The United States of Emily and Sera. Ahhh pretty good metaphor. Ya know because others like learn from listening when you share your personal journeys.
This will for sure take about four days to post but I do work for close to fifteen years. It’s actually very hard but I just tell myself it’s better to be here than home. Than after work nearly everyday I go to lift weights and then Zumba.l class. Been doing this for long time. People definitely notice something different about me at gym being that I talk to myself. At work I try hard not to be too distraught. Then I go home. Work is definitely way harder with symptoms than the gym.
Well having no close friends throughout my life I’ll say that mental illness is real. Also because I hear mean voices throughout the day making life intense and painful. And because sometimes it hurts and I can’t stand and need to be admitted to hospital. And because if I go too far off the cliff I become delusional and that is incredibly humiliating and terrifying.
I hope you post my comment. Only sharing what my journey is like.
That’s offensive plain and simple.
Comments from individuals using the public mental health system would be helpful. We got significant amount of former service users hospitalized in 60 and 70’s commenting.
Please post my comment. This is a fair point. I’m trying to have balanced conversation.
Put more bodybuilders that have a mental illness to be advocates. Put more mental health consumers too.
This rather than former service users who should be enjoying retirement rather than dominating comments.
For me this is a kick in the face after everybody has already left me.
It was great.
Personally in my younger years I dated women that were heavyset and curvy most of the time. I’m a 5”8 guy.
The United States of Tara. (Awesome show)
The United States of Emily and Sera. Ahhh pretty good metaphor. Ya know because others like learn from listening when you share your personal journeys.
https://youtu.be/ZL0NXZUfqKk
This will for sure take about four days to post but I do work for close to fifteen years. It’s actually very hard but I just tell myself it’s better to be here than home. Than after work nearly everyday I go to lift weights and then Zumba.l class. Been doing this for long time. People definitely notice something different about me at gym being that I talk to myself. At work I try hard not to be too distraught. Then I go home. Work is definitely way harder with symptoms than the gym.
Well having no close friends throughout my life I’ll say that mental illness is real. Also because I hear mean voices throughout the day making life intense and painful. And because sometimes it hurts and I can’t stand and need to be admitted to hospital. And because if I go too far off the cliff I become delusional and that is incredibly humiliating and terrifying.
I hope you post my comment. Only sharing what my journey is like.
That’s offensive plain and simple.
Comments from individuals using the public mental health system would be helpful. We got significant amount of former service users hospitalized in 60 and 70’s commenting.
Please post my comment. This is a fair point. I’m trying to have balanced conversation.
Put more bodybuilders that have a mental illness to be advocates. Put more mental health consumers too.
This rather than former service users who should be enjoying retirement rather than dominating comments.
For me this is a kick in the face after everybody has already left me.
It was great.
Personally in my younger years I dated women that were heavyset and curvy most of the time. I’m a 5”8 guy.