Sensing out signs

I’m on my way up. And there are signs—if I look for them, listen to them, use all my senses to detect them—if I don’t, then it’s the lurch in the stomach on the down curve of the rollercoaster that’s often the first sign.

If I’m really paying attention, then I hear it when my assistant says “Aren’t you Miss Polly Productive” when I leave him an enormous pile of dictation tapes, written motion and discovery work, and all the other legal detritus. If I look at my time sheet, I can see that I’ve billed a week’s worth of work in three days, though there’s no need to—I’m just blowing through everything, double time. It’s good work, too. Productive, concise, and necessary. The air’s clearer, the brain’s faster, and I feel more creative—am more creative. I write really well, and a lot, because I sure as hell only need about three hours of sleep.

If I miss that sign, then the next one is this. I’m still Polly Productive—except I’m now Misanthrope Polly Productive. I hate everyone—they’re all out to get in my way, talk with their whiny, annoying voices, bother me with inconsequentials. Every Little Thing They Do Is Enraging. I have road rage. I hate every cashier in every store everywhere who doesn’t blow through the things on the belt with superhuman speed. My critical voice snarks on each person’s shoes, haircuts, grocery selections, each one more worthy of hate than the last. My family and my husband bug the crap out of me, and I can’t understand Why Won’t They Leave Me Alone. There’s no objective perspective on why I’m so irritated.

The physical sensations start as I’m just about to crest from Misanthropic Polly Productive to Downward Spiraling Deirdre Depressed. The strange crown-like feeling on my forehead. That pushing sensation under my sternum. And the sweat. This is weird—but after three or four of these post-diagnosis, post medication episodes, I’ve realized something. When I’m in a high mixed state, and just about to start the long, long slide to the bottom? I sweat. Profusely. And it smells strongly. And my feet stink to high heaven.

Yes, that’s more about me than you want to know, really. But it’s a sensory sign—one that’s so weird that I notice it, even as I’m in the process of that catatonic withdrawal into my head, when the extreme productivity, the crazy irritability, slide by. Crazy has a smell for me, a clear, last-ditch signal. I might not be able to follow my mind all the time, but I can follow my nose. I wouldn’t have noticed it, maybe, if I hadn’t been serious about writing EVERYTHING down in my symptom notebook, but after talking it over with my shrink when I had my lithium toxicity episode, she said… tell me more about the sweating thing. Would I recognize that as a physical sign, even if I’m ignoring the emotional and mental ones? Turns out, I can.

Animals can smell fear. I suppose it’s not as weird as it could be that crazy has a smell that can wake up my animal brain, can trigger that self-preservation instinct that crazy makes it so easy to otherwise ignore. That smell says hey, put the brakes on this thing, slow this roller coaster car down– right now. I should be looking and listening and feeling for signs—but I’ll take the smell if that’s what it takes.

Posted by bipolarlawyer on December 8th, 2008
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6 Comments a “Sensing out signs”

  1. Mariposa says:

    Oh my…you just put into words what it’s in my head exactly…and the past days…I was the Misanthropic Polly Productive!

    If sweating does it for you…mine is terrible body pains…stiff muscles…the type where you can hear me make a sound just by me rotating my head…even when you are meters away! (Okay, exaggeration but that is how it is.)

    I think I need to pay closer attention…I used to collect signs to signal me when I am my way up…but when you mention the sweating part…I just realize maybe I wasn’t too keen with my observation of myself!

  2. Jenn @ Juggling Life says:

    I am so amazed at how in touch you are with yourself and how descriptive you can be. I have never experienced any of this (well I have been known to be a Misanthropic Polly Productive, but that’s just ’cause I can be a bitch when I’m tired and out of patience), but you paint such a vivid picture.

    Are you able to titrate your meds to keep some balance when you heed the signs?

  3. moonflower says:

    i really, really like this one. i love how descriptive your writing is, it’s good to be aware so that we can choose wisely :)

  4. ~annie says:

    Wow. This is amazing. I have never suffered from mental illness, but have family that is affected, so I am interested in knowing about it. I think a lot of us “normal” people would do well to be so tuned-in, too. Thank you for sharing!

  5. Noelle says:

    When I was taking lithium I used to sweat a ton and smell really weird when I got upset (which was a lot, because the lithium didn’t really work for me). I don’t have that problem on Lamictal, thank goodness. Nutty is enough, I don’t need smelly too!

  6. maevel says:

    i am new with having to deal with mental illness, i can really understand where you are coming from… all of a sudden, it’s like a switch has been flipped and it is intense. i’m a bitch, and just completely irrational. i hate everyone and everything. i don’t know what to do. depression and then the anxiety. the medications. oh god. will i ever be in control again?

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