I’m still here. Life goes on at its decidedly slower pace now that Chris is becoming a self. I haven’t blogged about him in a while, but recently I’ve been getting a flurry of e-mails from mothers seeking my advice about what to do about their own sons and daughters who’ve been recently diagnosed. I can’t just tell them to read my blog (all 912 posts) and expect them to get a handle of how to help their relative NOW. Years ago, an Internet pal told me that the best way to be influential is to write a book, so yes, that memoir I’ve been talking too much about and doing too little to finish, will take precedent over regular blog posts once again, beginning this month.
I’ve been looking over some of my earlier posts and wince at how garbled some of them are. What was I possibly thinking when I wrote THAT? I wonder. A future project for me will be to clean up some of the language to make the posts more readable. (Ref. Weird Al Yancovic’s Word Crimes, “Saw your blog post. It was fantastic! (I’m being sarcastic.) Cause you write like a ‘spastic.”) . . . Better book some quality time with my book editor beginning this month.
Monica Cassani has started a weekly blog post about psychiatric drug withdrawal called It Gets Better. Seeing her post today reminded me that an important part of my blog is to also show people from my own experience with Chris, how it does get better. The person you thought you knew at eighteen or twenty, was probably not a personality, not a cohesive self. The person you see ten years later may the person he or she has been struggling to be all along, defining themselves in surprising ways. Given the right conditions, the caterpillar eventually becomes a butterfly, the seedling becomes a plant. The building up of a personality is for patient people. The results are gratifying.
Chris has been wonderfully productive recently. He’s taken two intensive French language courses and passed his language proficiency exam, which he will need to show to a potential employer. One step at a time. He just got back from a week’s technical training in sound and light for theater productions. Since he dropped out of university at age twenty, he has not wanted to/not been able to, take a course involving assignments and grades and he hesitated to venture far from the nest. What he has done recently should give anyone struggling under the diagnosis of schizophrenia, cause for hope. I don’t see “schizophrenia” anymore. Haven’t seen it for a long time. I prefer to talk in terms of spiritual crisis, maturation, and a finding one’s self.
Keep hope alive, Rossa.
It’s the best gift you can give your son, yourself, and your family.
Duane
Hello Rossa
Please let me know how to contact u as my son is suffering from acute psychosis
Hello, Vijay,
You can contact me at recoverymodel@gmail.com