Pokemon GO.C.D.

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On the night of July 6, 2016, I sat in my apartment, bouncing in my chair as I waited to connect to the newly released Pokemon Go server. As soon as I was in, I scanned around the room with my phone, and found my very first pokemon (Bulbasaur, the starter I chose in my childhood) sitting near my computer desk.

Almost three years and 20,000 pokemon later, Pokemon Go is a big part of my life. I have attended every monthly Community Day event, hatch eggs on the way to and from work, and spend many evenings and weekends trying to get every new pokemon as it’s released into the game. It’s something that never fails to bring me joy, and I find a special thrill in remembering and telling the stories of how I caught some of my favorite pokemon.

My gaming experience wasn’t always so positive. When I was a kid, my parents didn’t let me play video games. They knew that I tended to hyperfocus on things, and since video games were getting more and more immersive, they didn’t want me to fall into the clutches of games designed to keep people hooked. They finally started letting me play games towards the end of elementary school, and the first game I wanted to play was a series I’d learned about through watching the TV show: Pokemon.

Although it started as a solitary game experience, I discovered a Pokemon-playing community when I went to computer camp in the summer. In addition to the fun I had playing the game by myself, I learned that it was even more fun to play with friends. I had something to talk about with kids I didn’t know and it helped me make friends a lot easier than I usually did.

I also learned about kindness – after being the “weird” kid in school thanks to my obsessions and compulsions being too visible at a time with even less mental health awareness than there is now, I finally got to encounter generosity from my Pokemon-playing peers. I will never forget crying over my file of Pokemon Sapphire after losing my chance at catching Kyogre (a legendary pokemon of which there is only one in each game file), only for an older boy I never met to give me his, no questions asked.

I stayed aware of the cautions of gaming – it’s easy to spend too much money on games and even easier to spend too much time – and I worked my way up to being a steady gamer who also knew my own boundaries. I signed up for my first MMORPG (very immersive games played online that tend to be the ones that spark gaming addictions) against my parents’ recommendation at 18, and learned by trial and error how to find balance. Why would I sign up for a MMORPG considering their reputation, I was sometimes asked – and the answer was always the same. In those games, you play with other people from around the world, and I was using my game to find a connection to people who shared my interests that felt too weird for real life.

As an adult, I still find it hard to make friends sometimes, even though I no longer experience compulsions like I did. Now, just like in my computer camp days, Pokemon helps me make new friends and also find a community where it’s not only okay to hyperfocus – it’s actually encouraged.

I went to a Pokemon Go event the weekend I moved to Chicago, and quickly learned of a weekly meetup in my neighborhood to trade pokemon, My Sunday nights are now filled with pokemon trading and hanging out with new friends from all walks of life who come together to play the game.

What I find most interesting about the Chicago Pokemon Go community as compared to the community I played with before I moved is how intense the players here are. I’m actually one of the only people without a spreadsheet or a series of notecards prioritizing which pokemon I will trade for – if someone wants to trade with me, even if it’s not the best trade, I’ll do it, just like the boy at computer camp once did for me.

When I’m out at events, I’ll start a conversation with anyone I see with the game up on their screen, and it’s so different from how I usually am around new people. Instead of telling myself that I can’t come on too strong by expressing my interests right away, I feel enabled to talk more openly because I know they’re just as interested as I am – and I’ve used this as a way to become acclimated to a new environment. In addition to playing with my neighborhood group, I’ve used Pokemon Go to make friends at work, interact with people at mixers, explore Chicago, and more.

Pokemon Go has become a way for me to find a positive thing to obsess about, plus a community where this obsession won’t lead to me getting bullied or ostracized. As a kid, I was led to believe that playing games as a person with OCD meant that they’d take over my life and lead me to becoming a recluse who lived for nothing but the pixels on my screens. It’s been a wonderful journey to discover that I have the inner strength to resist that temptation as well as the ability to make friends by being passionate about things – something I specifically thought would hinder my ability to make friends throughout my life.

And speaking of friends, if you’re looking for new Pokemon Go connections, please feel free to send me an invite! My friend code is 3073-2651-9207. 😊

Ellie, a writer new to the Chicago area, was diagnosed with OCD at age 3. She hopes to educate others about her condition and end the stigma against mental illness.

WHAT DOES BRAVERY LOOK LIKE?

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What Does Bravery Look Like?

Trigger Warning: Medical imagery

When I was little, I always wanted to be brave when I grew up. (And an author, of course.) Bravery, to me, meant what I saw in the movies - people doing daredevil feats, climbing mountains, bungee jumping, and being unafraid of the everyday things that scared me so much. Even petting a dog or trying a new food seemed like an insurmountable amount of bravery.

Over the years of living with OCD, I’m slowly learning that bravery can take many different forms, whether or not I see it in myself.

This past weekend, I was forced to be brave in a way that I’ve had to deal with since I was hospitalized seven years ago for a potentially fatal blood clot. Thanks to the medicine I’m on, I can start to bleed severely at any time. One of those (thankfully infrequent) times was this past Friday, when a small injury turned into an alarming amount of blood. I could feel my heart pumping in my chest as it just kept coming and coming and coming - and nothing I was doing to stop it was working at all. My thoughts raced along with my heart and I couldn’t help but think, in those first few moments, that I was the worst coward who ever lived.

It was then that I thought about what Mom said when I first got out of the hospital all those years ago. She got me a card with Wonder Woman on it and wrote inside that I had been so brave.

 I was shocked when I read the card. How could I be brave when I was little more than a crying mess for the entire time? How could I be brave when I was afraid of every little thing from beeping machines to drinking the tap water? How could I be brave when I tried to kick a nurse whose job it was to wake me up for a midnight blood draw?

Mom explained: then, and this weekend, I was brave because I kept going. I had the option to drop out and lose a semester and take more time to recover, but I didn’t. I had the option to not do the surgeries and risk permanent disability for the sake of my fear, but I pushed ahead, even knowing I would have to do at least one surgery while awake. No matter what happened, I did my best to keep my spirits up and I took all the steps I knew to do.

I did the same thing this weekend. I rationalized my actions in my head instead of running around like a chicken with its head cut off (my favorite metaphor for when my thoughts run amok). I may have talked out the steps to myself, everything as simple as finding clean towels and warm water, but I did it. I also knew to do the other things that would get me off of the peak of anxiety: I called my family, wrote to my best friend, cuddled up in a soft outfit and started playing a calming video game. Even as I took breaks in conversation to exclaim that the bleeding still hadn’t stopped, I quickly returned to the distractions I had created for myself.

I’m starting to recognize bravery in actions like the ones I did last weekend. It’s not the same thing as holding a giant iguana or ziplining (two things I’ve also pushed myself to do this past year), but it’s bravery nonetheless. I knew what was coming, and I did it. No matter how afraid I was, I did it.

I see that kind of bravery in my friends who also live with mental illness. Whether it’s the bravery to do a job interview with social anxiety or join a social group with autism, it strikes me that the people I know find ways to make every day a new opportunity for courage. While I hope I don’t have too many opportunities to prove my strength in situations like this weekend, I do know that my life with OCD so far has prepared me to fight for the kind of bravery I am good at, and to learn to see that as a positive about my diagnosis.

Ellie, a writer new to the Chicago area, was diagnosed with OCD at age 3. She hopes to educate others about her condition and end the stigma against mental illness.

THE PRICE OF MENTAL STABILITY

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The Price of Mental Stability

Trigger Warning: Medical imagery

The price of my mental stability is $250 a month.

It can be hard to put a price on things like this, but my case is clear. It’s the difference in costs between two medications that achieve the same purpose for the same physical illness I developed seven years ago. Both treat the symptoms in similar ways, but there’s one huge difference that means I can’t take the cheaper clinical alternative.

I was given the original medication along with a packet of blue paper. I can still remember how many sheets there were, straining the staple as I flipped through them. These were no ordinary instructions. These were restrictions on what I could eat - no leafy greens, and I’m a vegetarian. I had to take the medicine at the same exact time every day and not eat for an hour before or half an hour after. I had to get blood draws to even know how much to take, and the doctor would tell me what to do each day. There was also a list of how to know when things went wrong, and all the tiny little conditions that meant to go to the ER immediately, or else.

Instructions like these are probably meant to cause some kind of comfort to patients - if you follow these rules, you won’t get sick again. But for me, it took on a whole other meaning.

Thanks to my OCD, I tend to see all the possibilities of things. Sometimes, this can be a good thing, helping me to find the good in a negative situation. But here, all I could see was this huge list of rules that had to be done completely right. What if I took the pill at 5:01 instead of 5:00? What if I forgot any of the rules? What if I ate a potato chip before dinner? And what if that chip then somehow ruined the blood value for the dose I was supposed to take, and I took too much and bled or too little and died?

And that was just the aspect of things I could control - I also might have symptoms that terrified me because of my obsessive relationship with my digestive system for no reason at all, and all the sticking to the packet in the world couldn’t keep me safe if I had something like that. All it took was one memory of the horrifying taste of blood for me to become completely, utterly terrified.

When I started the medication, it was a daily ordeal. Not only did I have to keep the rules, but because my numbers were never consistent, daily blood draws became a part of my life. I had to enter an environment I was terrified of every day, and be in pain and fear every afternoon until the doctor would call me and tell me my dose. Then that would feed into the fear that I was cutting the tiny pills wrong, and what if I had half of one instead of a third, and did the little dust on the pill-cutter count?

The blood draws thinned as time went on, but the fear and obsessions lingered. I begged for an alternative, and when I heard about a new drug that was in FDA testing, I told my doctor to call me the minute it was approved for use.

Eleven months after I got that blue packet, I was finally able to take a pill with no restrictions. No blood draws, no counting, no timing. This pill was, medically, the less safe option. It didn’t even have an antidote at the time, which meant that paramedics couldn’t do much of anything if I was bleeding too much for any reason. But I gladly made that trade, so that the life I lived could be the life I loved from before any of this happened.

The new drug has no generic version, and won’t for years. It’s very expensive, even with insurance and the manufacturer’s discount card. The other option costs a pittance, if that. But there’s nothing I can do.

I know myself well enough to know that I can’t do something that regimented. I know this lesson in many ways, like when I’m trying to lose weight, I know to not count calories. I know to not fall into traps like these because of how hard it is to claw my way out. And so, I pay.

I pay the $250 not because I want to be difficult or don’t respect the money I earn, but because I prefer living my life without having to fight every single second for a shred of happiness. I know what that feels like, thanks to a prolonged mental health crisis where I dealt with the trauma of this illness and its recovery years after I left the hospital.

I pay the $250 because I don’t know how to tell an insurance company that yes, there are technically other options, but even the thought of going back on the first medicine made me start to cry and wonder if I had the strength to make it.

I pay the $250 because after experiencing a crisis like that, I’d gladly give my entire bank account to avoid having to deal with unending panic attacks and flashbacks and depression that sucked away everything good about my life.

I sometimes wonder about the people who can’t afford to pay the $250, or however much it might be for them. I wonder if they find ways to get used to the pain over time, or if they simply fall deeper into despair. I hope for their sake and mine that one day, mental health will be a valid reason to switch from one medication to another, especially in cases like mine where I was able to find research that 1 in 3 people facing my illness would also face a mental health crisis within the following two years.

To me, this is a reflection of the secrecy and shame around mental health. It’s not easy to use my OCD as a reason to make one choice over another, especially after I’ve been conditioned to believe that doing anything based on OCD is wrong. It’s not easy to explain things to doctors and pharmacists and insurance companies. It’s not easy spending the money that I could be saving for my future.

But for me, it’s no choice at all. I need to advocate for myself, to do what I know is right for me. I need to be able to eat salads at 5:00 and keep my blood in my veins where it belongs. I need to not be in a hospital environment that breeds flashbacks. And that means I need to pay this price for no reason other than the chemical production of my mind, so that I have a real chance to be happy and healthy.

And isn’t that what any medicine is ultimately for?

Ellie, a writer new to the Chicago area, was diagnosed with OCD at age 3. She hopes to educate others about her condition and end the stigma against mental illness.

THE THRILL OF ROUTINE

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The Thrill of Routine

For many people, routine is boring, something that they look forward to getting away from on a vacation. But for me, my favorite vacation each year is one that is choreographed from beginning to end, with only the slightest variations.

 My parents and I will leave the house early in the morning, and I’ll take a Ziploc baggie of cereal in the car’s cupholder for later. We’ll pick up my Nana, who will bring her breakfast in a leftover goody bag from my bat mitzvah, and then I’ll eat and nap, probably until we stop at a Subway in the middle of Alabama for lunch. I’ll stand in the sandwich line with Dad and get a custom veggie sub and have an internal debate about whether or not I should be eating potato chips. We’ll drive the rest of the way, and I’ll know every road, every rest area, everything between home and the small town in Florida where we’ve spent a week every year for almost half my life.

We stay in the same condo. Our mornings begin with the same walk on the beach and gruesome discoveries of dead jellyfish. Our afternoons are divided between a number of places we’ve visited for years, and the only thing I don’t know is which place we’ll visit on which day. In the evening, we go to one of our favorite restaurants where none of us even need to look at the menu, and one night we even go to my favorite French fries place I’ve ever experienced. (No one there minds that I eat them with a fork, and I even get a toy alligator just for showing up!) I collect the alligator toy and buy the same thing from the gift shop and after, I go with my family to bookstores and other calm places before we eat at our favorite ice cream place.

The trip is extremely predictable. I haven’t even left yet and I could give names and locations of everywhere we’re going and everything we’re going to do. And I absolutely, positively love it.

I didn’t realize these traditions were intrinsically tied into my OCD until we had to make some major adjustments to the vacation this year. It was really hard to delay it by two and a half months - we usually go the week of Christmas, and there are several traditions like cooking when the restaurants are closed and looking at light shows and shopping at holiday sales that we won’t get to do this year. I felt down all that week, thinking about where I should have been as I spent my holidays alone.

I was only just starting to acclimate myself to that change, promising myself the same vacation but a couple of months later, when my parents suggested shortening the trip by a couple of days. Without even a moment going by, I burst into tears, thinking the trip was really, truly ruined.

After figuring out vacation days with Dad, we were both able to take the time to do the trip I wanted. I’ll even be coming home a day early to spend time with my sweet dog. As much as I could, I took what I could get and am now counting down the days to the trip that I already know head to toe.

Once the plans were booked, I spoke to my parents about it, and realized they were a little surprised about my reaction to the changes. After all, I’m in my 20s, and I just moved across the country to a place I’d never even seen to start a new job without knowing anyone in Chicago. I even managed to go far away for college after never having lived away from home as a kid, not even for summer camp.

I’ve made major changes in a lot of areas in my life, and yet, there’s still something in me that needs some things to stay the same. It’s why I feel comforted when I’m watching my favorite movies, the extended Lord of the Rings trilogy - I know every bit of music, every line, everything that’s going to happen, and I take comfort in that stability.

There was definitely a part of me that knew that we could have cut the trip by a day or two and nothing major would have changed - we would have done our same things, and we wouldn’t have had as much time laying around and maybe even getting bored. But at the same time, I needed it. I didn’t know how to express that it was an OCD thing, or maybe I was just too ashamed at the way I got overwhelmed so fast at just the thought of cutting the trip short. I don’t need the comforts I did as a kid, like asking the same question over and over to hear the same reassuring answer. There are a lot of OCD-related things I’ve given up as I’ve gotten older, but some of them, like my need to keep certain things the same, will probably always stay with me.

At a time when I’ve had a lot of changes in the last few months, I take comfort in my favorite music, movies, and books. I’m trying to accept this part of myself and minimize my shame, but it’s hard to do in a world where mental illness is seen as bad, weird, and just plain undesirable. But it is an undeniable part of me, and it also gives me a ton of joy on trips like our yearly Florida vacation. I don’t get bored of seeing the same things; instead, it gives me new pleasure every time, as well as a warm and comforting sense of home that’s hard to get at a time in my life that’s full of changes. For me, learning to see that positive side of things is what has helped me get rid enough of the shame to share this story with you, and hopefully to work on sharing more. It’s only in a world where misunderstood behaviors are understood that people like me will really, truly be accepted.

Ellie, a writer new to the Chicago area, was diagnosed with OCD at age 3. She hopes to educate others about her condition and end the stigma against mental illness.

FINDING PRIDE IN MY PASSIONS

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Tomorrow, I’ll begin my second year of participating in Back to Middle-Earth Month, an online challenge that brings together people from across the Tolkien fandom to create new works celebrating his. When I talk about it, some people assume that I’m automatically going to sign up because they know I’m a nerd and Tolkien’s world is my absolute favorite.

What they don’t know is that I didn’t used to be open with people about this - and I actually became a Tolkien fan at age nine, farther back than I’d admit to most people.

I still remember the day I first discovered it: I was laying on the couch, entertaining myself with a comic book on an otherwise unmemorable weekend afternoon. Dad was watching Fellowship of the Ring, which was in my young (and uneducated) mind the nerdiest thing in the universe. He always tried to get me to watch science fiction movies with him, or fantasies like this one, but I was never interested.

Somehow, he got me to look up - and the second I saw that first clip, I was completely captivated. I watched the movies in record time and soon moved on to the books and to peppering Dad with a thousand questions about obscure bits of lore.

In the beginning, things were perfect. I felt like I’d fallen in love and nothing could bring me down. But then it was brought to my attention that I was obsessed with Lord of the Rings.

Even now, after so many trials with OCD, I still bristle at the word. When I was a kid, I was even more sensitive about it, and I realized that my new hobby must be something to be deeply ashamed of. And my joy soon turned to horror as I thought of what was under my bed at that very moment.

Shortly after finishing Return of the King for the first of many times, I had started writing fanfiction (although I hadn’t even heard of the term) inside a marble notebook that I kept in a drawer under my bed, right next to my diary. Paint chips representing the colors of outfits, horses, and decorations were glued meticulously into the notebook along with notes I wrote on pieces of scrap paper, napkins, and even the occasional tissue. It turned into a marvelous scrapbook of ideas, a cornucopia of inspiration.

With this new shame, I became determined to ensure no one would ever find out what I was doing in that notebook. I started writing in a code that became so convoluted that even I forgot how to read it after a while. And still, its presence haunted me - until one day, I went into the kitchen when I was home alone and took a pair of scissors and shredded all the pages I’d used, leaving an empty husk of a notebook cover behind.

For many years afterwards - almost a decade, in fact - I kept all of my fanfiction ideas in my head. It was easier than trying to explain to myself or anyone else why I was doing something so weird and still loving it even through all the guilt and shame.

Then, at seventeen, I discovered fanfiction websites. I finally had a laptop of my own, and I was able to browse the archives to my heart’s content. I saw what I had never seen before: a community of people who were also so focused on the same thing as me that they could write these stories for years, amassing thousands of words of fiction about their favorite characters.

It took me a few more years to actually write some fanfiction of my own, but once I started last November, it was such a thrill that I haven’t gone back. When people encouraged me, I read the Silmarillion and then discovered that some fans had spent years debating the finer points of the mythological book even many Tolkien fans call too intense.

 These people were extremely focused. Obsessed, for lack of a better word. These people were like me.

I dove headfirst into the fanfiction scene, and ever since then, I’ve been writing it as often as I can. And once I started getting a few kudos online, I started to tell people in real life about it. Explaining myself, my ideas, my shame, my freedom. And it felt wonderful to give my mom, who I had once hidden the notebook from with such desperation, the link to my first online story. She was also there taking pictures when I debuted my first cosplay of a Tolkien character and appreciates the photos I took with several of the films’ actors at a convention this past year.

It’s been a long journey to take pride in my passion for Tolkien’s work. This month, when I celebrate Back to Middle-Earth Month, I’ll post what I’ve written openly rather than shredding it. I’ll tell my friends, family, and even my new coworkers about what I’m up to. I’ll try to be as open as I can, even if others judge me, because I have watched that stigma lessen before my eyes and have hope that other stigmas can too.

As a kid, it was hard for me to even say the names of the characters I loved out loud, afraid of being ridiculed. I’ve gone from that to marching down the street in a cosplay parade, wearing elf robes and waving to the hundreds of people lining the streets. All it took was the kindness of fellow fans and acceptance of the people who didn’t quite understand why I was so passionate about Tolkien, but were willing to be kind anyway.

 I take pride in saying that I’ll be writing Tolkien fanfiction throughout the month of March. Hopefully, one day, I can be as open about other things - but for now, it’s time to hunker down with my writing prompts and prepare for an amazing month ahead!

Ellie, a writer new to the Chicago area, was diagnosed with OCD at age 3. She hopes to educate others about her condition and end the stigma against mental illness.