I accidentely made a large story, but i always do that whenever wherever. My novels are like 800 page's thick.
Well, our symptoms don't have to be the same, but still our stories can look a like. The theme and moral of the story might be the same. I think it's like that for many people with depression or other mental illness, that they somewhere lost control.
Symptoms are ofen difficult to explain to others, even trying to explain depression to someone who hasn't experienced it, will not really give that much understanding. Since i'm a writer, i try to place myself into different perspectives, but there was no way i could comprehend dissociation or psychosis before i experienced it. It's impossible. Dissociation and psychosis are the unknown. Like death in a way. I used to fear the unknown, but i no longer do. I'm also not really fascinated by it anymore, i was always obsessed with the things i feared.
It's kind a funny, just when i got sick with burn out/dissociation, i wanted to go to film school to write films scripts and make a film about psychosis. I became interested in mental illness, drug abuse, and madness, and was reading books by hunter s thompson and was fascinated by 'gonzo journalism.'
Then I became physically sick and had to let that go.
Eventually i did make something out of my old interest, madness & drug abuse, which i now find less fascinating, and story telling became my new one. I really believe people are designed by evolution to have certain skills and the will to do something with it, and find more interest in where the skill's at.
Story telling is where my skills and talent lay at, in remembering and seeing causalities and connections, it was already like that since i was young, and i now have so much experience with madness, drug abuse by myself and the people i've met in Amsterdam, that I kind a became a gonzo journalist. So with that experience i started to plan out a 6 novel story about everything i've been through, combined with fiction, but the core is about what i've been through.
It's not about dissociation, but core theme's of three novels are not being in control of oneself and life, and not be able to reeavulate ones actions, and infact not being yourself. And the other three are about adaptation to an individualistic society while caring too much about the opinions of others and being overly sensitive. I could write novels about dissociation, but you still wouldn't understand it.
I tried to explain dissociation to friends but gave up quickly since i understood there wasn´t a way they were gonna understand my situation. It's frustrating to be not undersood but that also did me good in the end. It put me on my own, and made me a stronger individual, which was something i needed.
So yea, what i've been through and what I still am going through changed me a lot. There are many down sides, cause being ill simply sucks. But there are also upsides.
I´m still functioning quite good, although my previous relapse makes it a bit more difficult. I was always very good at staying in control and function good while being drugged or drunk :D.
I found my passion while I was in the depts. I found my ideal life, how i would lead my life, differing from how many others do it at my age, while i was sick. When I was 17 i tried to live like the social extravert, with many friends, partying and binge drinking, but deep inside i always wanted to live more like a grandpa. A bit in a small world. I want to write, meet friends in small groups, and fall in love with a woman. And for the rest just appreciate the 'little things´, cause i used to be very good at that, untill i got sick at my mid 20´s. I just enjoy life a lot but forgot that in my 20's.
It's really funny, cause my friends see me as this totally different person. Some extravert, while i'm infact more introverted. But i was really good with people.
i guess what i learned mostly was to really know what i want and to not want what others want, and to care less about the opions of others and the mass. I´ve written a novel about the adaption of someone like me to the current individualistic society. I always used to lay my problems at others or the society, but learned during my isolation that my way of reacting to the world was not gonna get me any further, and that total isolation and alienation was'nt a solution. So it´s adaptation.
When I yelled at the shrinks, I was not even comparable to how i was when I was 19. I was always polite, but sometimes even the people who exhibit the most socially accepted behaviour, reach a point in their lives when they just don´t give a fuck anymore. It was the isolation and the physical illness, which changed me the most. The going out of society, becomming alienated, and becomming dysfunctional, was certainly something i needed to become happy again, cause i was like you say 'waiting for something to happen' and i wasn't in control. I also was very depressed, detached, stressed out, fatigued for 1 year without doing anything about it and just waiting for my total collapse, which eventually happened. I didn't even 'google' my quite severe problems. I probably would have kept going on for years without seeking remedies or psychiatric help if i didn't collapse.
I spent one year self reflecting and analysing. It's tough, but i recommend it to people who want to change their life's 180 degrees, to just get out of it for a while and make analysis. writing a semi autobiographical novel gave me a lot of insight as well. Even if you can't write well, it's just really insight full to do. I found out what my problems where and how to tackle them. I learned that i had a couple of preoccupations, like certain obsessions about all my relations with people, anxiety, and caring too much about the opions of others, which were totally useless. You can spend a life time busy with useless stuff.
Now I only need to get my body back online.
Have you already tried any remedies? And watch out with combining SSRI with products which functions are not known, like uridine. Even lions mane i now consider risky to combine with a SSRI. It went allright with me though. Lions mane would be my number 1 recommendation for depression. It did make me hypomanic but i'm also on zyprexa so that evened it out.
Good luck anyways, and this sounds like your average coach but hey : Take control! :D