Happy Tuesday folks! Unfortunately, I haven’t had the best weekend so I thought I would take this opportunity to try to explain what it’s like to have a “bad time” when you have BPD and Bipolar. It’s easy for me to explain factual things that have happened but explaining feelings and emotions is a lot trickier. It’s difficult for a lot of people but trying to verbalise and explain the inner workings of my mashed up brain is quite the foreign concept so bear with me on this one!
On Friday I was already feeling what I would say is flat. My post on Friday already said that I wasn’t all that great. I kept thinking of that dream to try to get me through the day. I tried to use the techniques that I learned in the Mindfulness Group. The key one there was breathing. I know that sounds completely daft but it is concentrated, slow breathing. It’s turning off all electronic devices, finding somewhere quiet and just spending a few minutes concentrating on your breathing, just in and out. Deep breaths. It is so surprising how calming and what a positive impact that can have. It helped a little for me on Friday but I was still feeling as if I could burst into tears.
Nothing had happened on Friday to make me feel like that. I didn’t have a “trigger” (more about them in future posts). I hadn’t seen someone I didn’t want to, I hadn’t had a bad phone call, I hadn’t received any stressful post, emails or text messages. It just happens. It is just a time where you just feel empty, a little numb to what is going on around you and you just feel in pain. The pain feels so heightened and intense and you just try to find ways of processing it and getting rid of it. This is sometimes when you disassociate also to take yourself out of the equation, desperately trying not to feel pain. As you will have probably noted, I am writing this in the third person because it’s easier for me to discuss it if I’m not directly relating it to me. It probably doesn’t help me in the long run but, right now, it’s working for me.
The biggest thing that you have to remember, and for those reading this who don’t have issues themselves but know someone who does, it’s okay for that person to not be okay. Sometimes you do just have to go through it and be in it and not try to fight it. Sometimes you just have to manage it and that’s absolutely okay. You are not being lazy if you don’t do the housework – it will still be there tomorrow. It’s okay if all you can manage is making sure you’ve eaten and taken your medication. It’s okay if all you can manage is picking the kids up from school and getting their tea ready. That’s absolutely okay.
So for the remainder of Friday, all I could manage was just getting through the day. I called Mum. I told her I was having a tough time but there’s nothing she can do to help. I knew it was one of those that I just had to get through and hope that Saturday would be a better day. I made sure I took my medication and I spent Friday evening watching a good old action film on TV (the first Lethal Weapon film to be precise) and then went to bed. I couldn’t wait to get to bed because I wanted to hide but I knew if I went too early, I would be up early on Saturday morning which, if I was still bad, would make the day even longer.
Saturday turned out to be not so brilliant too. I had to go out first thing because the cat had to go to the vets. Thankfully I was there and back in an hour and I knew then I could hibernate for the rest of the day at home and didn’t have to go out of the front door. I had all the supplies that I needed – food and cigarettes and I had more than enough cat food too so I didn’t need to open that front door for the rest of the day. I didn’t.
I knew I had housework to do. I knew I had to start preparing entries for the blog. I knew I had to check my bank account and check that my bills were paid but I had absolutely no desire to do any of it. I started off trying to distract myself and to try to help boost me up by watching some cricket. The 20/20 Blast Finals Day was on and David Lloyd’s commentary (aka Bumble) is always funny so I thought I’d try that. No joy. The longer I watched the cricket, the further I went downward so I curled up on the sofa and adopted another approach. I slept. I missed the first game of Finals Day but woke up to watch the second game. By this point the cat had forgiven me for taking her to the vets and wanted feeding and fussing. I didn’t even do the washing up. There wasn’t much there, I just couldn’t face it.
Not even having the energy to complete the simplest of tasks is sometimes devastating and pushes you further on the spiral downward. I felt exhausted from just getting up and going out the door for that 1 hour on Saturday morning. That was hard work enough for me. Having to interact with the team at the vets and the vet himself and making sure that the cat was safe for the journey there and home. It literally hurt my head by the time I got home. I spent the rest of the afternoon curled up on the sofa just being “in it” I suppose. The waves of pain and frustration came over me but I just continued with the breathing and resisted the temptation of self-harming. That is an achievement for me to not self-harm. I did eat though. Sometimes I don’t know what’s worse.
Sunday was a better day. I still didn’t feel great when I got up but I did feel that I could push myself to at least get the housework done and some of the ironing. I adopted my approach of some very loud rock music to try to boost my energy level. Def Leppard, Thunder, FM and Whitesnake got a hammering and I got the kitchen, bathroom, living room and dining room tidied, cleaned, vacuumed and the floors mopped. I went through the house reasonably swiftly so I built up quite a sweat so I gladly had a shower. Sometimes, that’s a challenge and also I normally self-harm after a shower because I like to be clean before I do that. Thankfully I timed the shower to be quite last minute before going out to see my friend, Jill and her husband Jack for dinner. I don’t have to pretend to be okay in front of Jack and Jill. They have been through everything with me since I separated from Dave so they have seen me at my worst and on the road to recovery. I can totally be myself with Jack and Jill whether that’s good, bad or indifferent. There’s no judgement from them and I can literally just “be”.
Yesterday was altogether different. Although I still didn’t feel like I was ready to swing off the chandeliers, I had to catch up on everything that I didn’t get done over the weekend! That’s when the feelings of failure and guilt can come crashing over you because you know that you had so much to get done and you didn’t achieve half of it. You feel like you’ve failed as a human being, as a housekeeper, as a regular person. Yesterday required more loud rock music to get the ironing finished but I still felt what I call “tetchy”. I couldn’t settle. I couldn’t just sit down. That was the frustration at not completing my to-do list over the weekend and feeling guilty for wasting the two days of the weekend. I know that when I’m “tetchy”, I’ll pace and I want to self-harm. I took myself out of that environment. I called Jill and asked if she would like to go for a walk. It was a beautiful afternoon in London yesterday so we went out for an hour or so and went for a walk in the park. It was what I needed. Fresh air to clear the cobwebs and to let the feelings of frustration and guilt pass and fade away.
I’ve woken up on a more even keel today. I hope that what I’ve written goes some way to explaining what it’s like to have a “bad day” or a “bad run”. Sometimes you can fight it successfully, sometimes you just have to go with it. Unfortunately, you do just have to go through a lot of them before you can really understand what works best for you at managing them. However, the bad runs do always pass. When you’re in it, it doesn’t feel like it but when you’re coming out the other side, you know that you’ve got through another one.
