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Showing posts with label therapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label therapy. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 May 2015

Marvellous Medicine? What is Private Hospital Care for Depression like?My Week.

It’s the end of my week off, hospital done and back to work next week.

Tomorrow I’ll be writing another #dayinthelifeMH post, and adding it to others’ contributions, but in this post I’m reflecting on my experience of taking time out for my depression (as I knew I needed to), seeking treatment for it, and going back to normality (whatever that means – I guess work and living) afterwards.

"Okay, I need help, time to take the mask off for a while and deal with this."

My experience of hospital is of private treatment for mental health patients with a variety of conditions, and it’s private because I am incredibly fortunate to be able to work for a company which provides, as a benefit, private health insurance. I can’t talk about public healthcare for mental health as I’ve never had it (see previous post for more details). What my private mental health coverage means is I have a psychiatrist and a one-to-one therapist I see, and in-patient or day-patient treatment which I can also make use of – depending on the severity of my depression at a given point, and also a fair amount of paper work which my psychiatrist, therapist, key worker (another therapist with whom I make appropriate treatment plans) and others complete to make the case to the insurance company that I should get approval for the treatment we believe I need.

Thanks very much, I'll take all that money from you right now...I need treatment

I knew that I’d be struggling after last weekend and a variety of external matters contributing to my worsening depression, so I took the step to see my psychiatrist beforehand and ask for the paper work to be submitted requesting day care at hospital for a couple of weeks (because it’s always easier to ask for more upfront than go back and ask for more later). Luckily my case was accepted and covered by my insurer. It’s not possible for me to pay for it privately, even on what I know is a really good salary. It’s just too expensive – something like £500-700/day, which, to be honest, if I were well I’d far rather splash out on a new pair of gorgeous Louboutin shoes as a massive extravagance (and a one off, not 5 pairs in a week, although if I ever win the lottery…).

Shoes fit for any Superheroine

The fact is that I might be able to pay for just one day of care at this amount, but I just wouldn't be able to pay for more, without going into debt. Money worries have always been a contributing factor to my anxiety and depression; when teaching I couldn't afford to feed myself without using my credit card (on £17K/year with London rents and prices) and I longed for a day when I would be able to pay my bills and eat, and socialise, without getting further and further into debt. Now that time has come, I feel physically sick at the thought of going back to that place. I cannot go back there. It would certainly worsen my health – probably both physically and mentally, as I know they’re connected (and I describe below).

When Depression Debbie comes calling, she's packs a punch.

Anyway, to hospital. My experience of private day care (as opposed to inpatient care, where I would stay in hospital) is to travel to hospital from home and to attend a number of groups every day which aim to educate and support people like me going through a difficult period of mental illness, whether that be depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar, borderline personality disorder. I attend groups which my keyworker and I determine will best suit my needs.

Time for support group. Let's share our troubles and support one another.

The first group of the day is support group, where I and other day patients sit in a confidential environment to share how we are feeling, what issues we’re struggling with that day and what we think we will do about them. We have to go around the room to introduce ourselves and ‘check in’ with our state of mind and feelings. This is helpful since many people are ‘new’ to the group each day. This really all comes down to insurance – if you’re covered for a particular day you turn up that day but not on days when you’re not covered. In the last week I met at least twenty people I had never seen before (and a couple I already knew). We are all taking what we can get. The people I met varied every day, so there’s always something new to talk about.

Time to fight our illnesses together. Pow!

In the hospital environment, the support group is guided by a therapist – in our case the therapy manager – and this helps us to dig a bit deeper with the problems that we’re overcoming, whether our illnesses have been triggered by a family matter, work, other pressures or a mixture of all of these. I love support groups because I don’t have to take notes or apply particular therapeutic techniques, but sharing with others is a kind of release, and hearing and participating in group discussions about issues often help me to unpick some of my own personal struggles and find that I am not alone or that I have new options I had not previously recognised.

Hello Demon Difficulties. Please go away.

The other groups are harder. This week I attended a schema group, which educates us as to our core needs as “newborns”, and how our core needs (whether met, overly met or not met) lead us to ‘maladaptive’ coping strategies – i.e. things that we do to compensate for whatever our upbringing and childhood environment was like. For me there’s a lot to learn about the way that I behave now as an adult which links back to being bullied as a child and feeling isolated. It is fascinating and useful, but it is also very hard to think back to those times where I was in so much pain and had no means of understanding or coping with the situations into which I was placed. You can make friends at hospital - because you may bond with others. It's a matter of choice, though, because if you do make friends you often talk more and more about your and their struggles, making the experience more intense and potentially tougher.

Memory Lane. Tough as nails and stronger than steel. And ever growing.

Other groups look at cognitive behavioural techniques (conscious recognition and rational working through) for anxiety, depression, and other important areas like anger management and assertiveness. Practising recognising our negative feelings and the ways that we automatically respond to them, and hearing how to apply different thinking patterns to try to retrain ourselves is what we do in this group.

I can see you, negative thoughts. I'm ready to fight.

For example, if I text a friend and don’t receive a text back, the lonely and isolated, bullied child in me might apply an automatic response, linked to our old ‘fight or flight’ mechanism. I don’t receive a reply = I’m somehow in danger of getting hurt here; = My friend doesn’t like me anymore; = I’ve done something wrong… and so I start to become anxious because of these worries and start becoming  depressed as I wrack my brain for potential incidents in the past where my behaviour might have caused the person to dislike me. (The first – worry – leads to a build-up in anxiety, as the physical symptoms like a racing heart, feeling sick, feeling dizzy may strike in addition to the ‘cognitions’ or thoughts that I described above leading to the feelings – shame, guilt, fear, etc. The second – rumination – leads to increased depression and may include some of the physical symptoms above, but also add sluggishness, a feeling that one is hopeless, a failure (more shame, more guilt, anger at self and others, fear of never getting better.)

In this case, 'A' is very much for 'Anxiety'

When I read the above and tell you that attending these groups leaves me feeling exhausted, I hope that you are not surprised. It’s quite hard for me (and I think it’s hard for others) to acknowledge in the first place that I need help of this level. Unfortunately the part where I get help is far from easy, as I look to past events and their effect on my feelings and depression, and I have to recognise them and confront them in order to start working through those feelings and events to feel better.

I went through this on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, always attending the support group first thing, and following this with other groups. By the end of each day I am drained and sad, probably sadder than I was when I arrived, because it is hard to go through things from the past. However, the alternative – not to go through those things – not to challenge my past and my negative thinking – not to address the deep depression that is overwhelming me – is not to live. And since I choose to live, I choose to get help, even though it’s hard and afterwards I curl up in my bed under the duvet, with pillows all around me, and I tune out with Netflix or my Kindle, or with a radio programme, and perhaps go to sleep for a while.

Support group. Where we share and sometimes laugh together. 
It's good to know I'm not alone.

I took Friday as my last day before returning to work. I didn't go to hospital because I wanted some time to do more tuning out and re-acquaint myself with the land of the living, thinking a bit about work, doing some food shopping, posting some parcels, paying bills and so on. I also spent a good deal of time cleaning (which is surprisingly therapeutic as a physical activity that allows me tune out) and resting in bed with a book. It's also just good not to think about myself in such a focused way - not to work on myself anymore. It's a relief to stop that and necessary in order to dip into a week of treatment and then return to work immediately. For me, Friday was the opportunity to start back into life and lead into the weekend with rest, and with those sad, terrible thoughts not exactly put away, but left for a while to get some air and be revisited in a smaller way at a later date.

And time for sleep while that works away...

I now feel like I’m ready to work again, and I feel rested, and heard. On Tuesday I felt hopeless; on Wednesday more so; on Thursday tired by the whole thing, and on Friday relieved to be away from all that difficulty, but able to recognise its value. I could see the sun and smile quietly at it. I could walk and appreciate the wind (and drizzle!) on my face and be in the world without anger or self-hatred. It’s a step forward. I will keep stepping forward. 

Time to step forward.  And put my head band and shield back on. Obviously.

Tuesday, 5 May 2015

Help, I Need Somebody, Help, Not Just Anybody...Or Any Drug...I Just Need Help...

I've said it before and I am sure I’ll say it again, after I say it here: recognising that you need help when you have depression, and trying to understand to what extent you need help, is incredibly hard.
I wake up most days and sort of mentally poke at myself: “How do you feel today?” “What’s you mood?” “Do you feel depressed?” “Do you feel okay?” “How do you feel about the day ahead?” “What’s your anxiety level?” As I lie there for those first couple of minutes after waking there are usually two different general responses to this: either I feel totally anxious and un-rested after (another) eight hours or more of nightmares, usually connected to the traumas I've recently experienced, or experienced in the past, or I feel okay. 


For two minutes. And then after those two minutes are up, I get to know exactly how I feel, really. My heart can start to sink; my stomach can curdle and recoil inside me with fear or unrest; my head can feel empty or too full, or both. My limbs feel sluggish and exhausted. My heart might start to race and I might start to feel sick at the thought of the day ahead, even if it’s just thinking about having a shower or eating breakfast.

If only it were that simple!

Mondays are the hardest because there are five whole days to get through before the weekend. And it’s not even as if I like the weekend, or find it easier to cope with. Sometimes the thought of seeing friends and putting on makeup and a happy (or vaguely happy) (or just not crying my eyes out and scaring everyone!) is too much to take, and the anxiety that I experience at the thought of this is almost enough for me not to go.

But as always, with all of the above, in 99% of cases I make myself go through with it. I know that I’m supposed to be brave and I’m supposed to get on with things, using all of the cognitive behavioural strategies that I've learned to support myself with. And I have my medication too (even though the anti depressants make my legs shake so badly that even with a sedative I can find it hard to sleep because they won’t stop moving).



Today I’m at hospital about to get help because I realised a couple of weeks ago that I was struggling again and that issues I was facing were escalating and bringing out the worst (or the best, if I look at this from the perspective of my fabulous type A personality) in me. I am going to go to groups that will help me look at my anxiety and depression and try to reinforce all those practical strategies I know I can apply when times are tough.



The day begins with group support, where we all have to name the emotions that we are feeling. Today I feel sad, angry – both at being here and needing to be here - and at the external issues that have helped bring me here again. We all speak our feelings. Usually it’s hard for some people because depression can leave you totally numb, so that the ability to experience any feeling seems untouchable, and incomprehensible. To be able to feel – it’s some cloudy far away concept – it doesn't mean anything.

Sometimes hope feels just like 'tomorrow'...something that never comes.

The best thing about support group is that it’s a free flowing conversation about our struggles, rather than a strategic almost-lecture on how to make ourselves or keep ourselves well. The rest of the day is much more tiring because of the things we need to learn – ways to control our anger, anxieties, how to adopt healthier coping strategies, how to use drama or music to articulate our difficulties.
I don’t know how I’ll feel at the end of the day, but I suspect I’ll feel very, very tired. Being ill is hard; getting the treatment is draining, and instead of the beautiful picture or essay or solved maths puzzle one might take home after a hard day’s work at school, I go home with the raw feelings unearthed by a day of delving into my past difficulties and disappointments, my demons and tormentors alive and well and brought into my consciousness from which ever compartment in my brain’s filing system I had buried them away.




But I have to go to hospital. I have to get help. The alternative is to stop living at all, or to continue with all the terrible symptoms of depression that make me want to stop living. So I go. I’m lucky to have the treatment and support. And I've recognised that I need help. So here I am. I'm getting help. It's another first step.