I had government insurance last year, and lost it. It's been a year without meds now. I was doing alright for a while, managed the symptoms through routine and physical activity, but I'm really struggling this month. The catatonic phase lasted for so fucking long I barely even recognized it was starting. But I'm seeing the altars again, the shadow people, social interaction is starting to become unbearably anxious, I feel like the person in my brain watching me fry the egg. The lines going between everything. One of them is watching me.

And this psychosis wave is fucking terrible compared to my last one. When shit started popping off for me, it was this dream like euphoric mania, where I'd see things like tree leaves on a color gradient, or start hearing full songs just start playing out of nowhere. The only way I can describe it is feeling like a main character of a play. Not in the sense that I'm particularly important or unique, more in the way that it felt like whoever was watching wasn't a stalker but like a film director, picking when to play songs. I used to hallucinate friends I hadn't spoken to in years, and would occasionally get to have chats with "them". This all was extremely unhealthy, but at least it was pretty easy to cope with.

It felt infinitely funnier back then. As time has gone on, the thought irregularities have become darker and more disruptive. First episode lasted really long before the mania crash, but this just feels like already being in the mania crash and it only has lower to go

I know I need to be on meds, but I haven't had money or insurance for it. America wants schizophrenic people in psychosis and homeless.

  • ReadFanon [any, any]
    ·
    9 months ago

    For real.

    I'm going to speak a bit vaguely so I'm not putting out too much information but the region I am in has an anomalously low ADHD diagnosis rate due to a big player's influence and their skepticism towards ADHD. You can probably guess what the stats are like for illicit amphetamine usage in the same region.

    Like if you take a demographic of people who are predisposed to addiction, who are especially prone to addiction when they aren't appropriately medicated, and who happen to feel a whole lot more normal when they take stimulants and then you put an effective blockade on them accessing appropriate medication... it doesn't take a PhD to figure out what happens next.