Tuesday, November 15, 2011

IT'S MINE! DON'T TOUCH!

So I work at a bank where it's almost as important to get new checking accounts as it is to run a transaction properly. In fact, it may be more important to get new accounts than to be accurate. Not only is it important, we get bonuses based on how many people open up accounts. I just got a taste of my first bonus and I'm hungry for more. I've never been commissioned based, but it's definitely profitable.

So today, I was helping someone who didn't have an account with us. I tried to softly sell her on an account: she politely declined. I went back to my desk to run my transaction; I was in drive thru and didn't have a station up front where she was. I come back to my customer and find the closest teller giving my customer her card and telling her to come back to her whenever she wants to open that account.

Now, I know, normally, you'd want to hate this teller. How dare she, you reply. But I like this teller. I like everyone I work with except for one person. And I felt more hurt and betrayed than anything else. And I felt like it was time to step up my game. Coming from a sales background, I know what this means. But this whole interaction spurred something much deeper in me.

I have "a thing" about my stuff. I don't like it when people touch my stuff without asking, eat my food, drink my drink, touch my station, use my cups....this could go on and on. I get nervous, edgy, and very angry. And this teller was touching my stuff. Now, I don't know why I've always felt this way. It's not that I didn't learn how to share in kindergarten; I share quite nicely, or, at least, I'd like to think so. But when someone takes something of mine, especially without asking, it triggers a chain reaction of thought and anger so quick, so powerful, and so violent that I hardly know myself when it comes. It takes everything in me to not say something, to throw something, to scream. It's just one checking account; there are plenty others. There's more food; there's a store down the street. Cups are reusable; it doesn't get damaged by someone else using it. But this irrational fear often pops up. And the inner kid in me screams, "IT'S MINE! DON'T TOUCH!"

Is this part of being borderline? Or just being mentally ill in general? Or am I just not mature enough to handle the basics of sharing?

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Being Told I'm Not Normal Enough


I've just been told by someone else diagnosed with a different personality disorder that I don't have a strong enough perception of reality in my view of life. How is that for pot calling the kettle black? I'm done with people. I'm done with trying to date people who always leave after a couple of weeks. It makes me terribly sad. I hate being told that I need to "double down" on some therapy. I know I'm not perfect. But who are you to judge where a person is at in their mental illness?

I don't live with my family. I maintain a full time job. I pay all my bills. I feel like I'm coping relatively well with my diagnosis. And it's not like it's easy or something. I feel like I'm accomplishing something by getting to work on time. Hell, just getting to work is an accomplishment some days. I'm just so fed up with trying to explain myself, my position, my mental illness. Just because you're in more therapy than I am does not give you the right to tell me that I'm more fucked up than you. You're no professional. You've only talked to me a couple of weeks. Why am I wasting my breathe on you?

And now my sadness turns to anger.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

I'm Scared of Myself

So I've started blacking out randomly. Sometimes I've had a few drinks. Sometimes it's just when I take my Ambien. But I think it's my Ambien that's key. At least, that's what I'm telling myself. A psychotic break or alcoholism would be too much to take right now. I know this job is stressing me out. I'm having nightmares almost nightly. I wake up sweating and remembering terrible feelings of dread, fear, and death.

I don't remember making my last blog post. That scares me. I know I've had conversations with people that I've completely forgotten because they remind me of them later. I promise to go places and to do things for people. Maybe my drinking has gotten out of control. Or maybe it's just taking Ambien way too early in my night.

On a positive note, I woke up really early this morning and was quite productive. I picked up my meds for the month and then took myself downtown for a nice walk. Downtown is where most of the tourists congregate because it's where the history is and where the beauty is. And I love to walk downtown. So it's what I did with my morning. And the smells of the houses and the marsh and the feel of the breeze made me so happy. I listened to my iPod most of the way, but when I didn't, I loved catching the conversations of a passerby. Sometimes they were tourists or tour guides talking about the history. Sometimes they were locals, rich locals, by the way, walking their dogs and making small talk. I felt like I belonged and that I stood out like a sore thumb all at the same time. It was refreshing and kind of uncomfortable. But I've heard that you should do one thing that makes you uncomfortable every day. I hear that saying a lot with regards to yoga.

I don't have a therapist and I have a new psychiatrist that I just don't like. I guess it's time to shop for another psychiatrist. And maybe a therapist this time. I just don't like going to therapy sessions. They really bore me. And it's makes me completely uncomfortable to talk about my problems to someone I'm paying. Something about therapy really bothers me. Oh well. Maybe it's time for a change.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Emotional Eating

It's so easy to fall into a trap of overeating and emotional eating. I believe most of my overeating comes from emotional eating. I just eat to fill some void, to feel something, to feel important. The feeling of full is like being drunk for me. I love to drink because I feel empowered by my drinking. I feel nothing can stop me. I'm invincible. And stupid for thinking so. Why do I need such crutches? But, most importantly, how do I get rid of these crutches? Any advice?

Thursday, November 3, 2011

My Borderline

I put a lot of my mental illness into tangible form very often. I refer to "my borderline" whenever I refer to my mental illness. The jury's out as to whether this is a healthy or unhealthy thing. For example, I'll often say, "My borderline doesn't like change," which means that change really upsets my personality disorder. I truly identify with being a borderline. Perhaps because I don't have an identity outside of it. Or perhaps because that's one of the characteristics of a borderline: lack of identity. 

It's not that I want to identify with being ill. And I think we are ill. It's all a matter of managing this illness. But I feel that I've found a community of other borderlines and so, at least online, I'm quite comfortable identifying as a borderline. I'm not alone, like I was in the past. Ten years ago, when I was diagnosed, I felt quite alone. 

My family did not appreciate their daughter/sister being determined mentally ill. They still don't really accept it. Hell, I didn't want to be labeled mentally ill either, at the time. I rebelled against it for a good year before I came to terms with it. It was like killing the "healthy" facade I had of myself, even though I was no where near healthy. After some time and lots of reading, I came to understand borderline personality disorder and eventually accept it as my diagnosis. It was only then that healing could really take place. 

So now I own my borderline. I have control of it, at least for now. But I feel that control slipping. And that thought makes me nervous. 

How do you refer to your mental illness? Is it "your bi polar" or "your borderline"? Or is it something completely different? Or none of the above?