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My Story April 08 May 08 June 08 July 08 August 08 September 08
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Location:
276 So. Mill St.,
Tehachapi,, CA 93561
My Story (I’m Still Standing) By Trish Guterez In 1973, I left U.C.S.B. as a young art student to battle schizophrenia in over eleven mental hospitals. I was so disabled that I didn’t understand the confusion and complexity of my illness. I heard voices, hallucinated, and received every medication possible to help lessen the symptoms. I remember entering the psych ward of Glendale Adventist Hospital at age 21 in Glendale, CA and receiving a shot of Thorazine, which was a drug that made my hallucinations worse and numbed me to any stimulus surrounding my spirit. The nurse, Susan, said to me as she drew up the shot, “Confused?” “Help me God,” is all I could say. I was more than confused. I was in hell. I drooled, shuffled down the corridors of the hospital, and wondered what a hell it was to battle mental illness. I was too sick to even cry. I would scratch the words “help” into my plate with plastic forks etc. and pray that God would take my life. But God knew I could handle the pain. Not only did I make it through the roughest period of my life, but also I went on to speak for the many mentally ill patients who could not speak for themselves when faced with the same situation I was. I spoke in high schools about the importance of taking medications, and fighting the negative stigma attached to receiving a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia. Schizophrenia, as I later learned, was a serious mental illness that plagued over 1 million Americans and resulted from an over-abundance of serotonin in the brain. I was on every drug under the sun: Navane, haldol, thorazine, tegretol, lithium, (which made me gain over 80 pounds!) depakote (which made my hair fall out and come in super curly…) seroquel, etc. and many more which I can’t remember. At one time, I was on over twelve medications, some anti-psychotics, some mood stabilizers-many that I don’t even remember (That, too, is a side effect of some of the anti-psychotic drugs, memory loss.) I can remember flopping around the floor of the hospital like a goldfish out of water because I went into convulsions. The first fifteen years of my recovery are a blur to me because I was so very sick and I felt like an overmedicated zombie, a guinea pig, in a scientific laboratory. But I remembered a line my grandfather told me which was, “When you reach the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on.” That is, in fact, what I did. Cogentin was then added to my list of medications which helped the horrible tardive dyskonesia which caused rigid muscle contractions in my legs. Time is a great healer, they say, and I guess just waiting it out and flowing with the grain proved to be the answer to my prayer. In the eighties, I was well enough to start a career in music and I played in almost every club in I was asked in 1990 to be a part of the “Recovery Vision” team in I am so indebted to my case aides, and case managers at College Community Services for all the help and confidence I gained throughout their support during the time I was so ill. I remember having a hard time making it through the day on a shoestring budget and wondering if I was ever going to make it through life in general. I started going to the My family is responsible for much of my recovery too. My father spent over half of his retirement trying to find a cure for my illness. But a cure was never meant to be. All I could do is master the coping skills I learned from my jobs, my case managers and Schizophrenic’s Anonymous. I have longed admired Joanna Verbanic for here heroic endeavors and starting Today, I am employed with College Community Services helping at the The difference today, is that I’m living a success story and loving my life in every way. I love creating paintings, making jewelry, writing short stories and meeting the challenges that life offers. I know that God was right. He knew He couldn’t give me more pain than I could handle. I not only made it “through the rain,” I’m not just “existing,” I’m learning to live, really live.
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