Cry Out Loud: Living With Mental Illness: An Autobiography

Author:   Sue Cromie
Publisher:   Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
ISBN:  

9781478362302


Pages:   146
Publication Date:   14 August 2012
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Cry Out Loud: Living With Mental Illness: An Autobiography


Overview

It seemed that I'd been having episodes, particularly of severe depression, since I was only just a wee girl, but I wasn't diagnosed until my mid-twenties. I didn't know what was wrong with me and felt relieved when I was finally diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder, a serious mental illness. At least it proved I wasn't going mad! I knew it couldn't be normal to spend an hour each day contemplating the advantages of carbon monoxide poisoning over a quick leap off a high building. So after years of going it alone, I wanted the ride to stop. I wanted to get off. The cycles were coming too fast and furious and both my physical and mental capacity were frightfully compromised. I was exhausted. But I chose to write about it and this is what makes my story unique: Cry Out Loud relates episodes of in-the-moment depression, mania and psychosis, all common elements of mental illness.To tell my story I have to admit that Bipolar Disorder is like anything else. You can make it the centre of your life or say it's only part of it. However, apart from wanting to publish every detail of my most intimate moments, I don't really want to make a career out of being 'Bipolar'. I want to treat it with respect and do what I can about it. Just get on with life. Yet it won't let me do this and therefore, I feel the need to tell you about my ongoing turmoil.Throughout Cry Out Loud, I also share with you my near-death experiences. I've been close to death a number of times. Self-inflicted? Yes. Fighting for my life? Not really. I didn't want to live. In fact, I should have been dead. But some strange twist of fate meant that I lived to tell my story.Throughout my years of living with mental illness, I believe I have earned the right to share this story with both those who also suffer from a life-shattering mental illness or for those who want to learn more about and understand the complexities of mental illness. Despite often being in a debilitating and deteriorating state, the growth I experience over a number of years is remarkable.Although still constrained by the effects of my illness, the outcomes of such incredible hardships and personal growth are both enlightening and rewarding to those who find themselves on similar paths. I invite you to come along on a journey with me, one that will take you through the exhausting experiences of my life so far. Step inside my mind and body as I am inflicted with a soul-destroying mental illness. Experience the degree of suffering and learn how life-shattering it can be to live day after day with an illness such as Bipolar Disorder. But just as importantly, discover how, through much hardship, there may also be a light at the end of the tunnel. So gain some insight into this serious mental illness and share in the pulse of my recovery. I am pacing, pacing fast, pacing faster and faster. I have just spent the past two minutes banging my head against the glass cage of the nurses' station window, to no avail. I feel like a child needing to throw a tantrum, but not wanting to hurt myself. So what is it that I want from that glass wall and those untouchable people behind it? I feel an incredible, smothering anxiety. I want desperately to run, scream, jump through the window and run for my life. Or maybe run away from my life. Yes, that makes much more sense. I just want my body and mind to rest, but I don't want any more tranquillisers. However, at this precise point in time, it seems as though a prescribed overdose of valium is all that will work to stop the irritation, agitation and discomfort I feel. It's a degrading, horrid sensation to be intentionally seeking attention. But I'm feeling suicidal. I want to cry out loud but can't. There's an overwhelming need to rip my irritable, awkward self from my pacing body, hang it all out in the sun to dry and hope that it's ready to wear in a co-ordinated fashion again by the morning.

Full Product Details

Author:   Sue Cromie
Publisher:   Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Imprint:   Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.204kg
ISBN:  

9781478362302


ISBN 10:   1478362308
Pages:   146
Publication Date:   14 August 2012
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Author Information

I didn't set out to write a book. I mean, it wasn't on my 'Bucket List' of things to do in my life. It just happened. There I was in the Intensive Care Unit of a psychiatric hospital wondering how the hell I was going to pay my mortgage. The thought of a best-seller seemed to be the solution to end the compromised and helpless state I was in. That's where it all started. No other best-sellers to my name! I grew up in Melbourne, Australia. Academically, primary and secondary schooling was a breeze. Socially, I was quite the lost little soul. It wasn't until I was diagnosed with a mental illness in my mid-twenties that my life started falling into place, or falling down around my ankles, I'm not quite sure which. By that time I was in a managerial role in medical research at a major Melbourne Hospital. I was rocking to and fro - being a high-achiever one moment to a very sick individual the next. My diagnosis sent me plummeting downhill for a long and difficult struggle. Fourteen years later, after much hardship and soul-searching, I am back on track. Although not quite ready to take on the world, I can now add 'author' to my list of achievements. It is too difficult to discuss 'other achievements' when you've had a mental illness for so long. You don't feel as though you've completed anything satisfactorily because whatever it is you've tried to do has been hindered by your illness. I like to think of myself as a loving family member and friend, but I haven't always 'been there'. So too with being an aunt and Godmother. I've missed out on so many special occasions. I've obtained three university degrees but have been too unwell to make the best use of them. My biggest achievement therefore is probably this autobiography, because I have finally come through with healing to applaud and enormous insight to cherish. Additionally, I hope that through my honesty, I have helped the reader to understand the enormous difficulties faced by people living with mental illness. I can now hope for a more settled future and without hesitation be proud of this autobiography. I can hold onto this graduation piece and hopefully move forward in life. I may continue to have the occasional step backwards and am certain to have side steps more often than I would like, but I will always have, in my own words, a story that hereby states I have made one giant leap forward.

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