no follow-up and no help." Carrie relapsed into drinking and returned to the emergency room. Debra Dunn, Park County Mental Health's adult services manager, agreed to take her as a special case, and Carrie was placed in the single respite bed at Hope House. "I don't know what I would have done without Deb," Carrie said. Carrie's mother is involved in trying to get more care to those with mental illness in the region. "We can't go on this way. Something's got to change," she said. She also tries to keep her beautiful, creative daughter out of distress. She cares for Carrie's little daughter; the other lives with her father out of state. "Most of the population doesn't have a clue," Carrie's mother said. "They want mental illness to be simple, but it isn't. I didn't understand it either, for a long time. In some ways, it's easier to admit to brain cancer. But as a mother, you can never give up. Never." For her part, Carrie wants "a decent life without rehab and hospitals," she said. She wants to keep her daughters out of the system. She prays that they won't be bipolar, although she knows they have a greater chance. Carrie wants to make people beautiful and feel good about themselves. "I like being a beautician because you hear other people's stories. Things are happy and rosy, and for that eight-hour shift I feel like a different person. Me, but a happier version. "The last time I had an episode, I thought the war was over, that it was pillow fights and that the world was beautiful. When I'm depressed I want to be in prison or dead. It took a long time to realize that none of that was real. Now I'm trying to get back to reality. "I'm starting to get used to it," she said. Carrie has been on a waiting list to get into the Wyoming Substance Abuse and Recovery Center in Sheridan. http://www.billingsgazette.com/index.php?i.../25-bipolar.inc |
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09-24-2005, 09:27 PM
Interesting article, albeit very sad.
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09-26-2005, 02:36 PM
Quote:
-Nitin <span style=\'color:green\'>(Forum PM, IRC) Dextroverse Administrator</span></span> |
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09-29-2005, 01:51 AM
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Except for lithium, most of the mood stabilizers (anticonvulsants, generally) are better antimanics than antidepressants. A couple of the newer anticonvulsants (lamotrigine? could be wrong on that) seem to have enough antidepressant activity to avoid SSRIs. If you don't lose your liver or get that pesky fatal rash. BTW, if I sound cynical about all this, please keep in mind it's often the least of a bunch of evils. But polypharmacy of this sort is at best rolling the dice. And for people who need it, well, it beats any of the other alternatives. Me: "I can't believe they're making me teach Freshman biology. What am I going to do with a classroom full of 18 year olds?" Pamela: "Try not to sleep with them?" "the shittiest part about the internet is that we can mix baby taunts with heavier concepts, top it off with graphic imagery, and go home feeling like we just did something smart." - d8ff752 |
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10-19-2005, 03:12 PM
B. White is correct.
They always prescribe a mood stabilizer. Then they prescribe an SSRI. Then they prescribe an anti-psychotic. They may start off with just a mood stabilizer, but they'll throw in the others at some point because hey the more drugs they prescribe the more money in their pockets, ultimately. |
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