Ambien The Hospital

(From May 11, 2017)

Sunday evening I had a Dystonia episode (muscle contractions). The previous Thursday I had been prescribed a new medication, Ambien, which is used to help you sleep. I’ve also been fighting a cold. Since the best way to stop a Dystonia attack (for me) is to sleep, I decided to go to bed early. I took my regular meds, one Ambien, and some cough syrup. That was a big mistake. In a mental fog, not really awake and not really asleep, I thought that if I took some more Ambien it would help knock me out. Instead, it put me in a state that I’ve never experienced before.

The whole evening is just a series of snapshots. I remember watching the end of a movie in bed, but I don’t remember anything about it. Then I watched a documentary that I normally would have turned off after five minutes, or not watched at all. I only have a few flashes of that. At some point I sent a message to Monica through Daniel. I had scribbled on my touchscreen computer: “I took too much. I’m sorry.” I barely remember doing that. Monica says I told her to call somebody. She called poison control, who told her to take me to the emergency room.

Again, I only have short visions of what followed. I remember putting on my shoes, but I have zero recollection of the drive to the hospital. I remember sitting down in the waiting room, but I don’t remember — and this is really weird — taking out my phone and posting a Facebook check-in to the hospital location. I had typed, “Uh oh! My bad.” I had tagged Monica, and I rarely tag people. I had used the “Feeling” thing (“Feeling confused”) — and I almost *never, ever* use that feature. That part is totally blank in my memory. Why on earth would I do something like that?

The rest of the night are still frames of a usual overdose hospital E.R. visit. This is something that, around 10 years ago, I had experienced on multiple occasions during some very dark years in my life. Given my history and the fact that I was unable to communicate, the ER doctor and Monica assumed that this was another suicide attempt. I can’t blame them. I still work on depression and newly diagnosed Bipolar Disorder. But this really was an accident.

If you think the story is exciting so far, I’m just getting started. I was eventually moved to a secure room with a guard posted at the door — on suicide watch. As my brain began to clear I struggled to put the pieces together. Why did I do that? Did I try to kill myself? Because, if I did, I don’t know why. I had not had a great day, but it wasn’t terrible either. Sure, I have bad days, but I’ve been in much worse depressive states than lately. In fact, I got a lot done during the week — doing errands and taking care of the kids. I even fixed our shower! I recently had been scheduled in to play with the church band occasionally on Sunday mornings, which is a big step for me. The fact that I didn’t know why I “tried” to overdose scared me. Then I remembered something that my doctor had said about Ambien, the sleeping pill. She said that some people had reported sleep walking or even sleep DRIVING while taking it. I started putting the pieces together. The Ambien, combined with cough syrup and my regular meds, put me in an altered state. When I ended up taking SIX Ambien in that state, my brain had left the building. (Side note: Don’t take Ambien, people!)

As the fog lifted, I told Monica what I thought had happened. However, by that time the hospital had decided that I had to be transferred to a local Mental Health Hospital. We told them that it was a medicine mix up and that I could be treated outpatient, but the hospital’s point of view is that they would be liable if I went home and completed suicide (CYA). There was nothing I could do. I was going to be held in a psych ward. After hours of waiting in an extremely uncomfortable gurney, with a guard watching my every move, an ambulance showed up to transport me. So off to the mental hoosegow we went.

As I mentioned before, I had purposely overdosed several times about 10 years ago, so this wasn’t my first rodeo. I’ve voluntarily been admitted to a mental health facility on more than one occasion. It’s a safe place to recoup, maybe adjust medications and get your thoughts together. But this was the first time I’ve ever been forced to go. And given that this was really all Ambien’s fault, it really felt like prison. I was terrified. Fortunately, I had an understanding doctor who could see that I was telling the truth and let me leave the next day (normally they would hold someone for three days).

During the almost two days I was there, I interacted with some of the other patients. Despite this post being mostly about me, I want this next part to be the takeaway for anyone who has managed to read this far. Most of the patients were very young. There were two or three around my age and one quite a bit older. Aside from me and maybe four others, the patients were there for addiction problems. Some of the patients suffered from mental illnesses as a result of addiction. While during group sessions the patients would speak of beating their addiction, outside of sessions they openly bragged about the various drugs they had taken. Almost everyone’s vocabulary was heavily laced with profanity. I’m not judging these people based on their addictions or the way they talked. I’m just stating facts. Three of these patients were military veterans. About two-thirds were male. I was the only white male. There was only one white female. Those are the demographics. I should clarify that in my part of the country, if you aren’t white you’re probably Hispanic.

The group sessions were — in my opinion — routine, stale, shallow, and some of them were just weird. I went to all of them, and had I been there as a suicidal patient or even an addict, I don’t see how any of it would have helped. However, short-term mental hospitals are designed as a stop-gap and not a solution. Maybe that should change.

What I found interesting is that, while the food was terrible, some thought it was like a fancy restaurant. While the beds were almost torture, those who had no beds thought it was like a nice hotel. And while there were several who were clearly chemically imbalanced, most were just regular people — hurting people. Most were people who had made really bad choices and were now paying the physical, mental and social consequences of those actions. But almost all of them blamed someone else for their situations. It made me sad. I felt helpless.

In a mental hospital and as a patient, you can’t just go around spreading the Gospel of Christ. That’s a good way to extend your stay. So, while people noticed that I never cursed and couldn’t relate to their drug experiences, I didn’t have an opportunity to be any more of a good witness for Christ. I hope that, at the very least, I was a good example in that I was a different kind of person. After my initial shock of being locked up, I didn’t shy away from interacting with anyone — the girl in her early 20s who had been sleeping on a floor for months — the gang banger who was being transferred to a more secure wing because of his disruptions — the vets with PTSD who told me unimaginable stories of their time in the Middle East — the elderly lady who didn’t have a home — the young African American girl who wouldn’t say a word — the kind, gentle man who had been in a traffic accident and had severe brain damage, who couldn’t forgive himself for the death of his godson in that tragedy — the young man with bandages over his slit wrists.

These are “the least of these”, my friends. These are the forgotten. These are the broken. These are the lost. These are the ones that need someone to let them know that — even with their damaged souls — there can be peace in Jesus. Even homeless, addicted, torn, and discarded, they can find love in Jesus.

I could rant and rave about how the Church should do more. I could point the finger at individuals who could help show the Way. I could whine about how I tried to work with church leadership to work with people like this, only to be ignored. I could rail against the government for their childish handling of America’s health system. I could tell you horror stories of terrible doctors. I could blame you, reader.

Instead, I choose to look to God. Instead, I choose to see what I personally can do for these damaged souls. Instead, I’ll take the blame myself, because I know what it’s like to be staring into a dead end. And as I continue to work on the issues I face, in the name of Jesus… I’ll continue to figure out how to help others who have been down that same dark road.

Stolen: My Star Wars Story

I don’t think I had even seen the original Star Wars movie when I got my first Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader toys. I was only six years old and I didn’t really understand who these two figures were, but I knew one was good and one was bad, and I remember the early days of enacting sword battles between them. By the time The Empire Strikes Back was released in 1980, I was ten years old and had been collecting Star Wars toys for four years. I saved every dime of my allowance for the next character. I would wait in anticipation as my Mom would drive me to the local Gibson’s to make the purchase. Every birthday and Christmas present were Star Wars toys. By the time I was around twelve years old I had amassed a treasure trove of toys from the Star Wars universe. Each new toy I acquired added another dimension of excitement and joy to my world. And I was a purist. I would never mix Star Wars with any other toy line. It was almost a religion. And that was a problem.

I had decided to follow Christ at a very young age. I understood that God wanted my complete and devoted love. The conflict between my love for Star Wars and my love for God became evident to me one day. I remember the moment clearly. My Dad was building a two-story addition to a house we had recently moved in to. I was playing with my Star Wars collection in a framework of a room when I suddenly stopped and told God, “If I love these toys more than You, then take them away from me.” Then I kept right on playing.

In what must have been a few months later, the addition to the house was mostly complete, but it was still easily accessible to anyone. I was showing the progress of the building to a friend who lived in a trailer park a few blocks away. We happened upon my huge cardboard box of Star Wars toys. I showed them off with pride. “I keep them all in this box,” I’m sure I must have told him.

Several days later my friend showed up again along with a gang of boys whom I’d never met. I remember that there were six or seven of them. He introduced them to me and we hung out in the front yard for a while, at the opposite end of the house addition. The new boys said that they were going to leave, but my friend said he wanted to stay. I remember him urging me to stay in the front yard. I thought nothing of it at the time. In fact, what weighed heavy on my mind was to tell that boy about what Christ had done for him. I explained how Jesus paid for our sins when He died on a cross, and how all we need to do is accept His gift to be with God. It was a very basic introduction to salvation through Christ. The boy prayed to receive Christ as his personal Savior. Soon after, he left for home.

It wasn’t immediately that I realized… it was a day or two… my box of Star Wars toys… I couldn’t find it…

My parents and I searched the house. We checked the new addition. We looked through closets. We searched outside the house and in our cars. There was only one conclusion: the toys had been stolen. We drove up and down the nearby drainage ditch, where kids would play, looking for a box or for scattered toys. We found nothing. A couple of days later, my parents filed a police report. I remember a uniformed officer sitting at our table. I described each of my toys in detail, naming them off like some kind of intergalactic playlist, “Hammerhead, Boba Fett, Millennium Falcon, Bespin Guard, Tauntaun…”  He wrote each one down as he asked for spellings and descriptions that must have seemed outrageous to him, but secondhand to me. The list was so long that the officer had to use at least two additional sheets of paper. “This is a felony,” I distinctly remember him saying. I didn’t know what it meant, but I heard a change of tone in his voice.

Naturally, I was devastated. I had devoted virtually half of my life to collecting and playing with these toys, and now they were gone. Imagine that for a moment: ALL of my toys were just… gone. I laid there in my bed, talking to God about it. Everyone was asleep. The house was dark. Then, I felt the need to tell my parents something. I got out of bed and walked into their bedroom.

“Mom, I’m really sad that my toys are gone. But… I still feel a happiness inside. Is that okay?” It’s true, I didn’t understand how I could be sad and yet still at peace. I almost felt guilty about it. “That’s Jesus,” my Mom replied. “That’s Jesus.”

It wasn’t until a few days later that I put all the pieces together. I guess I was so shocked by the disappearance of my toys that I didn’t think of the obvious. While my friend from down the street was occupying me in the front yard, the others went around the back and stole the box of toys. I went to my friend’s house to confront him. His mother met me at the door and told me to leave and not to come back. We didn’t pursue the matter any further, but I’m sure it was those boys, and I’m sure their mother knew what they had done. As to why she didn’t do anything about it, I’ll never know for sure. Perhaps she feared the police. Perhaps she just needed Jesus in her life.

There are so many lessons that I took away from this experience; lessons that I still adhere to today. First, be careful what you ask God for. I outright asked God to tangibly let me know if I was putting Star Wars before Him, and apparently, I was. I might have rephrased that request if I had it to do over again, asking for some other sign than to remove the toys from my life. This would be a lesson I would learn several more times in my life. God does listen to us. He answers prayers. But sometimes the answer isn’t what we want to hear. God was so real in the answer to that prayer. He is undeniable, and that’s the bigger lesson.

Second, doing the right thing doesn’t always mean that something bad won’t happen to you during the process. I was literally trying to help save someone’s life during the exact same time that my childhood was being robbed from me. I hope and pray that if that boy didn’t genuinely ask for God’s gift of life through Jesus that day, that at some point in his life he has done so. As Christians, all we can do is plant the seeds. And while all was being stolen from me, I was planting the seed of the Gospel. If I had to sacrifice all of my toys for that one soul, it was worth it.

Finally, I experienced a true peace that literally made no sense, just as described in Philippians 4:7. It’s a peace that would take me through some very dark places in my life. It’s a peace that continues to dwell in me, no matter what the situation.

I wouldn’t trade that peace for all the toys in the world.

“That’s Jesus.”