Thursday, December 16, 2010

Descent Into Madness

First of all I want you to get really worried about that title. It is about me. I feel like I am going mad.

Do you feel a little thrum of panic? A moment of worry? That's good that you got it, thanks for caring, and it was designed to get you to have a little feeling of what it has been for me this week. Repeatedly I have felt like I was going mad this week, and a big part of that is the thrum of panic from considering my oncoming madness.

I think my intellectual faculties are still fine, I'm not going mad from obvious delusion. I am going mad because of feelings. I have too many feelings, and many of them are too strong. It has been difficult to do anything, or more accurately I am protecting myself from myself by not doing anything difficult. On different nights over the last week I have slept four hours or twelve hours, depending on my mood. I have choked down tears while doing dishes and stalked through blustery winds with my mind racing through vast fields of thought, the very image of a madman.

The great concern of course is whether this will stop, will it worsen. Almost everyone at some point uses the words, "I think I'm going crazy" but most people are talking about something else. They are talking about the strain of their mind when faced with difficulty. I have basically no difficulty but I can sit here and watch my mind doing strange things. Why am I sometimes frightened of people in a general sense so that going outside to get the garbage can feels like something illicit, and then whenever I actually talk to people it is easy? The impression of everything is so much harder than the reality of it.

I don't know how much of this shows up. My wife has said that home is a nice place to be, and that I am a good husband, so either she is being fantastically nice during a very hard time, or it's true. It's probably true that for most of us our internal world seems much more frayed and difficult than our outside appearance suggests. In the end this isn't really very much different than being seventeen again, but I already managed to get over the fact that no-one will ever really understand me once in my life, twice seems so unfair (ah, the wail of a teenager again).

Of course, the ironic thing is that by the end of the writing of this post my mood has changed from worry and concern into a desire to giggle at the humor of it all.

4 comments:

Dade Cariaga said...

A very courageous post, Dan. Very courageous, indeed.

Emily Ruoss said...

I do worry. I feel the thrum of panic... please take care of your self and let my sister help. Let her love you. Let us love you.
You will get through this - like you said, you've survived thus far! Good luck riding the waves and surges of your madness. I'm home all the time... call if you'd like help talking you down off the ledge & getting your ass to go get the garbage can from the curb! haha-eh?
sending hugs!!!

Emily Ruoss said...

um... the above post is sent with all compassion and respect, and coming from someone who has spent an entire day in the fetal position in a closet...
more love & hugs...
~e.

Landlady said...

I read "...thrum of panic" just as I felt the thrum of panic. Then it went away... then it thrummed again. I must have been a mother in all my past lives. :)
We are most certainly not our shell's appearance. Most certainly.
I'm thinking of you now, across the miles, with no thrum of panic, but a smile, for all you are and all I've known of you before this moment. May you catch a moment of sweet peace. Or more silliness.