The story of Ron Coleman
Preface to "Recovery an Alien Concept"
I was brought up in a working class Roman
Catholic family and like many boys my age I went through my religious
phase in my eleventh year of life. I went to see our parish priest and
told him that I wanted to become a priest. Our parish priest at this
time was getting on in years and was one of the old school having said
more masses in Latin than in English. He was also without doubt a man
of God who saw himself as a shepherd and us as his flock. When one
among his flock stated they wanted to become a priest, he took them
seriously. He took my desire to become a priest seriously and once a
week I met with him and two other boys who had also stated a desire to
enter the priesthood. In these weekly meeting we would discuss further
the teachings of the church, the role of the priest and whether we
thought our calling to the priesthood was real. After one such
discussion one of the boys stopped coming as he felt he was not being
called but was trying to please his family. The two of us that remained
were undeterred and continued on with our instruction, fully committed
to the idea that some day we would become priests.
These were happy days for me, I was preparing
to serve God and I had all the enthusiasm an eleven-year old could
muster for my coming tasks. The day that changed my life started the
same as any other I went to school and after school I headed for the
chapel house for instruction. The housekeeper answered the door, she
was near to tears as she told us our parish priest had taken seriously
ill earlier in the day, although he survived he was never to return to
the parish. (I often wonder what would have happened had he never
became ill. Would I now be a priest?) Shortly after this happened a new
parish priest arrived, (I will call him Adrian) at first everything was
business as usual and I soon relaxed into my normal routine. The next
three months went by without incident as far as I was concerned though
I noticed that a lot of the altar boys were leaving service before they
normally would age wise.
I was very quickly to find the reason why when
after Mass one day Father Adrian asked me to come and see him in the
vestry, I sauntered over without any thought as to why he wanted to see
me after all he was a priest. When I arrived at the vestry Father
Adrian asked me to sit down it was at this point that things started to
change. He started by asking me if I had any sins that I needed to
confess, when I said I did not he called me a liar and said that he
needed to pray for me so that I would be forgiven. He knelt beside me
and started praying aloud he was saying something about me leading him
into sin and that I was evil. As he continued to pray he started
moaning and groaning, I was aware that his hand was slowly moving up my
leg this went on until he was touching my penis. As this continued I
was aware of becoming a spectator in what was happening to me. I became
aware of other things around me like the candles that were burning too
brightly and his purple vestments were if anything even more purple
than usual. I was there but not there those who have been abused will
know what I mean, much later in my life I discovered that this is
called dissociation and it is the most common form of self-preservation
of those who are abused. At the time it did not feel much of a defence
to me for inside I screamed at him to stop I also screamed at God for
protection but either God was deaf or I never screamed loud enough
because he never defended me. When it was over Adrian told me that no
one would believe me if I told them what had happened. I left the
vestry in a daze and never told anyone what happened that day or the
many other days that it was to continue for.
I was trapped for a while within this cycle of
abuse, after all who would believe me? Adrian was a priest he stood
between people and God, he represented Christ on the earth, the
forgiver of sins, the good shepherd. I was an eleven-year old boy, a
dreamer and to say anything would brand me a liar. My relationship with
this God that I thought I believed in was over. The abuse continued for
a few months until I found from somewhere the strength to turn my back
fully on the church and with it God. My spiritual and religious phase
was over. Time has taught me that this is the pattern with abusers that
they are often in positions of trust in the community and they use this
position to ply their evil trade in misery and pain. Experience has
taught me that the failure to deal with abuse means that the abuse will
stay with you throughout your life and in many ways shape your life in
terms of future relationships. This is especially true when it comes to
trusting friends or life partners. This event more than any other was
to shape my life or should I say illness.
If this was the only traumatic life event that
I was to go through I believe that I would have survived it and got on
and led a fairly normal life. As is often the case it was when I
thought that I had turned a corner that life dealt me its foulest hand.
As I grew up into adulthood I put the abuse behind me or so I thought
and got on with the business of living, it was while I was getting on
with life that I met Annabelle. I met her one Saturday night in the pub
after I had been playing rugby, when I saw her I knew what love at
first sight meant. Being psychotic has nothing on being in love, love
is without question the true psychotic experience. Annabelle was an
artist, sculpture was her main medium though also she painted and did
sketching. In the short time that we were together she taught me many
things, she taught me what love was, how to make love and most
importantly how to love life. She also taught me to appreciate the arts
such as classical music, opera and theatre. With her I began to
discover a spiritual dimension to my life though I hasten to add that
this was not a religious thing.
Our relationship developed quickly from the
torrid passion of new lovers to the passion that consumes those who are
indeed soul mates. We spent as much time as we could in each others
company often we would sit up through the night talking and planning as
couples do. We were planning our life together, this was normality at
its best. But like all normality madness was lurking waiting its chance
to pounce and consume us and then one day it did.
Like the day I met Annabelle the day our
relationship ended was a Saturday, I had been playing rugby and went
home with something for both of us to eat. When I got in I called to
Annabelle asking her if she wanted tea or coffee, she didn't reply. I
went into the living room and she was lying on the couch I asked her
again and still got no reply I gave her a shake but she would not wake
up. I rushed out of the house to a neighbour and asked them to phone an
ambulance. They rushed her to hospital and put her on a life support
machine she did not make it and three days later she was pronounced
dead. Annabelle had taken her own life I never really found out why but
I know that I blamed myself, I don't know why I blamed myself though it
was to be many years before I stopped doing so.
When she died a large slice of me died also, I
swore that never again would I get emotionally involved with anyone.
Like many others I suppressed all of my emotions about Annabelle and
her death. I continued on with a semblance of existence that others
called life. Like the abuse I choose to pretend it never happened and
like the abuse my feelings of grief and loss and hatred of the world
festered inside growing and growing waiting for their chance to devour
me.
The time came for my emotions to overcome me
when I had an accident on the rugby pitch that put me out of the game
forever. Barely weeks had passed since I was discharged from hospital
(still on crutches) when I heard a voice for the first time. I was in
my office waiting for the computer to deliver the results of some data
I had inputted when a voice behind me said that I had done it wrong. I
looked behind me but there was nobody there. I stopped what I was doing
immediately, went to the pub and got drunk, I remember thinking that I
was stressed and needed a break.
Within a short six months period the voice had
been joined by other voices that spent most of the day screaming at me.
I could not focus on my work and the only relief I got was when I had
drunk myself into oblivion. Eventually my boss told me I had four weeks
to get my act together. Four weeks later I was out of work, losing my
home and on my way (though I didn't know it then) to my first encounter
with the psychiatric services. In double quick time I became a pitiful
sight with an unkempt beard, more often than not dirty clothes and more
and more frequently drunk rather than sober.
Eventually I could not take any more and I
phoned the Samaritans and after much talking went to see my GP. He
ended the consultation with the words "I am going to arrange for you to
see a specialist" fine I thought that will take a while, what a
surprise I was in for. He took me out of his consulting room and asked
me to wait in a small side room in the surgery a few minutes later he
returned with a nurse who he told me was going to look after me while
he arranged an appointment with the specialist. The only thing I
remember about that wait with the nurse was how little she spoke it was
as if she was frightened to be in the same room as me.
My short wait ended some three hours later
when the GP returned with another man it turned out that this man was
the specialist that the GP had contacted. The specialist introduced
himself and told me that he was a psychiatrist and that he had come to
see me since my GP was concerned about me. It was here that I went
through my very first one-hour present state examination, after the
interview the psychiatrist told me I was ill and it would be better if
I came into hospital for a short time. I told him where to shove his
hospital and fled the surgery, three days later I was dragged into the
Royal Free hospital where I once again was subjected to the psychiatric
interview with the conclusion that I was suffering from schizophrenia.
The psychiatrist there told me that if I took
medication then my voices and other symptoms would be eradicated and I
would get better. He told me that the medication took about two weeks
to work and in no time at all I would be back to something like my old
self, he was wrong. Two weeks went by and if anything I was worse not
better so I stopped taking the medication and decided to leave. This
was when I discovered the real power of the system I was put on a
section two of the mental health act, which held me for up to
twenty-eight days against my will. A section three this is a treatment
order, which allowed them not only to detain me but also to medicate me
forcibly if necessary, followed the section two in quick time. This
became my new way of life a constant round of illness with short
periods of respite (not wellness) in the community.
Over the next ten years I was to spend six of
them as an in-patient almost all of them on a section three. In this
time I had nearly forty sessions of ECT, tried nearly every neuroleptic
on the market and was denied psychological interventions on numerous
occasions. Despite the most vigorous of treatment regimes the voices I
heard remained as virulent as ever, medication gave me no respite and
eventually the volume of medication I was taking was so high that I
became little better than a zombie who viewed life through a legalised
drug induced smog.
The system did teach me things the main one
being how to be a good schizophrenic, I do believe that we learn much
about how to be mentally ill in the system. Ten years were to pass
before I found a way out the system by then they (the system) had
created a perfect schizophrenic. Now on to recovery.
The stepping stones to recovery
Any recovery journey has a beginning, and for
me the beginning was my meeting with Lindsay Cooke my support worker,
it was her who encouraged me to go to the hearing voices self-help
group in Manchester at the start of 1991. It was her not me who
believed that a self-help group would benefit me. It was her who saw
beneath my madness and into my potential, it was her faith in me that
kick started my recovery and it is to her that I owe an enormous debt.
There are other essentials required for a
journey to be successful; one of these is the ability to be able to
navigate to your desired destination. In this I was fortunate not to
have one navigator but many. In this section I will mention only five
of them. The first is Anne Walton a fellow voice hearer who at my very
first hearing voices group asked me if I heard voices and when I
replied that I did told me that they were real. It does not sound much
but that one sentence has been a compass for me showing me the
direction I needed to travel and underpinning my belief in the recovery
process.
The second is Mike Grierson; Mike was the
person who navigated me through my first contact both with my voices
and with society. He encouraged me to go out and socialise with people
who had nothing to do the psychiatric system. He also took me to places
like the cinema and classical concerts which reawakened my love for the
arts. Mike was not only my social navigator he was also one of the
people who helped me to focus on my voices in a way that allowed me to
explore my experience.
The third and fourth are Terry McLaughlin and
Julie Downs, Terry and Julie were my navigators back to normality, they
rekindled my interest in politics and took me into their family without
reservation. It was with Terry that I developed much of my early
thinking around training and mental health. With Julie i developed
training packages and now with my wife Karen I am continuing to develop
training packages, which we use to explore the world of mental health.
My fifth person is Paul Baker another of my
navigators on the road to recovery, Paul who brought the hearing voices
network to the United Kingdom encouraged me to become involved in the
network, then when the time was right handed over the development of
voices groups to me. To all of my navigators Anne, Mike, Terry, Julie
and Paul I owe my sanity.
Navigators require a map or a plan from which
to navigate, and I have been fortunate for the people who were my map
makers, were Patsy Hage, Marius Romme and Sandra Escher. I do not
believe that these three fully understand what they have done. Little
did Patsy know when she read the book by Julian Jaynes that the
questions this would make her ask were going to affect so many people
indeed It is because of her questions that the hearing voices network
and resonance and other networks throughout the world exist today.
Whether she wants it or not she has a premier place in the history of
the hearing voices movement.
Sandra Escher is without doubt the person who
made sure that ordinary people could understand the maps that were
being made. Her ability to put across the message in language that is
accessible to everyone has meant that their work has not remained in
the world of academia but has been used by voice hearers from the very
beginning. Sandra and Patsy have played a very important part in my
recovery.
The final map maker is Marius Romme, Marius
who in his own words is a traditional psychiatrist, is without doubt
one of the greatest map makers who it has been my good fortune to know.
When he listened to Patsy Hage and explored what she was saying it was
then in my opinion he stopped being a traditional psychiatrist. When he
asserted in public for the first time that hearing voices was a normal
experience and that voice hearing was not to be feared he stopped being
a traditional psychiatrist. When he continued his work despite being
ridiculed and criticised by his peers he stopped being a traditional
psychiatrist and in my opinion became a great psychiatrist.
To Patsy Sandra and Marius I only owe one thing and that is my life.
Up to this point I have mentioned nine people
who have been participants in one way or another in my recovery journey
and therein lies the first stepping stone to recovery; people.
If I were to name all the people who have
played a part in my recovery the list would be massive. The other thing
about this list would be the fact that the majority on it would not be
professionals. One of my fundamental beliefs about recovery is the
premise that recovery cannot and does not happen in isolation. Nor can
it happen if all our relationships are based on a professional and
client interaction. Recovery is by definition wholeness and no one can
be whole if they are isolated from the society, in which they live and
work.
For many years I had argued that there is no
such thing as mental illness this has lead me into some interesting
debates with people over the last few years. One of these debates was
with Marius Romme, during this discussion it became clear, that Marius
was not arguing a case for biological illness, what he in fact was
saying was that illness could be expressed as a persons inability to
function in society. This I can accept as it means that recovery is no
longer a gift from doctors but the responsibility of us all.
This raises the question of whether society is
prepared to take any kind of responsibility for the recovery of people
with mental health problems. I am of the opinion that they will not,
for in our sophisticated culture we too have bought into the notion of
a biological explanation for mental health. I suppose that my
expectations of society might appear to be to high, but that must be
seen in the context of those societies that do accept responsibility
for those amongst them who become mad.
For Example in the Aboriginal Culture when
someone goes mad the whole tribe comes together to discuss what the
tribe has done to cause the person to be mad. Can you imagine this
happening in our cultures? I think not. When someone goes mad in our
culture it is off to hospital with them. It is not a gathering of the
local community that gets together to decide what is wrong with the
community. It is a ward round made up of so called experts who get
together often without the person concerned being present who decide
both what is wrong with the client and how it will be treated. This
scenario, alas all to familiar, does not hold out much chance of
recovery for the client. It is an impersonal rather than a person
centred way of approaching the problem. Within this scenario recovery
is objective not subjective and the person is no longer a real factor
in the process.
If people are the building bricks of recovery
then the cornerstone must be self. I believe without reservation that
the biggest hurdle we face on our journey to recovery is ourselves.
Recovery requires self-confidence, self-esteem, self-awareness and
self-acceptance without this recovery is not just impossible it is not
worth it.
We must become confident in our own abilities
to change our lives; we must give up being reliant on others doing
everything for us. We need to start doing these things for ourselves.
We must have the confidence to give up being ill so that we can start
being recovered. We must work at raising our self esteem by becoming
citizens within our own communities despite our communities if need be.
We are valued members of our societies and we must recognise our value.
We need to recognise our own faults the system may have created our
diagnoses, but often it is ourselves who reinforce it. We need to be
aware of our learned behaviour, this should be part of our old lives.
We need to change those behaviours that still trap us in our roles as
patients. We need to accept and be proud of who and what we are, I can
honestly say my name is Ron Coleman and I am psychotic and proud. This
is not a flippant statement, this is a statement of fact.
I am convinced that when we grow confident
about who and what we are; we can then be confident about who and what
we might become. For me these four selfs; self-confidence, self-esteem,
self-awareness and self-acceptance are the second stepping stone on the
road to recovery.
The third step is closely related to the
second and it is rooted in our own status. I believe that we ourselves
have a great deal of say in our own status. We can choose to remain
victims of the system, we can choose to continue to feel sorry for
ourselves, we can choose to remain the poor little ill person who
requires twenty-four hour care from professionals. On the other-hand we
can choose a different direction, we can choose to stop being victims
and become victors, we can choose to stop feeling sorry for ourselves
and start living again, we can choose to stop being the poor little ill
person and start the journey of recovery. This for me is the third
stepping stone choice. When we thought of ourselves as ill it was easy
to let others make our choices. The recovery road however demands that
we not only make our own choices but that we take responsibility for
all our choices good and bad. As we make choices we will make mistakes,
We must learn to see the difference between making a mistake and having
a relapse. For it is the easy option to go running back to the
psychiatric system when we make mistakes. Rather than face our own
weaknesses we fall into the trap of blaming our biology rather than our
humanity. If people are the building blocks of recovery and self is the
cornerstone then choice is the mortar that holds the bricks together.
There is one other stepping stone in the recovery process and that is
ownership. Ownership is the key to recovery, we must learn to own our
experiences whatever they are. Doctors cannot own our experiences,
psychologists cannot own our experiences, nurses, social workers
support workers, occupational therapists, psychotherapists, carers, and
friends. Even our lovers cannot own our experiences. We must own our
experiences. For it is only through owning the experience of madness
can we own the recovery from madness.
The journey through madness is essentially an
individual one, we can only share part of that journey with others,
most of the journey is ours and ours alone. It is within ourselves that
we will find the tools, strength and skills that we require to complete
this journey for it is within ourselves that the journey itself takes
place.
Recovery has become an alien concept, yet
nothing I have talked about so far is based on rocket science, rather
it is based on common sense, it is not anything new, it is merely a
reiteration of a holistic view of life. We need to realise that
sometimes we, all of us make things much more difficult than they need
to be. It is almost as if we need life to be a rocket science that we
can never understand. We seem to spend much of our time making the
complexities of living even more complex through our appliance of
scientific objectivity rather than exploring our lives through the
simple mechanism of personal subjectivity. The time has come to have a
close encounter with an alien concept it is time for recovery.