Behavioral Crisis Center: An Excerpt

As promised, here is an excerpt from my first manuscript of my 1st experience in the Behavioral Crisis Center.  Please note, all of this is truth.  It is a pretty scary place.
I was then taken not to the E.R. area like last time but beyond it to an area I knew nothing about… The Behavioral Crisis Center.  The sign above the monitored doors were metallic and nice looking but they hid the blank depressive state that lied beyond the doors.  Buzzed in, Jimmy and I followed the nurse. 
I was then shown to a room.  The walls were as neutral as possible with no decorative trim.  The only object in the room was a twin size bed centered on the floor.  The bed had a slight appearance of hovering.  The mattress was topped with blue vinyl.  No headboard, no foot-board.  The only decor to the bed were metal hooks for the sole purpose of strapping you down.  No sheets or pillows were provided to me.
The security guard left his bullet-proof glass cube and entered my room.  He dropped a plastic bag on my bed.  A nurse followed with a stark white with blue design hospital gown and blue pants, size XL.  The guard then proceeded to tell me to go into the bathroom and change putting all my clothes and belongings in the bag.
I entered the bathroom and was somewhat shocked at what I saw. For one, the guard stood outside the door, there were no locks. The second thing I noticed was the lack of glass mirror so those like myself would not break it and try to slash our wrists. The mirror was made of metal and you would need a strong Philips head screwdriver to attempt to take it off the wall. I guess I should be happy there was still a toilet and not just a  hole in the floor. In one corner was a shower stall with no curtain. Once again, the room was as neutral as possible.
I don’t know why they couldn’t add color. A burst of orange here, a splash of green there. No, just beige and plenty of it. In fact the only color I noticed was the blue vinyl that adorned the beds.
After I changed, I knocked on the door and the guard opened it, took the bag and made sure I went back to my room where Jimmy was sitting. I was unsure of what was going to come next. The bed still bare, I laid down and attempted to rest as anxiety still riddled my body. I started to shiver, not from nerves, but from the cold temperature in the room. When the nurse came back she informed me that I would be talking with a psychiatrist and a social worker that evening to see what exactly they would do with me. I felt as if I were in limbo. I kept praying they would come soon. I was desperate for help, hopeless, worthless, empty.

I asked the nurse if I could have a blanket as I was freezing. My teeth were chattering. She smiled and replied yes and that she would bring me two. She returned with the blankets and asked if I were hungry. I nodded and replied, “A little.” She said she would return with a tray of food and to eat as much as I could which in the end didn’t amount to much.
As I lay there, Jimmy and I listened to the other patients. The woman next to me kept getting yelled at by the guard because she was leaving her room. She whined incessantly to use the phone to call her young son as he was going to bed soon. Over and over, “Please, please let me use the phone. I promise I’ll be quick.” The guard told her no, the phone was off use to patients unless it was for setting up plans for picking up. Within the next five minutes she left her room, the guard yelled and she pleaded once again for the phone. This cycle repeated over and over almost the whole night.”

Not scary enough yet… It gets worse.  You’ll just have to read my book when it is published.  Maybe I will post another except at a later date.

Floating Above…

This poem was going to be published in Stigmama.com’s poetry slam this month but due to unforseen circumstances, the site and FB page have been taken down.  It is about my suffering during postpartum… How I was somewhat there conciously but couldn’t do a thing about it…

I will publish it here…

Floating Above
By Stephanie Paige

Floating Above,
Looking down at this woman,
Unrecognizable to me,
Almost a corpse,
A programmed robot,
Going through life’s motions,
Void of feeling,
Loss of an energetic soul.

Floating above,
Looking down at the newly born,
Seeking the warmth,
Holding up tightly fisted hands,
Crying for her love,
Yearning to be held.

Floating above,
Looking down at this forlorn man,
Hands on head,
Thoughts flowing,
What should be do?
Knowing aid is needed,
Confused on what comes next.

Floating above,
Looking down at this woman,
Wondering why she sits alone,
Why she does not rush to the babe,
Why she is silently voiced,
Why she avoids the man…

Floating above,
Looking down on this woman,
Realizing this is me,
First step to getting help,
Apathetically hugging man and child,
Admitting depression, anxiety,
Admitting myself into hands medically trained.

And, I am republishing my poem from Monday about being a Foster Mom after my foster son was removed…

A Foster Mother’s Love
By: Stephanie Paige

I cried tonight,
Salted tears down my cheeks,
Tissue in one hand,
Picture of a family never to be in the other.

I am staring at you,
A small tot with a blank face,
Gripping my shirt,
Thinking protect me, hold me, love me.

I gaze at your cherub cheeks,
That dimpled when you smiled,
The petite hands that reached out for mine,
Holding on to love, a new emotion.

I cried tonight,
Mother’s Day and I feel incomplete,
Sharing happiness with your sister,
While a piece of me flies miles away to you.

I trace the curvature of your face,
And pull the picture to my lips,
Kissing your innocence,
Hugging you from afar.

I hold the picture in an embrace,
Just as I did you many months ago, many moons ago,
Squeezing tighter hoping that when my eyes open you will be there.

I think how a few months time,
Turns into a lifetime
Of guilt, shame, blame,
But ultimately a Mother’s love eternal.

I realize your happy face no longer dwells in this home,
But continues to live and love in another,
Taught to you by a family that will never be.

I place the picture back in the envelope and tuck it away,
Another day, a needed cry,
Thoughts of you still floating in my mind.

I am Mother no more physically,
No more hugs, light kisses on cheeks,
No more soft foot falls and shirt grips.

I know even with all the loss
You changed my chemistry, made my heart whole,
Made me a Mother for a second time,
Loving every part of you,
An infinite feeling, never to be changed.

Reflections of Mother’s Day

Yesterday was Mother’s Day.  It was the first that should of included a little boy.  It was the 9th that has included my daughter.  Overall a great day, I could not stop thinking of Tyler.  Fostering a child is not an easy task.  A task that those who participate in know winds up with the loss of a child you grow to love just like one that is yours.  We did not go into fostering.  Tyler was legally free and would’ve been ours if not for Mental Illness returning to me.  So now I have learned what it means to be a Foster Mother the hard way.  It hurts.  It hurts loving a child so much that you can no longer hold, kiss, embrace.  Foster parents have a strength that is immeasurable.  I gave my heart to him and part of it still resides with him. 

I present a poem for my readers today:

A Foster Mother’s Love
By: Stephanie Paige

I cried tonight,
Salted tears down my cheeks,
Tissue in one hand,
Picture of a family never to be in the other.

I am staring at you,
A small tot with a blank face,
Gripping my shirt,
Thinking protect me, hold me, love me.

I gaze at your cherub cheeks,
That dimpled when you smiled,
The petite hands that reached out for mine,
Holding on to love, a new emotion.

I cried tonight,
Mother’s Day and I feel incomplete,
Sharing happiness with your sister,
While a piece of me flies miles away to you.

I trace the curvature of your face,
And pull the picture to my lips,
Kissing your innocence,
Hugging you from afar.

I hold the picture in an embrace,
Just as I did you many months ago, many moons ago,
Squeezing tighter hoping that when my eyes open you will be there.

I think how a few months time,
Turns into a lifetime
Of guilt, shame, blame,
But ultimately a Mother’s love eternal.

I realize your happy face no longer dwells in this home,
But continues to live and love in another,
Taught to you by a family that will never be.

I place the picture back in the envelope and tuck it away,
Another day, a needed cry,
Thoughts of you still floating in my mind.

I am Mother no more physically,
No more hugs, light kisses on cheeks,
No more soft foot falls and shirt grips.

I know even with all the loss
You changed my chemistry, made my heart whole,
Made me a Mother for a second time,
Loving every part of you,
An infinite feeling, never to be changed.

Grieving The Loss Of…

How do you recover when the person you grieve loss of is… You.

In the beginning I grieved the loss of Tyler.  Many tears flowed because that little boy left my house.  They flowed for my loss of him.  They flowed for Jimmy and Sophia’s loss of him.  It was like a death even though he is still very much alive.  Weeks of tears…

And then they stopped with the help of medication and therapy.  Therapy aided in helping me realize he’s fine.  Then why did I still feel a loss?…  Why was I still grieving?… Why do I still cry every now and then?…

And then it hit me, I am grieving the loss of me, of who I was.  What do you do when you can see your perfect self by delving into memories that occurred only months ago?! 

I call her Alaska Stephanie.  She was an amazing woman, in the best health of her life physically, mentally and emotionally.  Strong, finally confident in herself.   She knew what she wanted.  Happy with her figure and it’s flaws.  Finally able to not care what others opinions of her were.  Ready for new challenges with a smile on her face.  After all, she conquered the zip line and survived.  A Warrior, overcoming Depression five times and off all medication.  A determined spirit.

Alaska Stephanie is only within a finger length reach but I feel as if I lost her already.  I feel as if she will not return to me.  It hurts because the memory of her is so vivid.

I’m constantly told not to dwell in the past, that is where Depression lives.  But, if I forget the past then I am cutting all lifelines with her, my perfect self.  What to do?  Thinking about her is like a double edged sword… Good because I strive to be her again, bad because it saddens me at how much further I need to go to obtain her.

I’m a long way off from being her.  Still stuck on medication to live day to day “normally”.  Dependent on pills.  Scared of others views of me.  Struggling physically.  Having self image hate.  Craving her existance. 

How do you recover when you grieve the loss of you?