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not mental. Even in light of an EEG showing non-epileptic anomalous activity in my left temporal lobe, the problem is my behavior not my thinking...
It's a subtle but interesting twist in the evolution of my pursuing solutions to my problem. The VA out-patient mental health staff have given up on being able to help me. They've passed me off to a private clinic that they think is better suited to help me, and that clinic has me on a month's long waiting list. Well, ok. I've put up with myself for decades I suppose I can grind out a couple of months of waiting...especially since I have a psychologist who isn't afraid to prescribe perception altering drugs.
But in this process, I have noticed that things have changed. At the VA I was a patient of the trauma unit of the _MENTAL_ health division. The private clinic specializes in _BEHAVIORAL_ medicine. So it seems that my mental health problems do not have the importance of my behavioral problems. I can't help but notice that significantly shifts priorities about whose problems are needing to be solved. It's gone from MY problem to how I give THEM a problem.
Now, I'd admit that my behavior hasn't always been good. Hell, sometimes, it's downright awful, and in particular my behavior in three separate and exceedlingly poignant 15 second episodes over a period of about 9 years significantly and negatively harmed my employability and several versions of my own self image. But, isn't it interesting that the focus is shifting from my mental health (which is mostly about thinking and emotion) to my behavior (which is actually about the way I do things in my days--and I presume with that a shift in emphasis to how I do things involving other people's reactions to what I do rather than how I feel about how my days go)?
Without disparaging the good will and intent of care-providers, I wonder if, and to what extent, the focus on my behavior is really very different from the focus on mad behavior used by directors of asylums in the 17th century? If they put me in restraints (and they have) do they get what they want? If I sat quietly in a lock-up is their treatment a success?
I wonder exactly what behavioral treatment will give me access to 'normal' activity schedules so that I can finish the years I have left on this planet without restraints and segregation from the world? When that treatment is over, will I be able to think well of myself, or will I be burdened with an obligation to feel that I was rescued from disaster?
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