cabanafrau
DIS Legend
- Joined
- May 10, 2006
- Messages
- 15,764
It really depends. My sister has been battling depression for 8 years and uses it to get what she wants. She doesn't want to get better. When she is baker acted she manipulated the entire floor and laughed about it when she came home. She is refusing long term resort care (a very nice place that has a spa, activities ....). My sister doesn't want to get better because the situation works for her in a weird way. Not only has put herself in a prison, but she has put her entire family in it with her. That is selfish.
I have friends that have dealt with a relative taking their own life and leaving strange or nasty letters. The friends have had to deal with the death and letters left behind, that is selfish of the dead person to do that.
I had to let my sister go because I can no longer take the 2 am, 4 am constant phone calls because my own health started to suffer.
I know my sister will take her life and will not be here in a few years.
Dealing with a loved one with mental illness can take an extreme toll. One of the cruelties of mental illness is that frequently the ill will do everything in their power to cling to certain thoughts, behaviors, etc., which are obstacles to any hope of cure or improvement -- which they ironically on some level desparately do want to get better. It's similar to the way addicts will stoop to almost any level to keep using (and in fact may be linked). This explains why many chronically homeless remain so. Many of our homelesss are mentally ill & in order to avoid strictures of treatment, no matter how benign some of those strictures may in fact be, they wind up in a situation where they prefer living on the street to accepting any of the disciplines of treatment.
While your sister may indeed be manipulating in order to protect the way things are, try to remember she's in all likelihood not doing it on the level of consciousness you perceive. It's a trap, a trap of heartache and misery that she doesn't understand she's creating on many levels. I wish you, your sister and family the very best and I hope somehow she will receive treatment that enables her to live a happy, peaceful life, which I'm sure will provide tremendous peace to all of you who love her.