About These Blogs

Welcome to "Beyond Mental Illness." This site was created to give advice to people who have a psychiatric history and now are working to re-build their lives. It is definitely possible for people with psychiatric histories to have meaningful lives with important contributions, and these pages are designed to give suggestions on how to do so.

There is minimal discussion of medication here. Medications can be an important step for some people, but they are only one step. Medications can help mitigate some symptoms, but they cannot do everything a person needs. The author hopes to give suggestions on filling other needs people with mental illness have.

Right now the blog has two composite characters. One is Tony, a young man who has recently been released from the hospital and is low-functioning. The letters addressed to Tony are here on this page.

The second character is Kayla, who has been stable for a while but needs advice on taking next steps and moving forward. The link to Kayla's letters is: beyondmikayla.blogspot.com.

The author recommends people interested in mental health consider reading the following books: http://beyondmentalillness.blogspot.com/p/recommended-reading-list.html.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Variations

Dear Tony,

Do the best that you can.

Don’t strain yourself. Making these changes and trying things that you haven’t done in a long time (or never before) is enormously stressful. If you add to that by demanding that you reach certain limits, routinely do something at a specified time or for a certain length of time, you are going to burn out.

A large part of this is discovering what you can do, what your limits really are. People’s limits change from day to day (sometimes from minute to minute), are sensitive to moods and outside events, and frequently are not known in the beginning. People recovering from mental illness are even more sensitive to such issues. Your best work today may not be your best work tomorrow or the day after. Do the best you can at any certain point. Concentrate your efforts on not pushing too far and not burning out.

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