4 Tips for When Vices Outrun Vision

The song of addiction has been played time and again. A political and personal debate centered around it being a disease or a choice, remains. The matter is not only pressing, but controversial.

Mental health stress is incorporated in daily lives, and everyone has their crutches. Yet, addiction plays a special role. When do your vices outrun your vision? Do you stumble across the line of addiction in consistently craving that comfort? Let’s talk addictive mindsets.

Firstly, it’s completely fine to indulge. Full restriction simply does not work. In cases of alcohol/drug detox, going cold turkey usually isn’t the safest option. In any case of an addictive mindset, complete withdrawal from your vice will make you want it more. In saying this, personal reward systems and treats can be a great motivation technique.This doesn’t make you an addict, though the dangers of vices are becoming more prevalent.

How do you know if you’ve crossed that line? Ask yourself if you find that you are constantly leaning on something to ease pain. This includes, but is not limited to: food, love/sex, gambling, excessive partying, smoking, binge watching/drinking/eating, etc. It can seem like elegant picture you painted for your life is being overshadowed by shades of grey. These behaviors are often shamed in society, but it’s important to know that there is an entire community that understands the need to materialize emotional pain, and you are not alone. Here are a few tips to break the cycle.

Let old habits die hard. If you’re someone who has been cradling those crutches for years, it can be difficult to let them go. There’s a saying about letting your old self die to become a new, almost as a personal resurrection. Break free from the old you.

Go to the source. You’ll need to identify what’s causing you to lean on your vice. The only way to beat it, is to address it. In the process, you’ll come to understand yourself better whilst practicing self love and patience. This cannot be skipped because all steps following will be a band aid solution.

Re-frame your image. Fill the emptiness with healthier, more positive habits. Many toxic behaviors are developed due to a lack of control, so take control in non-self destructive ways. Once you’ve regained your sense of self, you won’t need to cling to your old ways.

Work whichever steps fit you. If you have an addictive mindset to love, practice being single. If food is your coping mechanism, change the way you feed your body. Routine and regulation is part of human nature.

Addictive mindsets can often be dismissed if they aren’t covered in a 12 step program. While I’m not a doctor or licensed medical professional, I realize the science and severity of addiction. There is more to an addictive mindset that is not being socially being addressed.

There is art in letting go, and beauty in transformation. Everyone in struggling in some form or fashion. Don’t let the shame or stigma attached to addiction guilt you into retracting. If you aren’t struggling with this, someone you know most likely is. Recovery is possible for everyone.

 

Music for Mental Illness- 50 Song Suggestions

From Kurt Cobain to Demi Lovato, there is an endless list of musicians with mental illnesses. It’s no coincidence that mental health affects creative energy, but it can be challenging to find the right song for what you’re going through. Instead of combing through music that doesn’t fit your mood at all, I compiled a list of 50 songs that encompass mental illness.

 

  1. Manic Depression- Jimi Hendrix                       37. Heavy- Linkin Park
  2. Unwell- Matchbox 20                                           38. Mad Hatter- Melanie Martinez
  3. Lithium- Evanescence                                         39. My Body- Young Giant
  4. Comfortably Numb- Pink Floyd                        40. Hate Me- Blue October
  5. Diary of a Madman- Ozzy Osbourne                41. Crazy- Patsy Cline
  6. Basket Case- Green Day                                      42. Fire and Rain- James Taylor
  7. Lithium- Nirvana                                                 43. Under the Bridge- Red Hot Chili
  8. Prozac People- The Killing Joke                        44. Schizophrenia- Blue October
  9. Semi Charmed Life- Third Eye Blind               45. The Good Life- Weezer
  10. Voices- Disturbed                                                 46. Jane Says- Jane’s Addiction
  11. Disturbia- Rihanna                                              47. Feeling Okay- Best Coast
  12. Warrior- Demi Lovato                                        48. 1-800-273-8225 by Logic
  13. Shine on you Crazy Diamond- Pink Floyd      49. Rehab- Amy Winehouse
  14. White Rabbit- Jefferson Airplane                     50. Breathe Me- Sia
  15. Where is My Mind?- Pixies
  16. Hope of Morning- Icon for Hire
  17. Sorry About Your Parents- Icon for Hire
  18. laughing and not being normal- Grimes
  19. Unbreakable- Fireflight
  20. Desperate- Fireflight
  21. Hell and Back- Tonight Alive
  22. Medication- Garbage
  23. Last Resort- Papa Roach
  24. Bipolar Bear- Stone Temple Pilots
  25. Crazy Train- Ozzy Osbourne
  26. Numb- Linkin Park
  27. 7 Minutes in Heaven- Fall Out Boy
  28. A Better Son/Daughter- Rilo Kiley
  29. Addicted- Kelly Clarkson
  30. Flying Whales- Gojira
  31. Brain Damage- Pink Floyd
  32. You’ve Got a Friend- James Taylor
  33. Psycho- Elvis Costello
  34. World Away- Tonight Alive
  35. Recovery- Broods
  36. PSTD (Warrior Built)- Tech N9ne, Krizz, Jay Trilogy

 

Brain on Fire

We’ve all read the blogs that feel like bullshit. Individuals who have never lived with Bipolar Disorder give the same tired clichés, stigma spreads, and taboo topics stay taboo. While some are very resourceful, they can limit the amount of open and honest discussion. I want to encourage you all to voice your truth, so here’s mine.

On New Year’s Day in 2013, my mania sprung up on me like a caged bird. It began by not-so-elegantly throwing a pumpkin pie in my face, and ended with my rendition of the worm. I swam in a sea of floor tiles and called it “celebrating”. I talked so fast my sentences were jammed together, and sleep was not in my wheelhouse. Five years into the madness, and my exciting behavior has progressed to random out-of-state drives and 4 am cleaning sessions. I’m Bipolar, and this is my story.

I was diagnosed with Bipolar 1 following my freshman year of University. I had no idea the abundance of therapy sessions, psychiatric visits, uncontrollable crying, and daily affirmations that would follow. I started doing research immediately. I scrolled through countless articles of self-help tips and medical advice, but no one seemed to be discussing the symptoms I was actually trying to manage. I was incredibly irritable, raging for no reason. My relationships with other people were unstable, my mind started crashing like the classic math problem about trains no one knows the answer to. There were times apathy would hold onto me so strongly, the only thing I could do was wait the day out. I still find myself just waiting the day out.

In a midst of managing a disorder no one else around me had, I lost myself in between the lines. The depression overshadowed everything I enjoyed doing, and my driven nature got swept up by the pressure to make the day count because living it was unbearable. I needed a reason for getting out of bed. I took up smoking to offset the anxiety, a habit I have always disliked, and found myself at the bottom of a bottle in more ways than one. I had attempted suicide so many times throughout the years, it felt like God was playing a joke on me by allowing me to live. I tried medicines with worsening reactions, self and cognitive therapy, meditation, and everything in between. It wasn’t enough. This self-destructive path that would leave me isolated, terrified, and with nothing to lose. That’s a dangerous place to be.

My life took a drastic turn when my moderate stressors became severe, and my body reacted accordingly. Life speeds up the most when you need to slow down, and I could not slow down. I found myself tearing at the seams, even though I was taking all the steps. I was sitting in doctors offices while they labeled my physical ailments a result of stress, and the frustration made everything worse. I thought stress had to make sense. Two years later, and I’m still in survival mode.

I’d like to call this a success story someday. I am alive and that is enough. I’ve played every part of my personality that exists, and recovery holds merit like never before. I’ve adopted some coping mechanisms and learned a great deal along the way that will be covered in other posts. I can’t encompass five years of spent energy into one article, but I know I am only one of many who have experienced the frustration I have with being Bipolar. I’ve picked myself up off the bathroom floor, and found a strength I didn’t know I had.

To my readers, you are alive and you are enough. You have all the hope in the universe to guide you through the unimaginable. My story is still being written, and so is yours. Let’s ride this roller coaster together.