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The Dopamine Flux
Member Since Jun 2010
Location: Ardenweald
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#1
i just wanted to say something...
as some or maybe all of you know im half black and half hispanic. well i tried to bring up my schizophrenia with both side of family before but both want to keep it extremely hush hush. but the different cultures of my family have different opinions from each other. the black side of my family seems a little more sensitive to it. i went to a family reunion and learned once that my cousin was once dxd as bipolar and has a brother with Sz supposedly although she thinks its really ptsd. and i saw a little girl at the family reunion with autism. also learned a few months ago my cousin is on disability for seizures. the hispanic side of my family seems more scared of me. when my mom once told them last year i was on haldol injections for my dx my aunt asked if i was gonna hurt anyone. BUT my cousin and i had a long talk about her being in a mental hospital once or twice and her being diagnosed as bipolar. but we both agreed that theres a few black sheeps in the family that the family wants to keep pushed out of sight OR keep the secrets hidden. and just make it looks like the family is perfect. idk how to deal with this. i wish my family was more open to my i guess mental illness __________________ "We're all born to broken people on their most honest day of living"
The Dopamine Flux www.thedopamineflux.com Youtube channel https://www.youtube.com/user/MozePrayIII |
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Axiom, Erti, Sometimes psychotic, Terabithia, unaluna
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Comfy Sedation
Member Since Sep 2012
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#2
i grew up in an environment where my family didnt talk about emotions or anything. even after my dad died...it was taboo to talk about him and what happened. i was taught to hide my emotions and deal with them when i was alone. i would cry in the shower or after everyone went to bed. i was basically emotionally neglected all my childhood. my dad died right after my 10th birthday and i didnt know all the details about what happened to him until i was 16 and my mom wrote me a letter about it.
it took me a really really long time to be able to talk about how i was feeling. it just felt so wrong to me. it has gotten a LOT easier though through much work in therapy. so anyway yeah, i hid my mental illness because i thought thats what i was supposed to do. even though there were clear indicators that something was not right with me in my early teenage years no one said anything about it and if they did it was hurtful. they didnt understand. it was only after i ran away when i was 16 that my mom took me to be psychiatrically evaluated. im not really sure how many people in my family know about what happened with my former therapist. i know my mom and sister know. i suspect my grandmother knows. they might all know. the thing with my family is they talk about things involving someone to each other and not to the person it happened to. __________________ |
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Sometimes psychotic
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Member
Member Since Jan 2014
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#3
My mother disowned me. My best friend no longer speaks to me. I'm on my own. Good luck.
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Axiom, costello, Erti, Loial
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The Dopamine Flux
Member Since Jun 2010
Location: Ardenweald
Posts: 43,644
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#4
thanks junk. thats hard to hear. why do you live where you live now? is it a residential treatment facility?
__________________ "We're all born to broken people on their most honest day of living"
The Dopamine Flux www.thedopamineflux.com Youtube channel https://www.youtube.com/user/MozePrayIII |
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Comfy Sedation
Member Since Sep 2012
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#5
Quote:
i am working on transitioning out of this program. my regular T left the program in august. so iwill continue to see him when i leave. __________________ |
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The Dopamine Flux
Member Since Jun 2010
Location: Ardenweald
Posts: 43,644
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#6
Quote:
__________________ "We're all born to broken people on their most honest day of living"
The Dopamine Flux www.thedopamineflux.com Youtube channel https://www.youtube.com/user/MozePrayIII |
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El Psy Congroo
Member Since Aug 2014
Location: UK
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#7
Quote:
My Dad just doesn't understand it at all & doesn't ask about it at all. It wouldn't be a problem but it's just like he denies it really. I think it's just a coping mechanism for him. As for my Sister... I barely talk to her. We used to be quite close but then she moved away & everything became about her. She never talks to me unless she wants something. Also, now she has her own family & I think the time has passed to get back to the way things were before now I am ill. She just doesn't know what to say to me ever. I'm not sure if that's because we never talk, or because of my illness but I suspect a bit of both. I was really open with the one serious girlfriend I had though... I think in some ways I see the misgivings of our family way & don't want the same for myself in the future. I still find it hard to express emotions though, certainly not helped by the cognitive effects I have at the moment. Our family is caucasian middle class if that gives any bearing to the thread topic. I think it's more to do with having two working parents, one of whom was away quite a bit whilst I was younger that had more of an impact on that side of things. __________________ The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again... "To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive." Robert Louis Stevenson
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junkDNA
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#8
I can totally relate to the cultural thing with mental illness.
I come from a multiethnic family that includes Black, Jewish and Japanese and when I talked to my dad about my issues, he got really angry with me. Like it was my fault. He is very hush-hush about it and doesn't want to me to talk to him about it at all. My mom's side of the family is mostly Creole and when I talked to her about it, she was also hush-hush at first, then eventually learned to understand better. But it was the same conversation with her, except she believed that I was possessed by evil spirits and that I needed to do some sort of ritual or something to get the spirit to leave my body. Something like that, I don't quite remember that was a long time ago. The thing is, my mom studied psychology in college and even majored in Child Psychology, yet she was really ashamed of me having a "mental illness". But yeah, I noticed with people in the schizophrenia group that I used to go to, the people were pretty much all white and they all told all of their family members about their schizophrenia and there was no problems at all for them. It was like their family just accepted it and didn't care so much about what other people would say. |
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The Dopamine Flux
Member Since Jun 2010
Location: Ardenweald
Posts: 43,644
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#9
i also have a feeling white families accept the schizophrenia better but idk...
__________________ "We're all born to broken people on their most honest day of living"
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Princess Tutu
Member Since Jun 2011
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#10
My family is white... it wasn't so much as hush hush... it was more of my mom complaining on how taking me to these appointments was an inconveniences to her. She basically said one day that if anyone needed to go to counseling it is her.
Then there's my ex boyfriends family who is Hispanic. They were more accepting of my mental illness and did stuff to help me get the help that I needed. Then again my ex boyfriend suffers from depression and anxiety and his father basically said, "what do you got to be depressed and anxious about?" |
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junkDNA
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The Dopamine Flux
Member Since Jun 2010
Location: Ardenweald
Posts: 43,644
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#11
my moms hispanic and says "what do you have to be depressed/stressed about?" too
__________________ "We're all born to broken people on their most honest day of living"
The Dopamine Flux www.thedopamineflux.com Youtube channel https://www.youtube.com/user/MozePrayIII |
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The Dopamine Flux
Member Since Jun 2010
Location: Ardenweald
Posts: 43,644
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14 867 hugs
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#12
my dad is black and personally has become more understanding of my schizophrenia because he has seen me get paranoid and picked up by the police many times. and sent to the hospital and heard of the things ive done. but hes the only one really. hes the one i always talk to you guys about on here
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Grand Poohbah
Member Since Jan 2013
Location: USA
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#13
My family has a long history of mental illness, so the topic is talked about openly.
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Princess Tutu
Member Since Jun 2011
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#14
Hmm maybe it's because parents don't want to feel like they failed at raising their children. My exs mom is more understanding seeing that my ex is morbidly obese and that can be a cause of his depression (though I think it's more of a symptom).
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Legendary Wise Elder
Member Since May 2013
Location: Chicago
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#15
I think this is more of an age thing than a race thing....it's like you don't have to work, you don't have to worry about feeding your family etc...so compared to them they think you have no worries but of course dealing with a chronic MI create its own stress that can easily be be beyond work....next time ask if they would like to trade see if they pick their supposedly more stressful life or yours...if they say yes, hand them a haldol...(not really since that's against the law but seriously wouldn't you want to.....I know I would)
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Princess Tutu
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#16
^ That totally makes more sense then what I said.
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