World Mental Health Day

October 10th was World Mental Health Day, a day that was started in 1992, with the initiative of Deputy Secretary General Richard Hunter. And today I am hoping that in sharing my journey through mental illness, I can be of service to someone struggling with bipolar, schizoaffective, anxiety, or depression. 

November 16th is the annual, local NAMI (National Alliance of Mental Illness) walk, which I will be walking this year. If you feel called to donate to NAMI, here are our (my parents & I) page. Anything from $2-$50 will make a huge difference in the lives of people who suffer, like me. J https://www.namiwalks.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=donorDrive.team&teamID=70786

Your voice matters. You matter. And you are never alone.

~

My journey into crisis began in October‘14 when my then-recent ex-boyfriend called me, leaving a voicemail telling me that our dog Artemis had passed away. This call sent me into a tailwind of emotion including guilt, shame, and so much anxiety. 

Why hadn’t I been there? 

I questioned incessantly on the plane ride back to Minnesota, where we both lived at the time. I had always been there for Artemis, when the guys had traveled. 

Why hadn’t I been there this time? Why did I have to be traveling to see my sister in New Mexico when this had happened!? 

The guilt plagued me like a monster…and did up until about a month ago when I finally let it go and forgave myself for something I couldn’t control.  

Meanwhile, I had made the decision to live in England for a year while obtaining a master’s degree in international business. Really, it was a year filled with avoiding my emotions, whether it be micro-trauma from the time I was young, Artemis-filled trauma, my own inflicted trauma, or boy trauma…but I knew (intuitively) I was avoiding myself. And as Carl Jung so eloquently puts – what you resist, persists. 

(I had also endured a debilitating, career-ending injury to my foot back in May’14 that had severed any chance of playing professional soccer in Europe, which was my dream). 

Safe to say, by the time I got to England in September’15, I was struggling. 

By January’16, I had stopped partying with the girls’ soccer (football) team there. I had stopped traveling, for the most part. I was meditating regularly, introspecting incessantly, and had given up my dreams of becoming a professional soccer player there. 

I was searching for my purpose, but it (God) was telling me to be still and know that he/she/they/it was there. My days were spent perched on my window ledge, on my bed, overlooking the courtyard. I felt called to do nothing. NOTHING? 

You see, I had come from a life where busyness was everything. If I had free time in my undergraduate years, I thought I was going insane…busyness made me feel productive, fulfilled, and sane. Ironically, those times in England from January’16-May’16 were the sanest I have ever felt. 

Throughout these months I felt so alive, but I was also skating on thin ice. Because I was living a master’s student’s life, not exercising, and not “getting into my body” regularly, I lived more and more in my head, and less and less in my body. 

It’s called spiritual bypassing: someone who uses spiritual mantras or practices to avoid facing trauma. In this case, I was using spiritual bypassing to prevent the un-comfortability of my negative emotions to come up. I was so scared to cry.

However, it was not until May’16 when I made the decision to ingest Magic Mushrooms in Amsterdam, that I became full-blown psychotic two weeks later. It was the most terrifying three weeks of my life…I had gone from enjoying Amsterdam with friends to hearing ‘evil’ voices, experiencing full-blown psychosis, and becoming completely delusional.  

I still wonder to this day if I would have suffered mental illness after ingesting psilocybin if I had faced my emotions back when they had happened throughout my life, instead of stuffing them. Probably not. But I wouldn’t change my journey for the world…it is my journey, and although I have suffered immensely, I came out a warrior in a way I never could have imagined I would. 

No matter how many more psychotic breaks I suffer in this life, I will never give up hope that I will one day lead a beautiful life. 

~

After spending this past summer in and out of wards, in and out of psychoses, and in and out of grandiose, delusional thinking, it’s been eight weeks since I left the hospital. And in coming down from this high-energy state, I have suffered from suicidal ideation, guilt, depression, existentialism, and anxiety. 

With the support of my family, God, and PHP (partial hospitalization program) I’m in right now, I can say that I am doing incredibly well. 

~

Thank you for taking the time to read this, and if this touched your heart, feel free to donate to the NAMI page below. J

6 responses to “World Mental Health Day”

  1. Thank you for sharing your story, Bri! I do think that when you share like this it gives hope to those who are on similar journeys, and it helps others know they are not alone in this. THANK YOU! You are a beautiful light in this world. Keep on shining!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Thank you for sharing your heart! You are loved. 🥰

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Bri, you are so loved! I admire your strength. Thank you for sharing ❤️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I love you Beth! Thank you for your words 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

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