Excerpt for From Socks to Insanity by Patsy Scott, available in its entirety at Smashwords

From Socks to Insanity

________________________

Patsy Scott

© 2012

All rights reserved

From Socks to Insanity

COPYRIGHT © 2012 Patsy Scott

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

NO PART OF THIS BOOK MAY BE REPRODUCED OR

TRANSMITTED IN ANY FORM OR ANY MANNER,

ELECTRONIC OR MECHANICAL, INCLUDING

PHOTOCOPYING, RECORDING OR BY ANY INFORMATION

STORAGE AND RETRIEVAL SYSTEM, WITHOUT PERMISSION IN

WRITING FROM THE AUTHOR.

Contact Patsy Scott at patsy@thetoymaker. biz

ISBN-13 978-0-615-59087-5

ISBN-10: 061559087X

Privacy Notice

________________________

Some names have been changed to respect privacy.

PREFACE

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

CHAPTER NINETEEN

CHAPTER TWENTY

EPILOGUE

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

iii

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DEDICATION

This book is dedicated to my husband, John Gilham,

who stood by me through all the bad times

and also to my dear friend Kerry Cain

who stood by John while he stood by me.

PREFACE

I wrote this book 10 years ago. It’s taken me that long

to feel ready to publish it. Although I take a light-hearted

look at mental illness, it’s a serious illness with serious

implications. It breaks my heart to hear of a suicide, even

though I tried at least three times that I remember. My

hope is that this book will help people who are caring for

someone with mental illness to understand a little bit of

what that person is going through and how to help that

person on their way to wellness.

Many people think that those who commit suicide are

selfish, taking the easy way out and leaving their loved

ones to suffer and grieve. I think that many suicides just

want to stop the pain. They can’t see the pain ever going

away and they can’t imagine living the rest of their lives

with it. For me it was my belief in Jesus Christ that

ultimately stopped me from trying to end my life. My

fear was that I didn’t know if suicides went to hell and I

couldn’t bear the thought that maybe, just maybe, I

would spend eternity in hell, in pain forever. Some

people suicide because they’re just so tired of thinking

about it all the time. They can’t make the thoughts go

away and those thoughts plague them day and night. I

would think about ending my life when eating my

breakfast in the morning, again as I showered, more as I

walked to work and so on. Many times I would say, ‚I

just can’t stop these thoughts and I’m so tired.‛

I mention my husband John in the book. He was my

rock. He ‘doctored me up’ after I cut myself and would

put me to bed, sometimes getting out his guitar and

singing to me to calm me down. As well my girlfriends

Kerry Cain and Marion Seguin listened to hours and

hours of my despair. They ‘babysat’ me when I didn’t

feel safe and on those days when I couldn’t get out of

bed, Kerry would come in and start running my shower.

As I was always watching money I couldn’t bear to run

the hot water and not use it, so I’d get out of bed and

have a shower. While I was in the shower Kerry would

make the bed. Now because the bed looked so nice and

tidy, I didn’t want to get back in and mess it up, so I

would be up for the day.

As much as possible, I have tried to stick to the events

as they happened. However, I was very confused and

muddled in those days, so events may not have been

exactly as I have reported them. This story is done to the

best of my recollection.

~ January 2012

CHAPTER ONE

IT WASN’T CLEAR TO ME AT FIRST. I’d studied

him for some time and he looked just like a regular

person. I stepped up to him.

‚Hello,‛ I said. He didn’t reply. ‚Hello?‛ I said again.

‚Leave him alone, he thinks he’s a tree,‛ said Manny.

Manny was an obsessive-compulsive. He spent hours

every day making sure his chair was clean before he

could sit on it. Manny also believed he was John Lennon.

I studied him some more. He didn’t look like a tree.

He just stood there, arms outstretched.

‚Are you deciduous?‛ I asked. He didn’t reply.

‚Perhaps he needs water,‛ I said to John Lennon.

‚Trees need a lot of water.‛

‚Don’t be stupid, he just THINKS he’s a tree.‛

I looked again at the tree. ‚So, what kind of tree are

you?‛ The tree glanced at me. I paused to reflect. ‚You

know, you look poorly for a tree. I think you need

water.‛

The tree rolled his eyes at me.

I’m not sure where it started. I’ve spent long hours

reflecting on it and the best I can come up with are the

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socks. It seems to me that the socks were the definitive

beginning.

‚The kids are here for FIVE days and you’ve packed

only ONE BLOODY PAIR OF SOCKS.‛ My ex-husband

was ranting.

‚What kind of mother are you?‛

What could I say? It was true, I had in fact packed

only one pair of socks.

It had been a busy week, running my business from

home, moving into a new house, starting a new

relationship, running three little boys to and from school.

I hadn’t had time to do the laundry.

‚Any halfway decent mother would have done the

laundry and there’d be socks,‛ he said with finality. ‚You

NEVER pack enough socks for the boys.‛

It wasn’t the first time I had displayed such aberrant

behavior. I could see in my head the mother he wanted

me to be. She not only packed socks but also little snacks

in their packs, and kissed them goodbye on their

foreheads and told them to be good little children for

Daddy ... or maybe for Grandma, because the good little

mother would never leave Daddy.

___________________________

‚I think the tree needs water!‛ I shouted to the nurse.

She sighed and told me to leave tree alone.

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‚If you are a tree, then dogs will pee on you ... I hope

you’ve thought this through ...‛

Tree rolled his eyes again and John Lennon asked, ‚Is

my chair clean?‛

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CHAPTER TWO

Sacramento, California

I HAD BEEN ADMITTED VIA AMBULANCE three

nights ago. I had taken a massive overdose and had been

caught in time. The experience had been humiliating.

My shoes were removed and I was given socks to

wear. Socks again ... I filled out endless paperwork,

signing my papers I couldn’t even read or had the

presence of mind to understand. They walked me down

to a ‘cell’ with a mattress on the floor. It was 4 in the

morning and the staff were tired. I was tired. I’d taken

massive doses of sleeping tablets and I badly needed to

sleep. There was another occupant in the cell, snoring

contentedly as I lay on my mattress with no blanket or

pillow.

I lay there dismayed, afraid, cold and so tired. As the

morning wore on, my roommate took pity on me and

gave me her pillow.

Finally I fell asleep, exhausted, emotionally drained, a

failure at even suicide.

At 6 a.m. the staff burst in the doors, turned on lights,

and ordered everyone out of the beds and into the

lounge. This consisted of one large room with one large

TV playing movies all day. Many people managed to

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find a small chair and try to sleep on it. Some people

were ranting away to themselves, some were ranting at

others. I was afraid. I hoped nobody would notice me.

The staff kept themselves behind bars so we couldn’t

hurt them. It seemed that many of us had been attempted

suicides. Many were lying on the floor trying desperately

to sleep, others were agitated and pacing around and

around in circles, only stopping occasionally to step over

a ‘sleeper’ or avoid another ‘pacer’. The pacers made me

nervous.

One young man, must have been only 16, in his

hospital whites, walked around and around in circles. He

looked confused. Like me, he didn’t know how he had

ended up here. As he paced, one of the floor ‘sleepers’

would roll over into the young man’s walking circle.

He’d stop, look very put out, step over the sleeper and

continue on his circle, each time stopping, looking put

out, stepping over the sleeper and carrying on. It didn’t

seem to occur to him to change his pattern.

I felt ill and I could hardly keep my eyes open, My

hair was matted and filthy from throwing up and my

chin and chest were streaked with black charcoal I had

been made to drink the evening before.

A ’pacer’ walked up to me, looked me up and down

in a discerning way, studiously analyzing the presence of

this disheveled woman in front of him. He stepped back

and studied again, a frown growing on his forehead. I

sensed he was about to tell me something of great

importance.

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‚You have a beautiful bone structure,‛ he said. I was

taken aback. It wasn’t what I was expecting. I took stock

to think of a suitable reply ... it didn’t happen. I grunted.

‚So do I,‛ he said. ‚Scary isn’t it?‛

Satisfied with this, he walked away and left me

standing there.

A staff member stood at the bars, surveying the

pathetic souls before her. A stout woman, one not to

mess with, she raised her voice and barked at us.

‚All right, you will stay in the room for the entire day.

You may NOT go back to your room, the doors are now

locked in your rooms. You will be provided with meals

at 12 and 5. You may watch videos all day, you will not

give us any trouble, nor will you give anyone else

trouble. We simply will not stand for it.‛

I got through the day by trying to sleep, interrupted

only by calling my husband and abusing him.

Apparently I consistently called him every two hours.

I somehow got the idea that I was going to be seen by

the psychiatrist at 10 a.m. and called my husband and

told him to be there for it. He duly arrived and was told

that appointments were not made for the psychiatrist and

they had no idea when I would be seen, or where I even

got the idea I would be seen.

Meals were served up on Styrofoam ‘to go’ boxes.

Lunch and dinner exactly the same. It didn’t matter to

me, I couldn’t eat.

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It wasn’t until 6 p. m. that night that I was seen by the

psychiatrist. An intimidating Asian woman who barked

questions at me, reminiscent to me of Nazi Germany.

‚Why you do it?‛she barked.

‚Ummm ... it was an accident.‛

‚Why you do it???‛ she demanded again.

I didn’t know what to say; apparently she wasn’t

buying the ‚accident‛ story.

‚Are you do it again???‛ she shouted at me

‚Oh no, no, definitely not.‛ At that moment, it was the

last thing I could imagine doing.

‚Are you sure you not do it again???‛ she barked

again.

‚Oh no, no definitely not‛ I assure her.

‚All right, go,‛ she says, and I’m dismissed.

My husband was called to come and get me and I was

required to sign some kind of discharge document saying

that I accepted liability for the $6000 fee for my one day’s

stay there if the insurance company refused.

I feel so tired. I’m within 24 hours of a massive drug

overdose. I can’t think, my head aches and I want to go

home more badly that I could ever have imagined. I

would have sold my firstborn child if they would just let

me go. I just wanted to go home.

Still, for $6000 I thought they could have given me a

pillow, and perhaps matching towels.

As it happened, the only thing they allowed me to

keep,were the socks.

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So ended my first experience in an American

psychiatric institution. Sadly, it wasn’t my first attempt at

suicide.

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CHAPTER THREE

Timaru, New Zealand

My first suicide attempt was not one of my most

brilliant plans. I made a spur of the moment decision to

end my life by way of carbon monoxide poisoning. I

recall so clearly going into the garage, starting the car

and sitting by the exhaust pipe.

After a short while I started to become bored, so I

went from the garage to my bedroom, got a book I had

wanted to read, went back to the garage, sat back down

by the exhaust pipe and started to read my book.

I suppose it might all have gone to plan if I had taken

into account the fact that my garage was built for six cars.

In any event my boyfriend burst into my pleasant little

reverie, reading my book, gassing myself to death, and

ruined the whole thing.

‚What the hell do you think you’re doing??‛ he asked.

‚Umm, I was reading a book ... ‛ I showed him the

book as proof.

Ultimately it led to my introduction to the world of

psychiatry, where (primarily) men of great learning

interview the beaten and bruised remnants of society and

drug them.

‚Well Patsy, your attempt at suicide was unsuccessful,

not because you didn’t intend to do it, but rather because

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you’re not sound enough of mind to do it properly ...‛

This statement of course brought me little comfort. The

fact that I was not of sound mind made me wonder about

those people who had succeeded in killing themselves.

Clearly, those people were of sound mind.

___________________________

I was born the last of ten children. My mother tells me

I’m a virgin birth. Apparently the only virgin birth

because she always spoke of ‘your father‛ to the others. I

did, however, receive my father’s ears. Mother never

offered up an explanation for this.

My mother had been a war-bride, falling in love with

a dashing Air Force pilot while he was in training in

Canada. She threw her close-knit family to the wind and

came to join him in the cold hard Scottish society of cold

hard Central Otago in New Zealand.

Mother was a beautiful and vivacious woman, her

dark exotic looks contrasted starkly with the plain and

dowdy women of that time in New Zealand. Her accent

would have been enchanting, and the local community

expressed their fascination with her differences by

making fun of her. Mother quickly learned that ‘fitting in’

was extremely important. Because we were her offspring

and our happiness of vital importance to her, it became

essential that we also ‘fitted in’.

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As the youngest child, naturally, my much more

mature brothers and sisters of 4 through 16 felt it

necessary to make sure I did everything possible

absolutely correctly, according to their own personal

definitions of correct.

When I was 4, Mother had had enough of ‘fitting in’

with that community, as it apparently also meant

ignoring my father’s affairs. So shortly after their 20th

wedding anniversary, she gave him the gift of solitude.

Mom packed us up in the car and drove 150 miles north

to our new home. How she managed the logistics of this,

I don’t know.

I saw my father only a handful of times again in my

lifetime.

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CHAPTER FOUR

OAKTREE WAS A LOVELY PSYCHIATRIC UNIT set

in the beautiful rural environment of Timaru, New

Zealand. It was a large square-shaped brick building

with the rooms to the outside walls and the laundry and

showers in the center. The rooms along two walls were

single bed units, and on the other two walls were double

bed units.

The rooms themselves were sweet and peaceful.

While they still had hospital beds, each room had

attractively patterned curtains, a peaceful picture (no

glass) and a nice little bedside table. Every room had a

view to the outside, which was lovely native ferns and

shrubs.

Oaktree could have been something of a sanctuary

from the world, if I had been in the right mindset.

The dining area was off the lounge room and

consisted of several little tables, seating four people each,

with fresh flowers on the tables. Meals were served from

the kitchen off the dining area and were quite tasty for

hospital meals. We always had a dinner, a drink and a

dessert. In the evening we were provided with hot

chocolate to help us sleep.

There were two small patio areas where we could go

outside and sit in the sun, to read or to smoke. Both had

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large fences but the restraining element of Oaktree was

fairly subtle. You could pretend you were there on a little

summer break, if you wanted to.

The hallway of Oaktree was long and in the shape of a

square. I became bored. Not because there was nothing to

do, but because I had such a limited concentration span, I

couldn’t stay focused on anything for more than a few

minutes. I paced around and around and around the

hallway, running my finger over the beading on the walls

in the pretense of dusting, hoping someone would notice

me and talk to me. I didn’t want to appear like I needed

them, so I didn’t make the effort to start a conversation.

In my journeys I came across a fire alarm. It was right

in front of the nurses’ station. I looked at it, touched it,

and the glass fell out. The nurses came running out,

shouting accusations that I’d done this intentionally, that

I really wanted the glass to slit my wrists.

Actually I hadn’t, but it sounded like a pretty good

idea.

The nurses believed my protestations of innocence

and allowed me to continue my ‘dust-walking’. I could

hardly believe my eyes when I came across another fire

alarm, this time far away from the nurses’ station. This

one wasn’t so easy to remove the glass, so I decided to

disassemble it. After I had successfully pulled it apart

with the help of my glasses as a screwdriver, I was in the

process of taking the glass when I looked up and saw a

nurse looking right back at me.

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I searched my mind for a plausible explanation and

was still working on one when they locked me in the

‘padded cell’.

I was horrified. I couldn’t believe how they had over-

reacted. After all, it was only a little piece of glass from

the fire alarm I was going to use to cut my wrists. I was

starting to cry when a staff doctor walked in and said,

‚That’s right ... just let it all out ...‛ I fought the

overwhelming urge to hit her, and she left.

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CHAPTER FIVE

MY MOM REMARRIED when I was 8. She always

told me she married again because I had nagged her

constantly for a father. I was later to overhear her talking

on the phone to a friend of hers; ‚Scotty said I’d never

marry again, well I showed him didn’t I? I married

within four years!‛

My stepfather had been great while Mom and he were

courting; the honeymoon between us ended fairly soon

thereafter.

My stepfather had a perfection personality, but only

where other people were concerned. His standards were

miles out of my reach. I was a lovable, friendly, messy,

quirky little girl who liked to go up and talk to strangers,

finding out their life stories.

My stepfather was highly critical. He found fault in

everything I did, and hardly a day went by when he

didn’t tell me I was lazy, thoughtless, useless or stupid.

Surprisingly, I believe my stepfather cared for me. He

simply showed it in a highly critical, extremely

destructive fashion.

He even found it amusing at times to point out how

stupid I was.

I remember once when I was 10 putting a sign on my

door that said ‚The times I have my room tidy, you never

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remember. The times I have my room messy, you never

forget.‛

When I came home from school he had turned it over

and written ‚The times you have your room tidy are so

rare I can never remember, the times you have your room

messy are so frequent I can never forget.‛ I can imagine

now how funny he thought that was.

As the years went by, I learned that his highly critical

manner wasn’t just for me. He was critical of everyone,

especially my mother. Mom brushed it off and didn’t let

it get to her, but between the ages of 8 through 14 that

was a skill I hadn’t mastered.

Even now as an adult, I would go to their home for

dinner and Harry would be picking at the way Mom did

this, or left that door open, or didn’t make the bed

properly. Mom doesn’t even notice. I still feel

traumatized by it.

I hated my stepfather.

___________________________

The tree looked tired. I had been sitting playing a

game of solitaire beside him.

‚Tree, can I give you a name?‛ Tree didn’t look as

though he cared too much one way or the other.

‚I think you’re a Poplar tree.‛ Tree looked perturbed.

‚Oh, okay then,‛ I said. ‚Are you a flowering type of

tree?‛ Tree frowned.

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‚No, no flowers ... okay then ...‛ I said.

‚Patsy, do leave David alone, you’re distressing him,‛

said the nurse.

‚Who is David?‛ I asked. The nurse nodded at tree.

‚Are you David?‛ I asked tree. He looked confused.

‚How can you tell he’s distressed?‛ I asked the nurse.

‚Patsy, you will have to go to your room if you’re

going to continue this,‛ she says ...

I decide to leave the matter alone.

Settling back to play cards, I hear a fuss in the

hallway. A new resident is brought in screaming and

kicking. It upsets me. I look at tree, he doesn’t seem to

notice. John Lennon walked in.

‚Hey, hear the new girl?‛ he asked me excitedly.

‚That’s a girl? Wow!‛ I was impressed.

‚What’s wrong with her?‛ I asked.

‚Dunno, but they’ve put her in the padded cell ...‛

A shadow descends over me as I recall the padded

cell.

‚So what are you doing today, John Lennon?‛ I ask

him.

‚I’m working on my new album,‛ he says. ‚I’m

thinking of calling it ‘Hard day’s night.‛

‚Oh!‛ I said ‚It’s going to be a great seller, I just know

it!‛

‚My boyfriend plays the guitar, you know,‛ I offer.

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‚He does?‛ asked John Lennon. ‚I’m looking for

another guitarist.‛

Thinking my boyfriend John would be excited about

this, I’m dismayed by his reluctance.

‚Why don’t you want to play guitar for John

Lennon?‛ I ask him.

‚I just don’t,‛ was all he would say.

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CHAPTER SIX

I HAD AN INTERESTING FAMILY. My eldest sister

was 17 years old when I was born, and probably tired of

seeing mother having more babies. At 17 the idea of your

mother having a baby is quite ridiculous.

My sister Sally was a mixed-up person in her younger

years. She loved us, and she hated us. We never knew

which one it was going to be.

As a result I was always nervous around Sally. She

had the most amazing way of saying something awful to

you in just the nicest way. So much so, you’d be nodding,

smiling and agreeing with her and days later you

realized what she had said about you.

As I grew older I was to learn to really admire Sally. I

was to learn that her life had been painful too, and she

had made every effort to learn from that and grow as a

person.

Sally and I spent many hours deep in conversation,

conversations that often resulted in my making positive

changes in my own life.

Naomi was my next sister, 16 when I was born, and

not long after that she left for the UK. I never really got to

know my sister Naomi, although I would have liked to.

She was a quiet introverted woman and I never knew

how to approach her.

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After Naomi came Molly. Molly was a very clever,

practical woman. I think she looked down on the rest of

us. We were never practical enough for her and she had

nothing but contempt for our flights of fancy. I always

admired Molly and often wanted to be her, but once

again, she didn’t hesitate to call a spade a spade, and I

didn’t want to find out I was a spade.

Laura was my favorite sister for years. Well at least

she frequently told me she was and I had no reason to

disbelieve her. She was beautiful and clever. She had

wanted to be a journalist but was quickly diverted from

this ‘unfeminine occupation’ by the Catholic sisters at the

school she went to.

Laura was a deep thinker. I often believe she thought

so deeply she became lost in her thoughts and we never

really got her back again. Some years ago she was

diagnosed as schizophrenic. Laura has never been the

same and I miss the old Laura terribly.

The saddest thing about Laura was she told me once

she was experiencing brain damage from the medications

they had her on to control her schizophrenia. I asked her

what she was going to do about that.

‚What can I do?‛ she asked me. The only other choice

she had was to go off them and then experience the most

horrifying of hallucinations.

Julie was Sister No. 5 and what a sister she was. Julie

was always absolutely full-on. Full of motivation, full of

energy, always with a wonderful idea about what the rest

of us could do to improve ourselves. It didn’t take long to

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realize that it was best not to mention an idea around

Julie unless I had absolutely decided to do it. Otherwise

she would become enthused and manage to drive me

nuts with my own idea.

Dirk was the first son of the family, quite a big deal

for a farming family in Central Otago, New Zealand at


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