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Stop Using the Name of My Illness in Vain

skcasta, February 25, 2019

My husband took me to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico to celebrate our thirty-ninth anniversary. All along the Malecon, the boardwalk, are sculptures and statues. They are all visually striking and thought-provoking which fits the definition of art. Isn’t the purpose of art to entertain, to take the viewer out of their everyday existence for a few minutes or an hour? If every artist in the world only painted pretty red roses and blue skies, the world would be missing out on so much. How about a brown sky or purple grass? That’s the power of imagination. God gave humans the gift of creativity, I believe.

The statues were unlike anything I’ve ever seen. Twenty-foot tall beings made out of bronze with elephant tusks and wearing clown shoes; a bench with big ears; strange-looking children climbing up a ladder to the sky and aliens with laps to sit in had us staring and gawking. I couldn’t look away. Tourists lined up to sit on a butt-shaped seat to have their pictures snapped. My husband Tony posed with a statue that looked like an adult with a child’s face and on its head was a hat with wings just like that old television program The Flying Nun. Maybe that is what it  represented-the power of art to cause the viewer to “fly away.” Who knows? That’s my opinion and everyone has the privilege of interpreting art in their own way. I did notice a statue of a woman golfer. It was done with skill. The human form of a young female was nearly perfect in proportion. But nobody stood and talked about it. No admirers and art critics even paused. It was ordinary. Not really unique, it was simply a statue of a girl swinging a golf club.

What does art have to do with my illness? Schizophrenia. I said it. I’m out of the closet. A woman walked up to us that day and gave her critique about a certain statue. The one that was my favorite, the one of a Plague Doctor, when doctors wore animal masks out in public. During the Middle Ages, doctors believed that the masks would frighten Death away.

The woman walked right up to me almost out of nowhere. At least I hadn’t noticed her before she got in my face. “Isn’t this something? Obviously the guy who made this stuff was Schizophrenic!” Then she walked away.

Why is the word schizophrenic used to describe anything unusual such as art, politics, even the weather? An artist is not automatically supposed to have Schizophrenia just because they used their creativity to make art. The premise isn’t even logical. Only people who have Schizophrenia can be artists, or all artists have the illness; those statements are not always true. So according to the woman, the artist had to have an illness in order to create a sculpture. Who said it was a male artist? Maybe a woman was the sculptor. Maybe there was more than one sculptor.

No one says “Oh! The weather is cancerous today!” News commentators have never called a politician Luekemic or Diabetic or Hypertensive, unless they were actually reporting this as information, not as a description of someone’s personality. Some artists do have a mental illness, but not all of them. Some writers suffer from diseases of the brain, but not all. Some musicians, movie stars, and athletes have mental illnesses, but not all of them.

I wanted to run after the woman and give her a piece of my mind, but the tourists would have seen me yelling and screaming about a word. And it is just a word. It’s a form of discrimination and ignorance to use the name of an illness so casually for something that has no relation to the disease. I am sensitive enough and smart enough that I would never remark “Oh, the weather is absolutely schizophrenic today” just because the wind was blowing hard and the temperature suddenly dropped thirty degrees. Why can’t people be more aware of what they’re saying? Nobody calls the weather manic-depressive or it has associative identity disorder. The list of mental diseases and conditions is quite extensive. Why pick on Schizophrenia? Is it because some schizophrenics are violent? Most schizophrenics are not violent. Anytime a murderer is found to have Schizophrenia, people think it’s the disease that caused the murder. This is not true. A disease does not kill people or cause bad things to happen to another person. All murderers are not schizophrenic! All schizophrenics are not murderers! There are different varieties of Schizophrenia and each person has different symptoms. Of course, some symptoms are common to the disease, but again, not every person has the same symptoms.

I hope people can become more aware of this illness. I hope people can stop calling anything out of the ordinary schizophrenic. This disease has biological and genetic origins. It is permanent, incurable but manageable with the right medication and treatment. I will discuss this more in another blog post.

 

Photo: Kat Jayne

 

 

 

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Comments (0)

  1. Karen DeBonis says:
    March 26, 2019 at 5:57 am

    This was a wonderful way to “out” yourself, and give the rest of us a sensitivity reminder. Thank you.

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    1. skcasta says:
      March 26, 2019 at 2:33 pm

      Thanks Karen, This was hard to do. I plan to write more about mental illness. I also follow you on Twitter I think!

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      1. Karen DeBonis says:
        March 26, 2019 at 4:34 pm

        I think I follow you, too. Is that where I saw this, perhaps? Some days I’m so enmeshed with social media, I have no idea where I’ve “met” people. lol!

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  2. Stephen Bentley says:
    April 23, 2019 at 10:00 pm

    There you are, Kay, you said “it.” I admire you for your frankness and sensitivity on what is still seen as a stigma in society.
    Indeed, mental health as a subject is still stigmatic, though we have come a long way over the past few decades.
    But still enough is not done by governments in funding mental health care including emergency outreach programs. I believe the United States is a classic example. Witness the mass shootings by clearly people afflicted by some serious mental health issue.
    This whole topic is one close to my heart. You know my story and how I “slunk away” from the police after my undercover work. Back then, there was no way I could have admitted suffering from a mental health problem.
    Following my retraining as a barrister (trial attorney), I became somewhat of a specialist in mental health law in addition to my regular criminal practice.
    Great blog! I look forward to reading more.

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    1. skcasta says:
      May 12, 2019 at 7:47 pm

      Thanks Steve. I plan to write more about mental illness. You mentioned the mass shootings in the United States. Some people want to blame guns. After the killings are over, we always learn of the shooters mental illness or trouble they had in school. Teachers and the general public don’t take the warning signs seriously or they aren’t aware of clues to look for. Political correctness interferes also. Police, doctors and social workers don’t want to appear as prejudiced or hateful so they let the young person back into society without enough help. Just last week, two young people entered a classroom and began shooting students. One student tackled the killers and ended up dead. The two shooters were indeed mentally ill and had records as being under a doctor’s care. Some in the media want to politicize these shootings but they should argue for more mental health services, especially for young people. People aren’t ashamed to see a doctor or take medicine for physical illness. Having mental and psychological symptoms still has such a stigma. The mind or brain is part of the body. Employers also need to become more educated about these problems.

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  3. Stephen Bentley says:
    May 15, 2019 at 6:32 am

    I agree with every single word. I look forward to reading more of your posts on this issue.

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