The betrayed times, part 1

Stanislaw Barszczak; A Patient’s View
The greatest destroyer of peace is abortion because if a mother can kill her own child, what is left for me to kill you and you to kill me? There is nothing between, Mother Theresa said. While Sacha Guitry, the great film director noticing: our wisdom comes from our experience, and our experience comes from our foolishness. In turn Ken Kesey, an author ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ mentions, that the inspiration for a novel came while working on the night shift at the Menlo Park Veterans’ Hospital. He often spent time there talking to the patients, sometimes under the influence of the hallucinogenic drugs with which he had volunteered to experiment. Kesey did not believe that these patients were insane, rather that society had pushed them out because they did not fit the conventional ideas of how people were supposed to act and behave. Eight o’clock every Tuesday morning I showed up at the vet’s hospital in Menlo Park, ready to roll. The doctor deposited me in a little room on his ward, dealt me a couple of pills or a shot or a little glass of bitter juice, then locked the door. He checked back every forty minutes to see if I was still alive, took some tests, asked some questions, left again. The rest of the time I spent studying the inside of my forehead, or looking out the little window in the door. It was six inches wide and eight inches high, and it had heavy chicken wire inside the glass. You get your visions through whatever gate you’re granted. Patients straggled by in the hall outside, their faces all ghastly confessions. Sometimes I looked at them and sometimes they looked at me. but rarely did we look at one another. It was too naked and painful. More was revealed in a human face than a human being can bear, face-to-face. Sometimes the nurse came by and checked on me. Her face was different. It was painful business, but not naked. This was not a person you could allow yourself to be naked in front of. Six months or so later I had finished the drug experiments and applied for a job. I was taken on as a nurse’s aide, in the same ward, with the same doctor, under the same nurse—and you must understand we’re talking about a huge hospital here! It was weird. But, as I said, it was the sixties. Those faces were still there, still painfully naked. Toward them off my case I very prudently took to carrying around a little notebook, to scribble notes. I got a lot of compliments from nurses: ‘Good for you, Mr. Kesey. That’s the spirit. Get to know these men,’ writer mentions.
1.
My name is Leszek Zapolny. I live in Silesia, in Poland today. One day, my such a thoughtful, useful life, there was strained, if not on the brink of … And so I felt sorry for themselves and their neighbors. I so much wanted to cry … tears were right there … missed one small pulse that broke the barrier of the eyelids. Someone said that a man can cross the boundaries of death, although his body is still alive. But if the man is just a piece of wood? Because only he can be all one, whether it is alone or with other pieces of wood. Just how many people, so many ways! Ward beneath us in the same hospital a colleague Adam lay.
– Why they put you? – Ask me again in the corridor. – Grass … – That’s what they put you? – The possession and cultivation. – Is not it a disgrace – lock up people because of what God has given? If he wanted, he never create seeds. How many years you put in jail. Unless you got the year? – ‘Six months, five hundred dollars fine, three years of rights. – Is not that a big turd?’
It was a psychiatric ward near his home. He was treated for depression and anxiety disorders. Diagnosed with a personality and ‘symptoms schizoidal schizoaffective disorder’. Quite recently I read about schizophrenia as a disease, and especially of our civilization. Schizophrenia is a brain disease, just like Alzheimer’s. It cannot be predicted or prevented and is not a moral weakness, character flaw, or a result of poor parenting. Schizophrenia is also not Multiple Personality Disorder. This is a common misconception that has greatly contributed to the ‘schizophrenic stigma’ which makes life for schizophrenics even more difficult.
I became friends with Adam, who told me his story. Before, I hated to be in a psychiatric ward, and I could not stand having to interact with strangers and I hated having to undergo treatment, persists. I hated the feeling that something is wrong with me or that I was spendthrift. There was even some a word fight, when I was there. I was in solitary confinement three different roommates and it was quite pleasant. But there was some therapy sessions each day, it really does not pose a chance to open up more. What were my problems? Severe depression, generalized anxiety disorder, cutting up, mild suicide attempts, suicidal thoughts? My childhood was behind me, it is still only a mother nearby. My friends were too far away from me. He had classical migraines since I was a teenager. My doctor prescribed the medication specifically for my migraines until a few years ago. I always repeated all the classic volume its symptoms: confusion, headache .. The main symptoms usually lasted several hours and caused that I was tired and my eyes too. Migraines are like a concussion and a headache at the same time. I do not remember the night before I went to sleep in a room above the garage. On December 5, 2001 in the morning there was a fire in our house. Two months ago I went with my friend the psychiatrist to talk to a doctor’s just that my mom gave me to the hospital. On December 6 at noon were taken under police escort me to the psychiatric ward of a hospital located in the center of city Dąbrowa Górnicza. I tried to escape but was stopped. The isolation could observe only the lime tree in the courtyard, still did not cease to pursue his monologue Adam. When I got there the first night I could not sleep. The first night I experienced a shock, downloaded from the vicinity of some ‘would-be suicide bombers’ and laid them next to me. Here, the doctor seemed like a mountain, strong and omniscient. After one such night of our long talks I decided to read about schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia is also ‘disharmony multiple personality (MPD)’. It is a misconception that greatly contributed to the ‘schizophrenic stigma’ that makes life even more difficult for schizophrenics. Schizophrenia due to debilitating symptoms, causes doubt and degrees of difficulty to find appropriate treatment for individual patients, schizophrenia is the toughest mentally in their daily lives. The most common symptom in people with schizophrenia experience is that the difficulty would not be able to distinguish real events from dreams and hallucinations. The distinction between reality and imagination, between what is real and what is not true, it is not clear to a person suffering from schizophrenia. They can have a dream or hallucinatory experience, which they do certainly true. Hallucinations are another common symptom schizophrenia. Patients can see a person or thing that does not exist, they can hear voices and sounds, which also do not exist. (Lepage, 2007) Schizophrenics often talk with people who “saw” or refer to the voices that are “heard” as if it were talking to each other. Sometimes we feel uncomfortable with these people, so they avoid. That is why many schizophrenics would lead a lonely life. But it’s so hard to tell them what is real and what is not. Many schizophrenics are still afraid to change. Depression and anxiety disorders often coexist with schizophrenia because of that. Many schizophrenics are presented as cold, retreating people have little or no emotion, avoid contact with others and often get angry or afraid of their loved ones, for no reason. (Gleeson, 1993) They use words that make no sense when talking to people. Suspicion, insecurity, and feeling as if ‘everyone is out to get me,’ are consistent with schizofrenia.

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