Dealing with
Schizophrenia
(April 22, 2006) -- When her
schizophrenia was at its worst, Vicky Collins carried a stuffed rabbit
everywhere.
The rabbit, Velvie, made her feel more secure, even if people stared.
When
voices told her to kill herself, Collins would clutch the soft, brown
rabbit with the red velvet dress.
Her longtime friend Kevin Bomhoff remembers the stuffed bunny.
‘‘I noticed when she stopped carrying the (rabbit) and started carrying
books,’’ he said.
That’s about the time Collins started getting better.
Academia replaced Velvie as Collins’ security blanket. And the voices —
while they still speak sometimes — became quieter.
Collins — a daughter, a sister and a social worker — wants you to know a
few things about mental
illness:
— You can get better.
— You can be successful.
— You can make up for the years you lost.
Collins, 47, lost about 20 of them.
Around the age most people are engrossed in their first jobs or starting
families, Collins was a patient at a mental hospital.
Now she works full time, teaches and has a master’s degree in social
work. Her diagnosis is schizoaffective disorder with a
borderline personality disorder. She suffers from
symptoms of schizophrenia and
depression.
Schizophrenia is a disease of the brain with symptoms such as delusions,
hallucinations and withdrawal. Many people with the disease have trouble
expressing thoughts. Their speech can be difficult to understand.
The man accused of killing 17-year-old QuikTrip clerk Brian Hall last
month in Wichita had schizophrenia, his family says.
Anthony Ray Barnes, 40, is accused of first-degree murder and aggravated
assault. His sisters said he had stopped taking his medication before the
shooting occurred.
Comcare of Sedgwick County, which provides mental health services, says
14 percent of the nearly 5,200 adults undergoing treatment there have one of
six types of schizophrenia.
News of the shooting saddened Collins.
‘‘Never would I harm another person,’’ she said. ‘‘If I was in the public
and thought that about schizophrenics, I’d be scared, too.’’
Collins had symptoms of schizophrenia as a young woman, but she didn’t
know she had a disease.
‘‘I knew I had problems, but I didn’t know to put a name to it,’’ she
said.
As a senior in high school, she went from being an honor student to
flunking out. She had trouble concentrating and organizing her thoughts.
She attempted college but landed on academic probation.
She had migraines and began seeing a neurologist. At 20, she tried to
kill herself.
She says the voices that spoke to her were ruthless and persistent. They
told her, over and over, to kill herself.
On Jan. 2, 1984, she was taken in handcuffs to the Topeka State Hospital,
a mental hospital that has since closed. She had tried to kill herself
again.
She waived her right to a hearing and declared herself incompetent. She
did so, she said, to spare her parents.
Over the years, Collins also has spent time in the psychiatric unit of a
Wichita hospital and at Comcare’s ‘‘partial’’ hospital, a structured daytime
therapeutic program.
Comcare has since replaced that program with one in which clients go out
into the community to receive services.
The medications Collins took initially numbed her brain and left her in a
condition that was barely better than the symptoms they tried to control,
she said.
People who didn’t know her might have described her as ‘‘not quite
there.’’
Collins now takes eight medications daily and says they — particularly
Clozaril — work far better.
In 1996, with the help of the new medications, Collins resumed her
studies at Wichita State University. She eventually earned a bachelor’s
degree in psychology.
But she started preparing for college four years before enrolling. To
help develop an attention span, she read children’s books. To get used to
sitting still, she took art classes.
She finished her undergraduate degree in 2001. She earned a master’s
degree in social work in 2003 and her license a year later.
‘‘She’s an academic animal,’’ Bomhoff said.
Bomhoff, community support coordinator at Wichita State University’s
Self-Help Network Center for Community Support and Research, has known
Collins since the ’80s, first as a patient and now as a colleague.
Collins completed her practicum at the Self-Help Network, which works
with nonprofit and community organizations across the state.
She now works there full time as a project facilitator. Her colleagues
say one of her biggest strengths is helping people with mental illness learn
coping tools.
Her downtown office, filled with plants, fish and Beanie Baby bears,
overlooks a flowering Bradford pear tree.
Just recently, a fellow member of the Breakthrough Club, a place where
people with mental illnesses can go to look for jobs and socialize, asked
Collins about her job.
Does she answer phones?
Does she take out the trash?
Collins answered that she writes grants, does research and teaches
classes for Wichita State’s Leadership Empowerment Advocacy Project, which
gives students with mental illnesses the opportunity to experience college
life.
Despite her successes, Collins is not cured. She struggles daily. She
keeps in check with a pill planner that monitors her medications.
Recently, she was so depressed she wondered to herself who would take
care of her cats, dog, fish and hermit crabs.
Luckily a friend called her at the worst of it and helped dig her out.
While she still plans her own death at times, she no longer acts on those
plans. In the past, she overdosed on pills. At one time, she had a shotgun
and shells. She has burned herself.
‘‘My impulse control is a lot better now,’’ she said.
Her younger sister, Pamela Self, is proud of Collins. She said she
remembers when Collins appeared dazed and confused much of the time.
‘‘The changes in her are just outstanding,’’ Self said. ‘‘I am so, so
happy for her.’’
Collins lives alone in a two-bedroom apartment. About 86 percent of
Comcare’s patients with schizophrenia live independently.
Her interest in American Indian cultures is apparent at home. Indian art
hangs on her walls. A curio cabinet holds more Beanie Babies. Fish tanks
bubble.
She gardens in a shared plot at the apartment complex. Last year, she
planted too many tomatoes, and they didn’t fare so well. This year, she’ll
plant a smaller crop.
She reads all the time, especially books on leadership and mental
illness. She especially recommends ‘‘The Day the Voices Stopped,’’ by
Kenneth Steele. She listens to the radio but rarely turns on the TV in her
living room, she said.
Collins is proud that she takes care of herself. She has gone from
depending on a disability check to earning her own money.
She’s soft-spoken and modest but points out that her supervisors treat
her like everyone else at the office.
Bomhoff and Greg Meissen, director of the Self-Help Network, say that’s
true.
Meissen was Collins’ academic adviser at Wichita State. He said she put a
lot of thought into how to accomplish day-to-day successes. If she felt
overwhelmed, she would figure out which class was the best to drop and would
do the least amount of damage to her academic record.
‘‘And she has woven the best support system around herself,’’ he said.
Collins wishes other people with mental illnesses would believe in
themselves. She says the stigma of mental illness keeps many from getting
the help they need.
She sees a therapist once a week, a case manager once a week, a psychiatrist
every six weeks and her primary care physician, Donna Sweet, every two
months.
Collins hasn’t tried to kill herself in years.
She partly credits her doctor for that. Sweet, Collins said, drilled it
into her head, repeatedly, that self-harm is not acceptable.
‘‘I don’t think anyone wants to die,’’ she said. ‘‘They just want the
pain to go away.’’
Last updated: 04/06
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