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Friday, July 31, 2015

Best Buddies

I am going to be a Best Buddy.  I signed up and now I am just waiting for the interviews, background check, and matching processes to proceed and I will be a Buddy!

"Best Buddies" is an organization that matches one-on-one friendships for people with intellectual and/ or developmental disabilities to a "buddy" who does not.  To be a Best Buddy, you need to spend time with the person twice a month and make contact with them once a week for at least a year.

I will be a Best Buddy to someone with Down Syndrome.  Why did I choose for my buddy to have Down Syndrome?  Because people with DS are angels on earth to me.  

After my aunt had a bad encounter with a person with DS when I was very young, I was afraid of those with DS.  But, that didn't last long, and I figured out that people with DS are the most kind-hearted people on the planet.

For a long time, I wanted to adopt a child with Down Syndrome.  I didn't want to have a "typical" child.  I wanted to specifically parent a child with DS because I always see all the good things that people with DS can do and what awesome people they are.  When I met my wife, I was still struggling with Bipolar and Anxiety, and even though I'm doing much better today, we have decided to just parent our dogs instead.  But, the thought still lingers.  

One reason why I love people with DS is because I love their features. Male or female, they are absolutely the most beautiful people to me.  They have the most generous and accepting souls I've ever known.  

I know that people with DS have the same emotions, feelings, and moods as the rest of us, but there's really just a wonderfulness about them that makes me want to be around them.

I don't really have any friends, other than on Facebook and through a computer screen, and I've always longed to have a friend with DS. So, I'm going to be a Best Buddy.

I'm very excited to be a part of this person's life and have them be a part of mine.  It is something that I've always wanted and now it's going to happen.  And I'm thrilled!


Thursday, July 30, 2015

Rest In Peace, Tommy

I haven't talked to my family, except my sister via Facebook messenger, and my mother via email, in six years.  On Tuesday, my sister sent me a message that my cousin, Tommy, took his own life early that morning.  She wanted to let me know, and she told me that he wrote his last words on his Facebook page. I saw that it was public, so I read it.  He was 32 years old.  A veteran of Afghanistan.  He suffered with mental illness, namely severe depression and substance abuse, for many years.  I had thought that he was better now.  That is the last I had heard about him.  I didn't have any reason to think otherwise.  

Mental illness runs in my family on my mother's side.  Tommy was my mother's brother's son.  His father, my uncle, struggled with alcoholism for many years, but got well and has been living a wonderful life for a very long time.  Until now.  Tommy's services are today, and I can't even imagine the heartbreak that my uncle and his family are going through right now.   

In my family, it was always me who was really struggling with mental illness. I attempted to kill myself about five times.  Now that I am well, I am so glad that I did not succeed any of those times.  I understand what it's like to be suicidal, to think that the only way out is to end your life.  He said in his final words that he was sorry to anyone he had hurt.  He said that he didn't want to hurt anyone anymore.  The thing is, he never hurt anyone so much that they couldn't forgive him.  He was a great guy.  He didn't hurt anyone so much that he needed to take his own life.  He also said that he wanted to stop hurting himself, and that he was severely depressed and could not conquer substance abuse.  I believe that he just didn't want to hurt anymore, and that's why he took his own life.  

And, although I am far removed from the situation, it hurts because I totally get all of it, and I am probably the only person in my family who truly gets it.  But my family knows what it's like to be on the other side of a suicidal person.

I feel terrible for my uncle and his family, and I feel bad for my own mother.  No, I don't talk to her much anymore, but she and I both know that she could have been in this same situation years ago when I was trying to end my own life.  She could have been the grieving parent that my uncle and aunt and Tommy's mom are now.

There are no words to express how sorry I am to my family.  And even if I could come up with some, my family wouldn't be helped by them.  I haven't talked with them in so long.

I can only say that I completely understand why you chose to end your life, Tommy.  I wish you hadn't done it, because you were such a great guy and you had so much to live for.  You are indeed loved by many, including me.

I want to end by saying that if you are struggling and think that ending your life is the only way out, PLEASE get some help!  The National Suicide Hotline is 1-800-273-8255. They have compassionate, trained volunteers who will not judge you, but will offer you support and help!  Or call someone, anyone, who can help you.  In the comments of Tommy's suicide post, there were tons of people who offered to help him and talk to him.  

Rest in peace, Thomas Ladd.

Sunday, July 5, 2015

Normal isn't just a setting on a washing machine to me

I am a very fortunate person. I don't take any day for granted, because I am so grateful to be feeling the way I almost always feel these days- normal.  

Many people don't understand what it's like to FINALLY feel normal after so many years of being sick, suicidal, not comfortable in my own skin, anxious, freaking out all the time, and depressed or hypomanic every second of the day.  And I DO mean every second of the day. 

It was torture, truly. I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy.

About three years ago, I started to feel better.  I had been married to my wife for two and a half years at that point, and was totally and truly okay with myself being a lesbian and happy in my relationship with her.  We had come a long way since the beginning of when we first started dating.  Our marriage was so much better than it had been and I was so happy about that.

The first thing that really helped was that the medication I was on really worked, and then I decided to go on a meditation retreat.  I had seen a documentary about Vipassana Meditation on the Oprah Winfrey Network and I knew it was something I wanted to try.  I found a center about an hour from my house and signed up to go for ten days in June of 2012.  It was rigorous, but it was only sitting and meditating and I was allowed to go at my own pace.  

I only stayed for 8 days, but it was great!  When I came home, I felt so much better, like my head wasn't buzzing as much and my thoughts weren't racing anymore.  I was able to focus better.  It was amazing.

Then, I took up running. I started out slow, with just a training program of couch to 5k and that helped me so much, too.  I eventually got to where I was able to run/ walk a half marathon (13.1 miles) and eventually ran 8 of them in about two years time.  The serotonin and endorphins that were released when I ran really helped me have better, more stable moods.

In August of 2014, I was feeling so much better that I decided to volunteer with NAMI with the In Our Own Voice program.  I go to various places like colleges and hospitals and give presentations of how I am living well with Bipolar Disorder, Anxiety Disorder, and Borderline Personality Disorder.  

During these years, I was in therapy, taking my meds responsibly, and had decided to stop communicating with my toxic family, and I have been getting better every single day since 2012.  

It was not easy, and I had to stop working outside of the house to do it, but I am living well now.  It took a lot of work, and my wife has been by my side the whole time.  

When I say that I've been there in my presentations, or just to people in general, I really mean it.  I've been to hell and made it back.  It was totally worth it, too.