(Trigger warning for anxiety)
My cellphone rang. It was my brother. He rarely calls.
It’s not that we’re estranged or anything. It’s that he has his life and I have mine, and we live far apart. And when we get together, we generally have a good time.
It was good to hear his voice.
“Hey Jamie. How are you doing?”
“Not bad, Wolf. How are you?”
I could never play the polite game with my bro. Plus, I was not a fan of chit chat and making polite noises.
“Honestly – not that good, Jamie. I’ve been having some severe panic attacks. I’ve gone to group therapy for about six weeks, only to find out I was in the wrong group and should have been in the panic disorder group, not the generalized anxiety disorder one.”
Silence. Then: “Man, that must suck.”
“Yeah, it really does.”
Silence again. He was probably trying to figure out what to say.
“I had anxiety years ago, and it was bad. I didn’t know what was causing it. My palms were sweaty, my heart was racing and I couldn’t think straight.”
As he listed off his symptoms, my heart began to race. I couldn’t listen to this.
I knew he meant well though, so I let him continue. Silently, I writhed. Listening to him talk about his episode of anxiety was making me feel unsafe and afraid and….I was panicking.
You know, I have to admit: before my panic attacks began, I saw those articles with the words “trigger warning” at the top, and thought it was childish. Who in hell needs to be warned that a story may cause a problem? What are we? Nine years old or something?
As it turns out, I was woefully naive. And as it turns out, very very wrong.
My own brother was making my anxiety worse, and he had no idea. And I was too deep into it to explain it properly, in a way he could understand.
He rambled on and on, describing in vivid detail his brush with anxiety. (And it was indeed a brush, as it only happened to him once, thank God.)
My heart was racing, my head was aching, my stomach was roiling and I was beginning to shake.
I was freaking out.
I stopped my brother in mid-sentence. “Hey Jamie, listen, I’ve got some dinner on the go here, so I think I’ll have to let you go.” There was no dinner.
“Oh okay Wolf. Catch you later then.”
I haven’t been to work in a week. This shit really messes you up. I look forward to a time when I’ll be able to take my good mental health for granted again.
In the meantime, I’m doing what I can to keep myself above the ground. It’s hard, but there are lots of places to provide support. My CAMH counselor made sure I knew that in the worst case scenario, I should call 911. And I will. And it may come to that.
I just know I can’t live with this crap. It’s no way to live anyway. It’s enough right now to just survive.
I won’t even go out on my balcony at this point. Because I don’t trust myself or my impulses.
Anxiety sucks.