(More
wisdom from my new friend Patti Dempster. This was in response to my post, “The
Safety Net,” where I talked about the possibility of going on disability, and
the difficulty of facing the prospect of numerous government agencies, paperwork,
and not working. Once again, thanks Patti – you’re response has led me to look
at my situation in an entirely new light.)
The
depressive voice is great at framing things in the bleakest of lights. As
things went for me I am living that reality you painted and it isn't as bad as
I had imagined it to be. It took me a long time and many, many set-backs to
accept that I was not going to have my life back as I knew it. I racked up debt
maintaining a lifestyle I could no longer afford. I compromised my recovery
pushing myself to work when I should have been focusing on getting well and
nothing else.
I
had to go on BC SA last year for a couple of months while I waited on my CPP
Disability application. Those were very, very hard times. The stress nearly did
me in completely. I was fortunate to get it on the first go around. One small
glitch with the Dr. who contradicted himself was cleared up pretty quickly. It’s
not much money but enough to cover housing and food. Just that was a huge
burden off my back.
One
major learning I have gained is to think differently about work. Think outside
the box. Don't think in terms of 'returning to work' but think in terms of
working differently. Talk to your employer and see how much room there is for
accommodation. Make friends with the bipolar. Partner with it instead of trying
to defeat it. There will always be some elements of it, some special challenges
related to it that you can't ignore. With bipolar there is a vulnerability to
external stresses that will always be around. A fragility to your nature that
the bipolar has expounded. A high maintenance component.
This
is true no matter where you are on the spectrum of recovery. You cannot risk
relapse at any time along the way. Change your benchmarks for success. Abandon
the old paradigms. We don't all fit the same mold. Be willing to invent new
molds and challenge others to allow you to operate and maximize your
contributions in different ways than the norm. You may never be able to fit
comfortably into the norms. That's okay. It doesn't need to compromise your
capacity to work, to give back, to be part of something you love. Customize
your environment. Press your employer and co-workers to accommodate and respect
your unique health related challenges. Your special gifts come at a price but
not such a high price it can't be worked around.
One
more thought. I don’t know if I will find my way back to working for money in
any significant way again. As modest as the amount is that I collect each month
from CPP Disability, it does take the burden of homelessness off the table. Of
that I am extremely grateful. Not being consumed with that worry has given me
the opportunity to really think about the value of work.
I
think it was Melody who mentioned the need to work as a way of feeling of some
value. But do we need to have a paying job to attain that same sense of value;
to be productive; to feel we are giving something back to the world we live in?
Can we achieve those goals, fulfill those needs without being paid? I think we
can, and if we are not in a position to get a paying job then we find other
ways. We volunteer in whatever capacities we can. We look to our left and to
our right and we help others. We use our time wisely and productively while we
stay the course of improving our health and well-being. Again it is about
respecting the illness; Accommodating the special requirements for recovery. We
don’t fight the illness, we partner with the illness and we learn how to live
as one.
These
are the lessons of balance and harmony. This is what it means to ‘walk in
beauty’. Don’t be looking back at what were your benchmarks for success. Look
forward at what is possible and create new, more meaningful and more achievable
goals and pathways to new success.
2 comments:
Thank you. These are wise words for all of us. I find the world very stressful and am always trying to shift the frame to emphasize ways of being in the world that are more inclusive and sustainable. We, individually and as a society, need to change direction, and this post speaks to that necessary paradigm shift.
Oh, and this! http://www.butyoudontlooksick.com/articles/written-by-christine/the-spoon-theory/
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