27 (March 2025) pt. 1 in 27 / 27 / 27 / 27 / 27 / 27 / 27 / 27 / 27

  • March 28, 2025, 12:52 a.m.
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I can’t keep a running journal to save my life, so I’ve decided to do an update on the 27th of each month, since it is my favorite number in all of space and time. I haven’t decided if they’ll all be written in one sitting or be deposits of thoughts saved as drafts throughout the month that I hit publish on each 27th. Leaning on the latter… This one will be a two parter, though, because I’m getting started late and, well, I haven’t been around here for a very good while.

Anyway, I’ve gotten an answer as to why I can’t maintain a journal (or much of anything routine.) In the last year, especially within the last two months, I have gotten more answers than I can handle–answers about things that have been ongoing in my life since the dawn of Matt. About one year ago, I endured three appointments, one of which being a three hour long set of tests, and was firmly diagnosed with Autism. I’m not going to lie, while I took it well for about two weeks, I ultimately did nosedive and lost the good part of last year to a mental collapse so bad that I was almost hospitalized by my psychiatrist. I mean, that collapse was so bad.... it included bouts of bawling in the floor, throwing things at work, and a month-long leave from that job for cutting myself in the back room (and I have no history of cutting, it was a first.)

I was on a rollercoaster of medicines for the constant anxiety attacks but they either didn’t work, had adverse side effects, or, in the case of Lithium, had an allergic reaction that caused fluid buildup in my brain (thankfully I eased off in time for it to not progress to full blown Lithium poisoning… I think. I didn’t go to the doctor for it, I rode it out laying on the couch watching Gojira fucking kill it during the Olympic opening ceremony.)

My (new) therapist, who is someone trained specifically to handle autistic people, decided that once my anxiety was down (which we eventually managed) that we should reapproach an ADHD diagnosis. I was given a single prescription to fill for lisdexamphetamine (Vyvanse) and given the spill about how extreme the impact of the medicine is, in opposite ways, for people with and without ADHD.

If you didn’t know, people who have ADHD are calmed by it and their focus is restored. The whirling thoughts in their head become quiet and redirectable. Normal existance briefly unlocks. People who don’t have ADHD get amped tf up and take it recreationally for this reason. My favorite story about this difference was one I found while looking up the medicine I’d been given: Someone said they attended a concert with several friends. Once there, all of them were offered an amphetamine. When it hit them, all of their friends went wild and barrelled off into the mass of people. They, on the other hand, zenned out and thought “wow… I think I can actually do my homework…” and sat under a tree by themselves to do so.

So, uh… my reaction was the zen side of things and it is unreal how completely different I feel. I have never felt this way in my life. It would take an entire entry to cover how profound the change (for the better) has been.

Once that diagnosis was secured, we moved onto another that had high results in my 3 hr testing session and I was referred to an EMDR therapist for PTSD. I am in love with her, by the way. She had me figured out immediately and told me by the end of the intake appointment that it was looking like a pretty serious case of it and that it was likely Complex PTSD. She picked up that I was fascinated by the process and has thoroughly exposed me to the hows and whys of each step along the way, showing me her guide paperwork, sending me home with books on the birth of EMDR therapy and neuroscience of how it works, and emailing me entire textbooks. I think I would die for her.

Anyway, EMDR is an eight phase process with several phases repeating in the middle as needed. I just graduated phase 2 and had my first go at phase 3 (where we barrel into the explicit details of traumatizing memories head on) last appointment. We’re doing phase 4 next time I see her, which processes the current memory brought up in the last appointment. Everyone says I’m going to cry or get broken at some point. One joke was that I’d end up bawling huddled in a corner while they’re looming over me yelling or something. That’s not how it works, of course, but the therapist did say she’d be surprised if I didn’t at least cry a little at some point. Hey, challange accepted. I struggle to feel things. My partner had to encourage me to cry when we were having to put our dog down. If she can somehow get to me while talking about things I’m already very open to talking about with anyone who will listen, I’ll consider it a privilage to ugly cry or throw a lamp or something.

(I had originally typed ‘if she can break me, I’ll consider it a privilage’ and snorted, wondering if that’s where my recent curiousity about femdom came from. Ah, that was lgbTMI.)

We’re also not sure if I have OCD. It was decided it was autism instead when I got that diagnosis, and she explained the overlap between the two conditions and how they can tell the difference. Something has recently come to light (a story about something a stranger did that I also did and how people suspected she had Malignant OCD) that makes me want to bring it back up with the specialist. I meant to last visit and faggin forgot.

So, in short, life has been extremely eventful since I was last here, but with the power of the other half of meth, I believe I can keep this journal going with some consistancy. I’ll drop a part 2 to this entry tomorrow and cover things that aren’t mental health related… like that time I rode a train for two hours covered in a week’s worth of BO and a backpack full of dog piss… or that time I was awake under the surgeon’s knife while his alexa blasted Dio, Ozzy, and Judas Priest. Damn, I haven’t even posted how my chest surgery has healed. I gotta get on that.


Last updated March 28, 2025


Pretty Fly Jedi March 28, 2025

One thing I noticed when Hayden and Hayley took Vyvanse was how quiet they got.
Hayden's was like he could finally hear his actual voice and do the things he really wanted to do, but couldn't navigate because his brain was so loud.
But he also laughed a lot, cried a lot...it's like he was unlocked to surface and be himself.

Hayley's was different. It was a miracle and torture at the same time.
She was quiet and she would write books. Illustrate them. One a day. She was probably 7. But it's like all the chaotic energy exploding out of her (she was extremely destructive around that age) was finally funneled where she wanted it. She got her ideas on paper.
Except, she stopped eating.

Both refuse meds these days and they blame the Vyvanse. They both acknowledge just how much it worked and helped, but they really struggled with the crash and headaches.

Many years later, I've learned that they really should have had a secondary med at the end of the day that buffered the crash.

So if you experience that kind of crash, definitely bring it up.

They wanted to do EMDR with Wayne but he really struggles with memory. They decided to go the spravato route.

He has LOVED it.
yells KETAMIIIIINE lol

The coolest thing about it all is when he first started it, he didn't have any wild or vivid experiences like most people do. He just knew that he felt a bit lighter and happier. He still doesn't have crazy visual hallucinations like others in the office do.

But he's starting to have these really complex emotions come up with visual things during treatment.

It has really helped him. He doesn't know how (we've researched the science of it and it's really interesting) but he can definitely tell a drop off when he doesn't do treatment.

The psychiatrist and people where we go are amazing too. They can tell we are interested in it all and send us links and stuff to read...and we geek out when we go in haha

I'm sorry the autism diagnosis hurt so deeply. When they diagnosed Hayden, at 12, I cried for a long time.

Nothing had really changed except now it had a name. Now he could get help...and some of the tears were knowing how he would struggle his whole life. That he would struggle in a world not made for him, even though he's the most excellent person.
But also just having someone say, "You're right" and validating everything.

It was an emotional nightmare AND relief, somehow.

You are such a spectacular person. I'm sorry the journey hasn't been easy, but you are absolutely killing it.
It takes a lot of bravery and curiosity to explore the mind.

Little Metal Weirdo Pretty Fly Jedi ⋅ March 29, 2025

Thank you. :)

Yooo the not eating thing, I got that part of it too. I'm mature/aware enough to recognize it and fight through it and it's gotten better thankfully but there for awhile I just did not feel like eating or sleeping on it. I am dealing with a slight crash right when we get home from work, like clockwork every day, when I take the Vyvanse, but after talking to some people, it looks like that's common with the standard dosage and that there is an extended release one that is supposed to work longer with no crash... something I'm going to ask about whenever I see my dealer next lmao.

The therapy building Shane goes to recently set up for Ketamine treatments, they just warned that insurance doesn't typically cover it for most things yet. I'm defo curious about it.

Yeah, that diagnosis only hurt because, and I told my therapist this, it's like being made to sleep through your life and then you're allowed to wake up much, much later and where the estate should be that you should have been building, it's just burning ruins everywhere. It's still buildable, now with the right tools and instructions, but Christ where do you start? Everybody at work keeps seeming a bit bothered by us going part time, asking things like 'what are you doing with all that extra time?' and I want to shake them by the shoulders and verbally vomit about how I'm 34 and I've missed every single milestone in my life. Dropout, no driver's license, none of it. I have some catching up to do lmaooooo.

Right now I'm navigating how to explain that part without seeming like I'm blaming autism for a failed life experience... I'm not. There was so much less understood in the 90s about it, especially as it presents in girls. It was the lack of knowledge and the lack of support/neglect. Even last year, when I posted the diagnosis, my dad had to chime in and say 'don't think so, never saw it in you' haaaa (he never saw anything tbh.) I've told both my autism and ptsd therapists that and their face was worth having to read it. EMDR lady said 'wooooooow..... HOWWWWWW... you are like the textbook--- I am sorry, but it's like, you open the page and there's you, that's your picture. :D'

"That he would struggle in a world not made for him, even though he's the most excellent person." I keep telling someone we work with 'look mine has a name but I'm not buyin' the part where we're the odd ones' lmfao.

Pretty Fly Jedi Little Metal Weirdo ⋅ March 29, 2025

I think that's what makes me incredibly sad about how autism is treated.

It's like they cut all the edges off you to make you a circle and one day, it's ok to be a square.

But why didn't they just let you be a square from day one??

Honestly, it's really no one's business what yall do in your "free" time. You could tell them anything you want. Make them all wild and different. Let them compare notes HAHA

Wayne has the same insurance, I think. Ours is BCBS through Walmart. His psychiatrist was able to put it through for coverage but it took her about a month to convince them to cover it.

If he gets to do spravato, they usually keep candies because the spray can be bitter...but they had ginger candies so if he starts, tell him to bring some he likes lmao!!

Wayne keeps wanting me to start therapy and try it but I just don't think I could handle it, honestly. I've got all my bits and bobs of trauma neatly tucked away for the time being HAHA I'll deal with them when I have time later on. Gonna be an old woman just rage gardening HAHA

My mom blamed forever for putting the kids on medicine. Told me all this isn't real.
My dad said I was the reason the world is fucked up now. Giving kids drugs and adukts living without them when "back and my day" thE parents did drugs and the kids were just kids.

And then mom got diagnosed with severe adhd 😂😂

I'll tell you something cool, though. The world you're building, even from ashes, is going to be so beautiful and solid. Your life going forward is going to be on your terms...you're fucking free, my dude. <3

I love you both very much. You're doing hard things but the payoff is peace and joy.

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