INVISIBILITY
By Clare Hill
Have you ever wondered what it would be like to be mad? Not pissing in your pants, drooling in your cereal mad, just occasional bursts of madness, which strike without warning, like lightning bolts from a clear blue sky.
Well, that’s how I live my life, always having to be wary that my mind will malfunction, like a gremlin lives within my head and tinkers with all of the delicate machinery, mischievously causing short circuits at inopportune moments.
Medication helps, but even that can cause problems, unexpected side effects over which I have no control. Like the twitching episode earlier, talk about embarrassing! I looked like a marionette whose strings were being jerked about by an overly rambunctious child, my leg was twitching one way, my head another. It’s frightening; too, you worry that you will be stuck like it forever. Nobody would be able to take me seriously looking like a Thunderbird puppet on acid, would they? People would just assume that I was a nutter, with no worthwhile contribution to make to conversation. They would talk to me in raised voices, pronouncing things oh-so-clearly, worried that I was too mentally subnormal to understand even the simplest things.
I’ve often wondered what it must be like to live with a physical disability, and I actually received a rather startling insight
whilst out clubbing one night. There was this guy, early twenties, blonde, totally gorgeous, with a space all around him.
Why the space, in a nightclub packed like an over-full suitcase? He was in a wheelchair. People didn’t know what to say to him, so they preferred to totally avoid him, as if his disability were somehow contagious.
Even now, many use appearances in order to judge people, the book by the cover syndrome. This guy had a fantastic sense of humour, and used it to overcome the problems that people had whilst talking to him. He confessed to being shocked that I was at ease with him straight away (while waiting for a taxi, I asked him if he could give me a lift on his lap, as it would be quicker and far more interesting!) It’s sad, though, because there are many people out there who maybe don’t have the confidence and the ability to put people at ease that he had.
Although things are improving, more needs to be done to ensure that people with disabilities are not segregated within
society. People need to be educated that avoiding things that make us feel uncomfortable does not make those things go away, and it creates a group of people who are excluded through no fault of their own.
My disability is invisible, and I have to say that I am glad that it is. There is still so much unconscious prejudice against disability; it’s preferable to be able to hide what is wrong in order to avoid being marked with the stigma that is still attached to disability.
I am mad. If I tell people, it makes them feel uncomfortable. If I don’t, they merely think that I am eccentric. I have the choice. People with physical disabilities do not have that choice; have no way to hide it in order to make others more comfortable. The twitching has stopped, I am lucky, my disability is invisible. Sometimes, people become invisible because they have a disability. It makes people uncomfortable. People, get over it.
Clare Hill is author of
Living Without Marbles
It's a must read book about surviving mental illness and not giving up. Clare says she wrote Living Without Marbles after being diagnosed with bipolar affective disorder and her moms death by overdose. The book provides an offbeat but insightful look into the workings of her unique mind!
Clare's main interests lie in changing the perceptions that people have of mental health service users, and providing some comfort to others who, like her, may be facing the challenges that living with mental health problems brings.
Living Without Marbles is available as an e-book from Chipmunka Publishing, here's the link
Living Without Marbles.
Learn about Clare
click here
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