Looking back in anger: A personal reflection on World Bipolar Day

You might as well haul up
This wave’s green peak on wire
To prevent fall, or anchor the fluent air
In quartz, as crack your skull to keep
These two most perishable lovers from the touch
That will kindle angels’ envy, scorch and drop
Their fond hearts charred as any match.

Seek no stony camera-eye to fix
The passing dazzle of each face
In black and white, or put on ice
Mouth’s instant flare for future looks;
Stars shoot their petals, and suns run to seed,
However you may sweat to hold such darling wrecks
Hived like honey in your head.

—from Sylvia Plath, “Epitaph for Flower and Fire”

I have known mania, and the imagery in this poem sparks with an intensity that excites and disturbs. When I encounter the words of one of the many poets known (or thought) to share (or have shared) the same affliction, I often find an undercurrent that causes me to flinch for just a second. Not that it diminishes the beauty or power of their words in any way—it is rather an echo in the dark, a faint recognition flashing by.

Image copyright Joseph Schreiber, 2012

It is World Bipolar Day, and this is the first time I have stopped to recognize the fact. I have spoken in, and around, my own bipolar diagnosis, but I have never addressed it formally in my writing. Even now I find myself uncomfortable discussing it. On the one hand, I am fortunate. I respond well to medication. I am, to use that distasteful term, “high-functioning.” But I do harbor a deep anger toward this condition that was part of my life many years before I finally careened through a brutal month of manic psychosis and found myself committed, and ultimately diagnosed, at the age of 36. I was, in classic bipolar fashion, the last person to suspect that I had a mental illness. Even though I, and those around me, knew something was terribly wrong, the stigma and lack of understanding around mood disorders—not to mention the radically impaired insight the sufferer has when they are ill—stands as a barrier to timely intervention. And then there is the matter of actually accessing care. One almost has to crash completely—by which time it can be too late.

Between my first manic episode in 1997 and the second in 2014, I experienced more than sixteen years of stability. I transitioned, became a single male parent, built a career out of nothing, and eventually became the Program Manager at an agency dedicated to working with survivors of acquired brain injury. I loved my job. Looking back, I can now see how the last few years of that period were marked by an increasing tendency toward hypomania. With my psychiatrist’s support I cut my medication back. And then things started to fall apart at work—things beyond my control, but it fell to me to try to pull things together. Then I started to fall apart at work, until I spiraled into full blown mania. Not psychotic, but it matters little. The damage was done.

The agency I worked for, dedicated as they are to supporting clients with disabilities including co-morbid mental illnesses, treated me with distrust bordering on contempt. My only contact with them has been conducted through a workplace advocate and my insurance worker. When return to work was discussed they refused to consider any possibility that I could work there again. Almost three years later with long term disability finally at an end, they still have my personal belongings.

Nine years of employment and dedication to that job now stand as a gaping hole in my life—a life already filled with gaping holes. And that is one of the reasons I hesitate to talk about mental illness (although I have never hidden my diagnosis). What can I say? Bipolar is not my identity any more than transgender is. Both fuck up your life. Leave wounds that do not heal. Find you fumbling through mid-life with little to show for your years but a lot of things you can’t talk about. And periods of time you cannot even remember.

So this is why I find it hard to write about my experience with mental illness. There was a time, following my diagnosis, that I devoured everything I could find, just as, a year later I hunted for books on gender identity. Two pieces of a puzzle I had inhabited—the periodic mood swings and the persistent, life-long feeling that I was not the female person everyone else knew me to be—had finally fallen into place. I had two, if you wish to be specific, explanations that come neatly labelled and defined within the covers of the DSM. It was, for a while, a source of relief.

Today I rarely read any literature that deals with mental illness or gender. But I am aware, more than ever, of being doubly stigmatized. And, most painfully, within the spaces where you would expect acceptance—in the human services profession and within the queer community. Thus the anger.

And what is this anger? Grief. The deep griefs I carry, layered now with more recent bereavements. It has become, for me, an existential bitterness that plagues me, an inauthenticity that defines the way I intersect with the world.

The legacy of mental illness is this: after diagnosis I was advised not to dwell on the disease, not to talk to others with bipolar; I was not deemed “sick” enough to warrant outpatient support or psychiatric follow up. I was left, like so many others, to flounder in the dark. It would take seventeen years and a spectacular career-destroying crash before I was able to access proper psychiatric and psychological support. I am still lucky. I am stabilized. And the forced detour into what may become an early semi-retirement has afforded me a space to write.

Now I need to find a way to write my way through this weight of grief. And begin to heal.

I’ll leave the last word to Sylvia Plath, with the final (fifth) stanza of the poem quoted above:

Dawn snuffs out star’s spent wick,
Even as love’s dear fools cry evergreen,
And a languor of wax congeals the vein
No matter how fiercely lit; staunch contracts break
And recoil in the altering light: the radiant limb
Blows ash in each lover’s eye; the ardent look
Blackens flesh to bone and devours them.

—You can find out more about the International Bipolar Foundation here, and a prose poem I wrote to honour a dear friend who lost her desperate and brave battle to bipolar last year can be found here.

Author: roughghosts

Literary blog of Joseph Schreiber. Writer. Reader. Editor. Photographer.

13 thoughts on “Looking back in anger: A personal reflection on World Bipolar Day”

  1. It is strange, and doubly wounding that acceptance seems not to be forthcoming from the Queer community. The only explanation I can conjure is that perhaps the wounds carried by those particular people who have let you down make it harder for them to care about people other than themselves. But you are succeeding without them. The journey of healing is a long one, but you are on the way.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks Lisa. I also think that with the fight for marriage equality, there is little energy or interest in fighting for the other challenges facing LGBTQ people, including the alarming depression and suicide rates among some groups—youth, trans people and gay men. I’ve always been an outsider. 🙂

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      1. Here in Australia there’s been a sordid political fight over a schools program to address these issues and reduce suicide levels. The conservatives have had the win federally, but here in Victoria (arguably our most progressive state) the program is being implemented. So with time, if it’s a good program, we should see some results. If we do, it will be much harder for opponents to argue against it…

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Yikes, I just about accidentally trashed your comment! I’m glad you appreciate the my musings—this sort of small piece is much easier that writing a book review. Sometimes I need to throw my thoughts out there, someday perhaps it will work its way into something longer.

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  2. Thank you for sharing your experience, I know it is hard to do since (at least in the US) even with all the advocacy around mental health issues, people who suffer from them are still stigmatized. It’s a real shame that hurts everyone. I hope you find your way to healing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I think the stigma is widely spread. With my last job where I was open about my diagnosis and involved in promoting understanding of mental illness with brain injury professionals, it frustrates me that no one recognized how manic my behaviour was. There was no closure, I was left humiliated. Before that I worked for a mental health association and that was, by far, the most mentally unhealthy (and transphobic) environment I ever worked in—and I had volunteered there for years.

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  3. Thank you for articulating your grief. Tragic that human services and LGBTQ communities perpetrate stigma and discrimination. Glad that you are now stable. I, too, could be described as “high functioning” which resulted in a long delayed diagnosis of bipolar and much workaholism.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I can relate. No one complained when I was doing the work of three people (and raising two kids on my own), but when I cracked trying to resolve a workplace crisis that was not my fault, I took the fall. Am I bitter? Yeah, a little…

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