Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Another Day in Paradise



March 24, 2016
6:30am

I am an introvert with isolationist tendencies and darkness is a friend that gives me hugs whenever I need one the most. At home, I never open my curtains unless I have to and, if I had my way I’d open the door only when the pizza deliverer brought my latest attempt to quell my pain. I am also seldom awake at this time of the day unless I have been awake all night. So, the fact that it’s so bright in here at 6:30 in the morning with not a window to be found is unsettling, to say the least. Neither my body, nor my mind are, accustomed to this and I am struggling to make sense of my surroundings. The word that comes to mind is “antiseptic”, which I suppose is not a negative thing, especially as far as the staff is concerned I suppose. That said, being up so early has made me wish I could see the sunrise this morning. At the very least, it may give me a feeling of change, rebirth, of hope.

They took away all of my clothes when I was admitted to the hospital. A pair of light pants was courteously, and laughably, offered but their meager size rendered them useless to me. So, I am wearing two hospital gowns; one with the untied opening to the back and the other with the opening to the front, like an untied kimono. They are far too short and I seem to be constantly threatening to flash anyone who walks past, even when I am lying on my gurney with a blanket over me. It’s the closest I’ve gotten to wearing the kilt I’ve wanted to try on since I first saw a video of the highland games.

As uncomfortable as my outfit is making me, it’s the socks which are the most frustrating. I am not a sock person and footwear of some sort is mandatory here. I like my feet to be cold and these things are like little ovens for my toes, so much so that my piggies are beginning to resemble bbq pulled pork, I’m guessing. Sure, they aren’t cheap and even have a rubberized non-slip tread complete with happy faces but they are making me quite uncomfortable.

I’ve been up for three hours now and since no other patients are awake, the nurse on duty has allowed me to sit in one of the interview rooms to write this. I am very appreciative to her for the slight rule break. It’ gives me a small sense of normalcy, something I didn’t realize I was missing until right this second. Sitting in an uncomfortable, cheap office chair from 30 years ago is a comfort I never thought I’d appreciate but considering the pain I deal with every day, I suppose I should have gotten to this point before now.

I don’t think that most people understand the irritating and embarrassing feelings that psoriasis sufferers deal with on a daily basis, the flakes, the crusty skin itch and the constant pain of arthritis. From a secondary point of view, it’s hard to ignore the blatantly obvious flakes of skin but I have to wonder how many actually understand the embarrassment which accompanies them. Of course, those flakes come from plaques which often cover large percentages of our bodies turning our skin into, at the best times, an itchy hive-like scab and at the worst of times are akin to setting our skin aflame. What’s hidden from everyone is the arthritis which often comes with the disease, as it has with me, and has been a literal pain in my ass since my early twenties.

Psoriatic skin flakes get into and onto everything. It doesn’t matter how often you vacuum, how often you change the sheets or how often you clean your entire home, there will always be flakes you missed. As a child, the flakes that my mother would leave on the floor, especially in my parent’s bedroom fascinated me. I would look for the big ones, often the size of dimes, and study them. They were light yet thick. They were almost crispy, the way they would crack in half when I applied pressure to their outside edges. Some kids pick their scabs and are fascinated in this way. I had an almost unending supply to make me wonder about the way the skin worked, growing and healing. It wasn’t until my later teens that the flakes began to show up on me. Like dandruff, it was coming off my scalp and suddenly high school became a battle against my own body. How many 17 year olds do you know who carried around a lint roller in their backpacks? At choir competitions, I would lend it out before just before we performed ensuring that I was the last to use it because if I had used it first, by the time I got it back only a couple minutes later I would need to use it again.

I found myself near constantly brushing my shoulders, pulling at my shirts and letting them pop pack to my shape in hopes of forcing the flakes to release from the fabric. The battle of the snowy shoulders is one that you can never win, so at some point you just accept it and do the best you can. You begin to avoid dark and solid coloured shirts. You accept that others are going to see the flakes and immediately judge you with rather pity or disgust. When I turned 19 and began going to dance clubs, my friend pulled me aside one night and pointed out my shoulders. They were alight with little star-like sparkles, my psoriasis flakes glowing in the black light that was popular back then. I was horrified because even in the near complete darkness of cigarette smoke filled clubs, my shoulders were shouting “I’m a gross slob!” to anyone I would meet. Women get stared their chests stared at and to a degree I understood how they felt because my shoulders were getting stared at. The difference is that one attracts members of the opposite sex while the other repulses them.

As bad as my scalp psoriasis was, my cousin had it far worse that the same age. At twelve years old her head was covered in a layer half an inch thick over a four to six inch diameter area. Her early teen life was an exercise in finding equilibrium between the pressures of burgeoning womanhood and trying desperately to not have her entire school know her secret. She was however lucky in that it remained only on her scalp and was able to find medication which would control it enough to keep it at bay until her body grew out of it. I was not so lucky.

Eventually, parts of my body other than my scalp had breakouts, especially my back, stomach, groin and shins. I began having to tuck in my shirts or avoiding black pants as flakes began to appear on my hips if I was wearing my shirt loose. If I had been wearing my shirt tucked in to contain them, the minute I untucked it a blizzard would appear and it no longer mattered what I was wearing because there were so many flakes that I would leave a patch on the floor below me. What had once fascinated me as a kid exploring my parents’ bedroom had become an embarrassment so bad that I refrained from going to pools, waterslides or the beach. I was terrified of what strangers thought of me already due to my anxiety but now I was actively turning down invitations out with friends because I was worried what they would think of me.

My bedroom was becoming uncontrollably dusty. Entering it was like going in search of the home movies of your childhood, packed away years ago. On them were the images of a carefree childhood, now so distant that you can’t recall the emotions which made you smile at twenty four frames per second. Replacing them was a constant reminder that I was different, judged, and, as far as I was concerned, unlovable. While my friends were having relationships, I was the guy sitting in the corner longing to be them but certain that I could never be. Looking back now I can see that women were interested in me but I couldn’t conceive of that being real so even when women threw themselves at me, I didn’t even respond. The girl giving me a picture of her with her phone number on the back was just being nice. The roommate climbing into bed with me one night was just being playful, not wanting me to stroke her body. The girl in the bar standing two inches from me with her hand on my chest and dragging her fingers across my skin was being strange.

I had gotten used to the assumption that I was different than everyone else. It isn’t that this feeling was without merit for there were times when people would ridicule me for the strange patch of skin on my forearms or my shins. I also didn’t blame them for feeling this way. I can easily understand how a bad patch, or plaque, would look like a communicable disease. People with eczema or shingles are treated in a similar, despite general knowledge of these diseases in the public being far more prevalent. We tend to fear of what we don’t understand. This evolved response has protected us through the millennia but I have seen it used far too often in today’s society, to justify prejudice, bigotry and willful ignorance. The error I made was assuming that because one percent of people were judging me like that, so was everyone else.

One day at work about ten years ago, while waiting on a table a child of about eight years old pointed at the large plaque that had recently formed on my forearm and asked me what was wrong with it. His mother immediately scolded him for being so rude. Had I left the situation like that, the boy would have learned the lesson that his innocent curiosity was something to be curtailed, that trying to understand the world around him is not something to be embraced and encouraged. Neil DeGrasse Tyson says that “We spend the first year of a child's life teaching it to walk and talk and the rest of its life to shut up and sit down. There’s something wrong there.”

To the parent’s chagrin, I corrected them, getting down on my knees to be at his level so as to minimize the trepidation on the child’s part. I softly explained that I didn’t mind being asked and what the sore on my arm was, why he couldn’t catch it and asked if he had any other questions about it. I find it very important to speak to children about these types of things at their eye level while talking to them as you would an adult. You don’t have to use big words but there’s no point in dumbing it down either. It’s surprising how many “mature” things you can talk to them about without upsetting or overwhelming them. Unfortunately, the parents didn’t agree with me and lodged a complaint for contradicting them to their child. I hope that boy learned something from that interaction before his parents had the chance to drill it out of him.

One thing I hadn’t counted on when the plaques first started to appear was how uncomfortable they could be. At their best, they are best described as a slightly sensitive sunburn; mildly itchy and painful at the same time. At worst, they are like poison ivy rash covered in bee stings. And the things which can turn them from mild to hellish are varied and seldom predictable. What does not affect them for 364 days will send them into a firestorm on that last day of the year. Eating a tomato can do it. Being around a smoker. The wrong soap can set it off. A single stressful moment at work or a bad night’s sleep. It’s virtually impossible to nail down what single thing triggered the inflammation but it is not ambiguous when a flare-up occurs. I have had nights where I lay in bed desperate to not scratch, only to find myself unconsciously doing so to relieve the itch and then discovering that my sheets and legs are covered in blood in the morning. I once had a friend tell me that my scratching was making her uncomfortable because I the sounds I would make as I relieved the itch were like “someone is sucking on your dick”.

Trying over the counter creams were a laughable attempt at stopping the plaques from becoming so irritated often making things worse rather than being helpful. The few topical choices which would work were by prescription only, difficult for two reasons. Firstly, I could not afford the steroid sprays which worked the best, over a hundred dollars for a two week supply for only my forearms and scalp, and second because getting them would entail me paying for my medical insurance and actually going to a doctor. I hadn’t been to a doctor since I cut my hand after falling on and shattering a drinking glass when I was 13, requiring emergency surgery, seventy stitches and two nights stay in the hospital. Perhaps the only thing worse than my anxiety triggers of women was when I was forced to deal with doctors and dentists. It didn’t matter that they were professionals who had surely seen far worse. Opening my mouth wide or disrobing in any manner was to be avoided at all costs, lest the other person in the room voice their displeasure with my appearance.

As a result, the psoriasis plaques spread over more and more of my skin, eventually beginning to form on the backs of my hands, so long sleeve shirts no longer covered them. The spots on my shins expanded from the tops of my feet to my high on my thighs, wrapping around to the backs of my legs and knees, a particularly painful and itch place to have them. They also began to show up on my face, neck, eye lids and ears. The once small spot in my groin turned into a patch which ram from the top of my bum crack all the way down and up again, reaching 3 inches above my genitals. The one half centimetre patch on the tip of my penis was like the pièce de résistance. At one point in my early twenties, I had begun a sexual relationship with a girl I had known since I was 14. She’d had a crush on me since we were that age so I was able to accept that she would consider a physical relationship. Unfortunately, her claim of a latex allergy meant that our dalliances were done without protection, and the patch of psoriasis made sex incredibly painful at times. One night it was even so painful, as if there was an Exacto knife and a vat of battery acid in her vagina, that I had to fake orgasm so that I could end it.  

If I had been able to keep the flakes at bay and hide the plaques under clothing I would, at the very least, be far more comfortable going out in public but eventually the patches began appearing on the backs of my hands, my now quite bald head and even on my face. People had begun to stare at me, not like a man stares at a woman in yoga pants or a dog makes eyes at a piece of pizza from across the room. They were staring in wonder, fear and in some cases, revulsion. When I had finally convinced Chrissy to go out with me, after years of trying, it turned out to be a one date and gone situation. I found out through a mutual friend a couple years later that her friends had convinced her that I wasn’t ”pretty” enough for her, confirming what I had always feared. I was being judged by women, including the ones who were very attracted to me, the way I had always feared except that now it wasn’t my weight or my looks. My skin and immune system had conspired to keep me single and although it was something that that I had always felt I deserved, to that point I had still had hope that I could change it. That day I acquiesced. I was going to be alone. Forever.


What Goes Around


(Fall, 2013)

Last summer, as my mental illness pushed me over the edge, a defensive behavior of mine became uncontrollable and I pushed my friends out of my life at a shocking rate. I'm not saying that what they did and how I was being treated wasn't uncalled for but pretending what they had done didn't happen was, perhaps, the worst possible decision but it was also the only decision I could live with at the time. I hurt my friends greatly by doing so and after apologizing, some have forgiven me while others have completed what I tried to accomplish. I can't blame any of them for the decisions they have made. As my counselor used to say to me, "Most people are doing the best they can at any particular moment and we should remember the times when we hurt people by doing the best we could at the time."

Now karma has come back to haunt me. Two of my oldest friends, the ones I thought I could trust the most, have decided that the best thing for our friendship right now is not to be friends and no matter how many times I tell myself that they're doing the best they can, I still am pained a great deal. I really didn't need an education of how much I had hurt them and others in the past.  Nights of tears and strained apologies with vicious sobbing have scarred my heart, marking it for the rest of my life with a brand that will always remind me of the pain I caused even after I am finally able to forgive myself.

Five and a half years ago, a friend that I had found the courage to tell me how some of the things I was doing had hurt her. They weren't big things but they had bothered her and she was right to tell me but in the mental place I was in I couldn't see how hard it had been for her to tell me these things and instead I only saw how much it was hurting me to hear it. I felt like I was being attacked and that she had lied to me for so long rather than telling me the truth months before. I was self absorbed and had been unable to see the courage it took for her to risk exposing a piece of herself and jeopardize our friendship by bringing the conflict to the forefront.

Today I think of a friend that has done the same to me. After multiple occurrences of being treated like my time and emotions don't matter and conversations about it I put my foot down and said that I thought she needed to reexamine what her priorities were with our friendship. She replied much like I had five years ago with my other friend, pushing me away but throwing out another excuse like having reasons for her actions justified them. As I look at where we are I see that I need to keep perspective and give her the time to work through everything she's feeling. Knowing that I need to step back isn't making it any easier to give her the space she says she needs but if I make the mistake of pushing now I may never be able to speak to her again.

I also have another friend that trusted me with a serious problem she was having necessitating a move out of her current living situation right away. I did something that I would have never done in the past, throwing my life to the side and making myself as available as she needed to help her with the move. In the past I'd have found or created a reason to be too busy or simply unavailable to help, avoiding actually making an effort of any kind. To my surprise, my offer of help was returned with an accusation of having ulterior motives and I was accused of trying to take advantage of her situation to my advantage romantically.  Despite a wordy explanation of everything the accusations persisted and I was forced to withdraw the offer, fearful that if I pushed her the depression she's been battling for years would do to her as it had once done to me.

I was right to fear but too late in action to prevent her pulling away. I don't know exactly what's going on in her mind but I only know that I'm no longer welcome to be a part of her life and although that may change in the future I have no control and having to allow her to step away is rather difficult.

All I want right right now is a single friend I feel like I can be honest with and will understand. I don't actually believe in karma but if anyone wanted to make a case for it now might be the time because I feel a little like the Universe is punishing me, trying to teach me a lesson that I've already learned.

And I don't know if I'm strong enough to learn it a second time.