Dotty

A wry and often humorous look at one woman's struggle through life.

Browsing Posts tagged Health

Insomnia

2 comments

Is a strange ‘thing’ which hits without warning. I have had ‘real’ (as in recognised medically) problems with sleep for the last year or more, but the actual fervent desire to do anything but sleep strikes intermittently. At 9pm, I am as any other person: winding down, tidying up, making ready for the next day, flicking TV channels, chatting on Twitter… and then at around at 10.30pm I know it (sleep) is just not going to happen.

I will find any excuse not to make ready for bed… there will be a list to write, a plan to make, someone to chat to: the joy of Twitter in particular is that there are friends around the world to pass the time of day with… all the time.

When I put words in quotes – please understand that I mean nothing more than I can’t find the real word which belongs there. I know there is one. A particular one. But it is locked away: it is happening more and more – I find myself talking to professionals half my age (my sons’ teachers, speech therapists, for example) and I lose my vocabulary. If I were working today I would be earning 4x their salary. I would be driving whichever sports car I chose: fully expensed. I would not be shopping on eBay for my clothes (and indeed shoes). I feel reduced – and yet by night, occasionally, full of life, spark, wit, verve: all those things by which I used to be valued.

My twilight world is a remnant, a scrap, a valuable memory which cannot be discarded. I knit egg cosies (truly), I sew patchwork quilts, I read blogs and blogs and more blogs until I feel so enthused with projects and equally sick with inadequacy that I cannot move.

Finally – when the world stands still at about 5am (a time I longed for when working when I was on call from 6.00am until 5.00am) I will stagger into bed and feel the welcome cool sensation of my pillow.

Insomnia – party time it is not.

Health

168 comments

I am bipolar. When I was first diagnosed 4 years ago I would say that I suffered from bipolar disorder – no wonder I spent most of the time depressed. I actually prefer the old non-PC term of manic depressive: it conjures up a much more accurate image of the torrent of energy surging in and around me at the upper end of the scale, and as for depressive: well, there is little to say … too depressing. I’ve been MD for years – since I can remember: from deciding one day (6 weeks before my A-level exams) to leave school, to walking into an Audi dealership 16 years later, standing by the new TT convertible and saying to the assistant ‘I’ll have this one, please’. In between were years of overspending (40 shift dresses, anyone?), overconsumption of alcohol, hiding in bed for whole weekends before being forced out to function ‘normally’ at work and a general rollercoaster of a life. It was the most fun – nothing was impossible, but it was heart-wrenchingly miserable: sometimes all within the course of one day. The diagnosis came initially as a relief, then as a millstone. I was clever, bright, had never taken drugs but was now tarred with the mental illness brush. It didn’t seem fair… and of course it isn’t fair – but what is? Today I accept the label as something required to treat the chemical imbalance in my brain – it does not remould me. In fact, I have met some truly remarkable people through this imbalance: friends and professionals (my GP and Community Psychiatric Nurse are heaven-sent). I have found out who my true friends are (isn’t that always the way?!), but I also think that I have become a better, less judgemental person.