TheBanyanTree: Crazy on Planes

Sally Larwood larwos at optusnet.com.au
Sun Mar 11 16:36:09 PDT 2012


Me too!

Sal

Sent from my iPad

On 12/03/2012, at 9:21 AM, B Drummond <redd_clay at bellsouth.net> wrote:

> Bravo, Monique.  If you were on a stage, at this point I would be on my feet, clapping, and shouting, "Bravo!".
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
> On Mar 11, 2012, at 5:18 PM, Monique Colver <monique.colver at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> Yesterday’s cursory review of the news was full of mental illness stories.
>> If by full, I mean there were several. There were also the old standbys:
>> War, famine, the economy, politics, but there were also stories of people
>> lost in their own minds.
>> 
>> 
>> There was a video of a flight attendant losing it on a plane, before the
>> plane was in the air. I clicked on the video, and watched several minutes
>> of passengers holding up cell phones to capture the activity and the
>> screaming as the flight attendant was restrained in the front of the plane.
>> The passengers were avid to capture anything on their cell phones that they
>> could, and occasionally they’d comment on what was going on. Also,
>> occasionally, they’d laugh, as if something particularly amusing was
>> happening.
>> 
>> 
>> Because there’s nothing funnier than witnessing a person losing their mind.
>> I use the term “losing her mind” loosely, because I don’t know if she was,
>> I don’t know what happened, and I don’t know what will happen to her. I do
>> know, having witnessed such breaks myself, that for the person that it’s
>> happening to, it’s pretty damn horrible. It’s frightening, it’s scary, and
>> when it happens one can’t really imagine any other reality than the one
>> that is happening right then, at that time, in that space. It is their
>> reality, whether it bears any relation to reality as the rest of us would
>> define it.
>> 
>> We are a wonderfully compassionate people.
>> 
>> 
>> We’re certain that sort of thing won’t happen to us because, after all,
>> WE’RE not crazy. It only happens to crazies. Only other people. Is that why
>> some of us laugh? Because we’re so safe in our own reality that we don’t
>> need to consider those in pain as people just like us?
>> 
>> Sometimes when I’m in an uncomfortable situation I’ll laugh. If I’m nervous
>> it relieves the tension, or it’s a nervous habit, or it’s one of the ways I
>> cope with pain. Stew and I often laughed about his mental illness, but we
>> were in the thick of it, not watching from a distance.
>> 
>> 
>> I don’t know why people laugh when someone else is in obvious pain. That’s
>> what mental illness is, after all – it’s pain, and because it affects who
>> we are, how we act, what we do, it scares us. It should scare us. it’s a
>> scary thing. But it’s scariest for the person experiencing it, that much
>> I’m sure of, as certain as I am that one should never end a sentence with a
>> preposition.
>> 
>> 
>> I’d like to say we shouldn’t laugh at people in pain, but then I’d be
>> accused of telling people how to act, and I don’t have that right. That’s
>> true. But I would like to know why we laugh. As someone who has looked out
>> over the precipice, I can’t imagine having the certainty that I would never
>> have a loss of mental health. Maybe I’m missing something because of my
>> brain chemistry (and here someone will tell me that there’s no such thing,
>> but they can believe what they want and I’ll believe what I want), and
>> maybe if I had that absolute certainty that crazy people are always someone
>> else, then I  would understand.
>> 
>> 
>> As long as I’m on the subject, as much as we pity the mentally ill and tell
>> ourselves we’re not like that, why do so many then want to characterize
>> themselves as crazy? We try to  one-up each other with stories of how our
>> family and friends are crazier than your family and friends . . . Maybe
>> crazy is cool? As long as it doesn’t manifest itself as seeing things that
>> aren’t there, magical thinking, major depressive episodes, mania, paranoia,
>> psychosis . . .
>> 
>> 
>> We want to be crazy, but in a good way. But with crazy, you don’t get to
>> choose, do you?
>> 
>> 
>> Should I ever have occasion to suspect I may become psychotic, I shall send
>> out notices in advance in the hopes that everyone will gather round and
>> capture the moment with their smart phones. So there’d be proof, because
>> what fun is it being crazy if you can’t prove you really went there?
>> 
>> 
>> It’s like having your passport stamped when you’ve been to a country you
>> didn’t really want to visit, but did anyway.
>> 
>> 
>> Do make sure I have your contact info on hand. You’d hate to miss it.
>> 
>> 
>> Monique
> 



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