"Is there a bed?" I asked, peering doubtfully into the dark hallway of the psychiatric ward.
The man looked at me but didn't see me.
"Not yet," was his noncommittal reply, and I felt panic rising like bile in my throat. They had said there would be a bed.
"Is the doctor here?" I croaked.
"Not until tomorrow," said the man as he leafed through my paperwork, nodding to the paramedic dismissively.
My heart hit the ground. I knew what it meant for the doctor not to be here. I had been here before; I had never seen the illusive doctor.
A wracking grief came over me like a tsunami, and as I began to sob, the man turned on his heel and walked away, clicking his pen. I took one last desperate, ugly inhale of fresh air and watched as the paramedic closed the doors separating me from the outside world.
There, alone, I sunk to my knees and broke down on the cold floor.
---
An indiscernible period of time passed before I found myself in a room-of-sorts akin to the set of Girl, Interrupted.
I shivered in the cold and uneasy quiet of the small, boxed space, which had no windows, and a door that could only be opened from the opposite side. Inside there was a white plastic table, with legs drilled into the white concrete floor so that it could not be moved. The white walls were decaying.
The whiteness was suffocating; what worse, it wasn't all entirely white.
I was at once reminded of The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman.
I wandered out into the dank hallway, peering down an endless wall of doors to rooms of endless white. A snicker snaked its way through an open door down the hall and I retracted in fear back to my own holding space like a dog to its crate. There I paced in my chaotic sadness, whispering feverishly to myself.
I could feel the blood pumping through my ears. I could hear Dolly Parton in the background of all my wildness, singing, "I cannot compete with you, Jolene."
The man from before emerged from an office that I could not see nor access. He told me that I could make a phone call, and handed me an old yellowish telephone, on which I immediately dialed my sister. I watched as the man strolled away with nonchalance.
I waited anxiously as the line rang.
I had been listening to Dolly's hit song Jolene that night – over and over and over, like a mantra. In my grief, I had reached for my prescription pills and swallowed a few. Then, on reevaluation, popped a few more. I had just wanted to sleep that night. I had just wanted to sleep the pain away.
My sister didn't answer. I set the phone down and in my defeat I sobbed.
I remembered how, just a few days prior, policemen had entered our home. The paramedics had evaluated me with strange instruments and then whisked me away into the night.
I remembered then being in the ER, answering a strange woman's questions. She had been jotting down my statement, which I slurred in the stupor of my overdose. Her brow furrowed with genuine concern.
"Were you trying to kill yourself?" I had heard her ask in my periphery.
I couldn't remember how I'd answered that.
My consciousness snapped to the present as a tall man clutching a food tray stepped into my holding area, announcing his presence with a grunt.
I had been pacing like an injured animal in its cage, but I came to an abrupt stop. I met eyes with the man and at once felt a rush of relief.
YOU ARE READING
Songbird
General FictionDeclared suicidal and held against her will in the state psychiatric hospital, a young woman uncovers the abominable reality of the mental health system. The true story of a patient's perseverance and personal growth within the walls of an asylum, t...