My Decade on Broadway
Ten years is a dreadful amount of time to spend cooped up with very ill people, especially if you’re sicker than most of them yourself. I know that mentally ill is the more accepted term nowadays—the one that NPR uses—but nuts or whacked seems closer to the bone, to the truth that people feel down deep about those who are unstable.
Or, should I say, the truth that I felt.
Parent’s Foundation for Transitional Living (PFTL) is a residential living center in New Haven for those with severe illness. I’m often flustered when I try to describe my decade there to someone who’s never been around the psychically wounded. Words like odd and crazy are the first words that pop to mind, followed by some unexpected ones: helpful, warm, comforting, camaraderie.
PFTL’s two-story red brick building runs for about a half a block, right between some Yale apartments and a church parking lot. When I was there, it was diagonally across from a defeated-looking Shell station and an addict-filled Popeye’s; the thriving university was just down the block. The building is divided into a residential living center—the group home—and a supervised apartment program, where clients have their own kitchenettes and are more independent.
During my stay, some residents moved out eventually, some disappeared when they ran out of cash, and some decided to stay there permanently. For those paying full cost, it was quite expensive. My ten years there, including medication, staffing, food, lodging, and case management, cost my parents about $400,000, which didn’t include the private psychotherapy.
The residents ranged in age from eighteen to seventy-three, with histories of multiple hospitalizations and, I think it’s fair to say, a basic difficulty in adjusting to the world. Some of us were motley, mouths drooling from excessive medication. Others had difficulty keeping quiet during the voluntary group meetings that were part of the resident and recovery enrichment program, which included horticulture, art, music, and discussions of current events. I learned rapidly that non sequiturs, psychotic rambling, and inspired verbal expositions were a madly popular form of communication around the building.
Random, paranoid comments whipped through the air about venomous snipers on rooftops stalking the chosen or tele-pathic, or female police officers with teeth in their vaginas are waiting to castrate clients. Stolen thoughts and hurtling ESP pronouncements ricocheted around the smoking courtyard, during some meals, and during late-night television viewing. Satanic spirits and religious riffs on everything related and unrelated. It wasn’t an unusual request for one resident to ask another to please stop coveting his thoughts.
PFTL took me in on a clammy March morning in 1997, after I’d spent years bouncing around mental health facilities throughout the country. Eventually, I was diagnosed with bipolar II disorder—commonly known as manic depression—with hypomania, an avoidant personality, and an anxiety disorder. I’d also developed a brutal obsession with self-harm over that time, repeatedly slashing myself with razors. After seven years, I began burning myself with cigars and cigarettes. Earlier in my career, I went AWOL from a Hartford mental hospital, got my head shaved, picked up several packages of straight-edged blades and began slicing.
Originally published:
New Haven Review
Issue 006
September 2010