http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber
Not the least of human concerns around the world during the Covid-19 pandemic, is mental health; many if not most of us are stressed out either by social distancing and not being able to see family and friends, money worries for not being able to work, and let's not forget the stress grief imposes on us whenever we lose a loved-one. We all must find a way of alleviating stress if we can hope to survive the pandemic as much the same person - if not better and stronger, mentally if not physically - than we were before it struck.
An actor friend once described how when he takes on a character it takes him over to the extent that he
becomes that character and all but loses sight of his own self. It occurred to me that much the same might be said of stress; it takes us over and we can't see it because we
are it, and lose sight of what is happening to our natural selves.
From time to time in the blogs, I have referred to a bad mental breakdown I had in the 1970’s, just a few years after my mother died. I was still in my 30’s, and a psychological mess for all kinds of reasons. It may be an overworked metaphor, but true enough to say I was drowning in a sea of confused and conflicting feelings that had less to do with being gay than a sense of failure as a person, again for more reasons than I could begin to define. To make matters worse, there was no one in whom I could even begin to confide and there are limits to how anyone in a state of crisis, as I most certainly was, can cope with it on their own.
Inevitably, mind-body-spirit lost not only the ability to communicate in any positive form, but also the will to survive. I experienced a complete mental breakdown with far-reaching consequences; in the short term, these were pretty dire, but in the longer term they saw me emerge a stronger, more focused person. I lost my job and did not work again for nearly four years. It was a terrible time and I would not have survived but for the support of some good friends who showed me the way back to Hope where all there had been was Despair; the rest was up to me.
Thankfully, mental health issues carry less of a stigma these days. Even so, the mentally ill person has not one battle on his or her hands but a series of battles. We win some, lose some, but practical as well as emotional support is needed before innate survival instincts start to kick in and a glimmer of positive mind-set appears at the outer edge of an all-devouring Black Hole; it is called motivation, and more often than not it is triggered by the return of a much missed sense of humour.
“If I had no sense of humour, I would long ago have committed suicide.”
― Mahatma Gandhi
Fortunately, once rediscovered, I have not lost my sense of humour again since; it has helped me through 6+ years of coping with prostate cancer, inspired me to learn to walk again after a bad fall in 2012, and I dare say it will see me through an impending operation on my infected elbow and subsequent stay in hospital.
Religion does not have a monopoly on spirituality; never underestimate the human spirit as it can help us overcome even the worst life throws at us ... if we but let it.
A HEALING WITHIN
Weary of fumbling
through a maze of ugly shapes;
nothing beautiful
to be seen or heard even
by the inner self,
its default to a positive mind-set
left for dead under
a mind-body-spirit anaesthetised
by helplessness,
as in up against huge waves
of negativity,
no existential surfboard, tired
of having a pathetic dog-paddling
pass for progress
World, acknowledging me
party to its ugliness.
bearing down on human senses
day after day
on the early morning commuter run;
a cacophony
of buses, trains and people anxious
to be on time
for places and faces they would prefer
to avoid, but needs must
as some ambivalent ethos drives
the human engine beyond its limits
with no regard for whose, where, why
or consequences
World, reconnecting me
(slowly but surely) with the beauty
of Below Surface,
fishes passing by without tossing
judgemental glances,
sharks causing a stir on the look-out
for sustenance,
not a fast buck to line the pockets
of designer gear
intended to impress or intimidate;
splendid rainbows
among coral spewing beer cans
along with other evidence of human
complacency and waste
Suddenly,
a so-weird glow of crabs and starfish
on the ocean floor
opening the inner eye to tales
of the unexpected
coursing the blood of living creatures
great and smell,
alerting us to danger, even death,
but also the wonders
of creation among which the greatest
has to be life itself,
its delights as well as hardships
around every corner if only by way
of ‘no pain, no gain’
Lungs bursting
with no less self-doubt than before,
but tempered
with hope of finding a kinder world
than I had sought
to quit without notice like a tenant
in high arrears
or that square peg in the round hole
of a workforce,
unwilling to face the situation
head-on, imagining
devils with human faces,
the easier to find excuses for opting
out of the damn scrum
On home ground,
concerned voices and helping hands
reaching out to me
to clutch, not as one all but drowning
but as someone
encouraged to restructure a whole
whose parts
have broken loose from each other,
need reconnecting
and (still) reshaping into a form
least likely to fall prey
to human frailties for staying focused
on evergreen life forces
Copyright R. N. Taber 2017; 2020
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