Stranger than fiction, yesterday I had
an encounter with One Of Them...

He appeared
normal, but that shouldn't fool you. There he was, sitting in my
kitchen, slurping up some soup like it was no big thing for one of
His Kind to be sitting docilely in my kitchen. I was afraid that he
was going to run away before I could take any good field notes. But
oh what juicy data I ended up getting...I'm going to tell you the
truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. The following is a
faithful record of what transpired.
I had just gotten back from my daily
run (you know, the one where you peel yourself off your bed and you
do some deep breathing and a bunch of self-talk and the anxiety is
finally calm enough for you to go outside and exercise). So I'm
walking in the door, winded, patting the anxiety monster on the head
in momentary victory; I grab some chow and sit down across from This
Guy (we're going to call him Ben). Psh. I was totally oblivious.
"Can I ask you a question?"
Ben says, sort of unexpectedly.
Nod nod, munch munch. "What's up?"
Ben shrugs. "I'm just trying to
figure out if my life is easy or if everyone else just complains more
than I do."
"What do you mean, Ben?" My
rare-breed-of-human sensors hadn't yet clicked on. I was eating
delicious chicken-and-potato soup and cannot be held accountable for
the slowness of my apprehension.
"Well, probably every single
Sunday," Ben continues, "I hear someone talk about some
huge trial that they're going through in their life. And I mean, life
isn't perfect, but I don't think I have any huge trials, and I'm
trying to figure out what everyone's talking about."
Yes, this conversation really happened,
right in my kitchen, folks. He had exposed himself of One Of Them.
Family: Psychological Health. Genus: Perfect Specimen Of.
"You're not going through anything
difficult right now?" I asked warily.
"Nope. Not really. And it doesn't
look like my life is that different from the lives of the people
around me," says Ben. That's because you blend in,
I thought.
"What about people who are going through divorce and loss and chronic illness?" I say.
"Yeah. But I feel like that stuff is a lot more rare than common. I mean, I'm happy...pretty much all of the time. Occasionally I feel depressed, but if I just change my attitude, I'm just fine."
"Yeah. But I feel like that stuff is a lot more rare than common. I mean, I'm happy...pretty much all of the time. Occasionally I feel depressed, but if I just change my attitude, I'm just fine."
There
you are, folks. He said it, not me. A decent, hardworking, jovial
kind of guy with absolutely no grasp on the intense reality of suffering. That can't be healthy. I decided to Lower the Boom.
"What would you say if I told you that I just
got back home in September from my mission—eight months early,
anorexic, suicidal, and delusional? I weighed like ninety-five
pounds. You would never have known that if I hadn't told you, right?"
| Me on the right...circa 100 lbs |
Specimen does one of those cartoonish
double-takes and his eyes get really big. "Oh...oh, wow. Wow. I
mean, you've done a really good turn-around."
Oh Ben. Every single day is an uphill
battle. A lot of days are crazy
uphill battles with hair-pulling and irrational obsessive worrying
and problems with my medication and the tight fear that I'll never
really be okay again. And every day I have at least a little while
where I'm like, man, I'm doing really okay right now. I think I'll do
my homework or eat something. This is so nice.
Here's
the clincher, though, and it's what people like Ben somehow don't know: Most
people that you know are going through something pretty darn
difficult.
![]() |
| Me on the right...having eaten food |
Okay
guys, this isn't supposed to be depressing. There are plenty of
well-adjusted people out there too. And for the record, I wouldn't
change Ben's life if I could. It's always refreshing to catch a
glimpse of Their Kind.
Someday,
up there in that big BYU in the sky, we're all going to be healed of
our physical and psychological problems. We're just gonna be a bunch
of light-hearted, happy-go-lucky Bens with occasional worries and
not much to chat about in Sunday School. (Well, maybe.) But for all
you fellow non-Specimens, curious Specimens or Questioning, I know it
can be a long road.
I
hereby promise to keep a faithful record of my life as a Non-Specimen
of Psychological Health (N.S.O.P.H., for clarity's sake). Boom-lowering aside, you're going to like
it. Because as nuts-business as my life has been over the past year
and a half, I'm weirdly, in a very cool and not-predicted way, healing.
Medication works. Therapy works. Close friends are essential. Feeling like you're not alone in what you're going through--also essential. Guys. I've been using these crazy esoteric tactics and...okay, so maybe you'd never guess where I've been, but you're going to be even more impressed with where I'm going.
If
you're a fellow N.S.O.P.H, I bet you anything that you need an
occasional injection of realistic, humorous, tell-it-like-it-is hope.
And I promise to do my utmost to give that to you.
If you're NOT an N.S.O.P.H., you're in for a treat. Because as crazy
as this sounds, we N.S.O.P.H.'s are among the most hardy, humorous,
resilient, and realistic people out there. Grab your binoculars...


When's the next post?! Loved it!
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