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Writer's pictureYours Truly

They Don't Call them Asylums Anymore (Part II-Once Upon A Waiting Room)

Updated: Aug 25, 2020


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⚠️Trigger Warning: The following poem contains subject matter pertaining to self-harm, suicide, and involuntary psychiatric hospitalization⚠️

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I don't recall a whole lot

about my first hospital visit.


I know only the

fleeting

keynotes of the experience.


And I'm not just referring to my first...

psychiatric (?) visit.


(I'm not sure if psychiatric is

the right word,

but I find that I often struggle

to find the right words

when I attempt to describe hospitals

and the time I've spent in them.



I'll do my best.)



See,

I had never been to the

Emergency Room for anything before.


(Well,

except for that one time

I tumbled off the changing table as a baby.

But I'm not sure that really counts,

my only knowledge of the event

having come from second-hand stories.)


Surprisingly enough,

being the clumsy child I was,

I had never sustained

any significant injuries

while growing up,

especially in comparison to my sister

who had a daunting repertoire.


When she was a toddler,

she executed a daredevil jump

from the top of the staircase,

breaking her arm as she crash-landed

onto the basement carpet.


While we were waiting

for her to be fitted with a cast,

I remember her doctor told me

to stop misbehaving.


While I can't remember

exactly how I was misbehaving,

I'm sure it had something to do

with the chaos of my temperament,

a chaos that has churned inside me

for as long as I have known.


Over the course

of my high school years,

when I would make several

appearances at the hospital

due to my own brokenness--

the very brokenness that persuaded

the lacerations on my wrists

and my lust for death--

the doctors would,

in their clinical, roundabout ways,

tell me the same thing:


to stop misbehaving.


In the ninth grade--

this here. this is the first visit--

my guidance counsellor and English teacher

had driven me to the Children's Hospital,

which was only up the road from my high school.


Oddly enough,

I had been relatively compliant.


I had gone quietly,

devoid of the defiant uproar

that seethed under my skin.


Perhaps I acted as I did to prove that,

despite, my darkness,

isolating me from the world I knew

would be a grand disservice to me.


Or perhaps I feared

what would happen

if I was to purposely disobey,

that, upon arriving at the hospital,

I would be treated like the rebel I was,

promptly disrobed of my independence.


The remaining details of the visit

have been resolved to vagueness

as time has passed.


I only know my father

came straight from work to pick me up.

Before we left,

the doctor gave us pamphlets--

crisis hotlines,

accessing resources

within my quadrant of the city,

alternatives to self-harm.


The doctor dwelled on this last subject;


if I felt like cutting myself,

I could still satisfy the urge

without actually drawing blood.


I could press ice to my skin

or write on myself with markers--

markers not pens--

or snap a rubber band against my wrist,

which was the method

he had particularly fixated on.


He explained he wasn't too keen

on me snapping myself

all the time, either,

but that it was a preferable

alternative until I improved.


"Doc,"

I wish I'd said,

"If only you knew

how lovely it is to bleed."

 

Image Source:

Red static on television gif. (n.d.). [image] Available at: http://rebloggy.com/post/gif-red-television-static-glow-loop-obsolete/118076755483 [Accessed 3 Aug. 2019].

 
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