Terri Cheney

Take Me as I Am, Whoever I Am

First Published in The New York Times; MODERN LOVE – January 13, 2008

Manic: A Memoir by Terri CheneyTerri Cheney is the author of Manic: A Memoir (Morrow/HarperCollins in February, 2008).

As a bipolar woman, I have lived much of my life in a constant state of becoming someone else. The precise term for my disorder is ”ultraradian rapid cycler,” which means that without medication I am at the mercy of my own spectacular mood swings: ”up” for days (charming, talkative, effusive, funny and productive, but never sleeping and ultimately hard to be around), then ”down,” and essentially immobile, for weeks at a time.

This darkness started for me in high school, when I simply couldn’t get out of bed one morning. No problem, except I stayed there for 21 days. As this pattern continued, my parents, friends and teachers grew concerned, but they just thought I was eccentric. After all, I remained a stellar student, never misbehaved and graduated as class valedictorian.

Vassar was the same, where I thrived academically despite my mental illness. I then sailed through law school and quickly found career success as an entertainment lawyer in Los Angeles, where I represented celebrities and major motion picture studios. All the while I searched for help through an endless parade of doctors, therapists, drugs and harrowing treatments like electroshock, to no avail.

Other than doctors, nobody knew. At work, where my skills and productivity were all that mattered, I could hide my secret with relative ease. I kept friends and family unaware with elaborate excuses, only showing up when I was sure to impress.

But my personal life was another story. In love there’s no hiding: You have to let someone know who you are, but I didn’t have a clue who I was from one moment to the next. When dating me, you might go to bed with Madame Bovary and wake up with Hester Prynne. Worst of all, my manic, charming self was constantly putting me into situations that my down self couldn’t handle.

For example: One morning I met a man in the supermarket produce aisle. I hadn’t slept for three days, but you wouldn’t have known it to look at me. My eyes glowed green, my strawberry blond hair put the strawberries to shame, and I literally sparkled (I’d worn a gold sequined shirt to the supermarket — manic taste is always bad). I was hungry, but not for produce. I was hungry for him, in his well-worn jeans, Yankees cap slightly askew.

I pulled my cart alongside his and started lasciviously squeezing a peach. ”I like them nice and firm, don’t you?”

He nodded. ”And no bruises.”

That’s all I needed, an opening, and I was off. I told him my name, asked him his likes and dislikes in fruit, sports, presidential candidates and women. I talked so quickly I barely had time to hear his answers.

I didn’t buy any peaches, but I left with a dinner date on Saturday, two nights away, leaving plenty of time to rest, shave my legs and pick out the perfect outfit.

But by the time I got home, the darkness had already descended. I didn’t feel like plowing through my closet or unpacking the groceries. I just left them on the counter to rot or not rot –what did it matter? I didn’t even change my sequined shirt. I tumbled into bed as I was, and stayed there. My body felt as if I had been dipped in slow-drying concrete. It was all I could do to draw a breath in and push it back out, over and over. I would have cried from the sheer monotony of it, but tears were too much effort.

On Saturday afternoon the phone rang. I was still in bed, and had to force myself to roll over, pick it up and mutter hello.

”It’s Jeff, from the peaches. Just calling to confirm your address.”

Jeff? Peaches? I vaguely remembered talking to someone who fit that description, but it seemed a lifetime ago. And that wasn’t me doing the talking then, or at least not this me — I’d never wear sequins in the morning. But my conscience knew better. ”Get up, get dressed!” it hissed in my ear. ”It doesn’t matter if she made the date, you’ve got to see it through.”

When Jeff showed up at 7, I was dressed and ready, but more for a funeral than a date. I was swathed in black and hadn’t put on any makeup, so my naturally fair skin looked ghostly and wan. But I opened the door, and even held up my cheek to be kissed. I took no pleasure in the feel of his lips on my skin. Pleasure was for the living.

I had nothing to say, not then or at dinner. So Jeff talked, a lot at first, then less and less until finally, during dessert, he asked, ”You don’t by any chance have a twin, do you?”

And yet I was crushed when he didn’t call.

A couple of weeks later, I awoke to a world gone Disney: daffodil sunshine, robin’s egg sky. Birds were trilling outside my window, a song no doubt created especially for me. I couldn’t stand it a minute longer. I flung back the covers and danced in my nightie — my gray flannel prison-issue nightie. I caught one glimpse of it in the mirror, shuddered, and flung it off, too.

I rifled through my closet for something decent to wear, but everything I put my hands on was wrong, wrong, wrong. For starters, it was all black. I hated black, even more than I hated gray. Redheads should be true to their colors, whatever the cost. I dug deeper, and there, shoved way in the back, was a pair of skin-tight jeans and something silky and sparkly and just what I needed: an exquisite gold sequined shirt.

I slipped it on and preened for a minute. Damn, I looked good. Then I tugged on the jeans. I had gained a few pounds during the last couple weeks of slothlike existence, but once I yanked really hard, they zipped up fine. Although something was sticking out of the pocket: a business card, with a few words scribbled across the back: ”Call me, Jeff.”

Jeff?

Jeff! I kicked the nightie out of my way and grabbed the bedside phone. Was 6:30 a.m. too early to call? No, not for good old Jeff! It rang and rang. I was about to give up when a thick, sleepy voice said ”Hello?”

”It’s me! Why haven’t you called?”

It took a while to establish who ”me” was, but eventually he remembered. ”You sound different,” he said. ”Or no, maybe you sound more like yourself. I’m not sure. It’s so early.”

Soon I had him laughing so hard he got the hiccups and had to get off the phone. But before he did, he asked me out for Friday, three nights away.

No, I insisted, it had to be tonight, or even this afternoon. I didn’t want to lose another chance to get to know him. I knew that Cinderella had only so much time left at the ball.

We compromised on dinner that evening at 8. I spent the afternoon ridding my house of all evidence of depression. I soaped and scoured and dusted and vacuumed, using every attachment, even the ones that frightened me. Then I ran out and bought a dozen Casablanca lilies to hide the smell of ammonia and bleach.

When the house looked perfect, I turned on myself with the same fury. I buffed and polished and creamed and plucked and did everything in my power to recreate Rita Hayworth’s smoky allure in ”Gilda.” As I was shadowing my eyes, I remembered her poignant line about the movie: ”Every man I’ve known has fallen in love with Gilda, and wakened with me.” It gnawed at me, to the point that my hand started trembling and I couldn’t finish applying my mascara.

Suddenly I didn’t look radiant. There were lines around my mouth and a hollowness to my eyes that aged me 10 years. My skin, despite the carefully applied foundation and blush, was so deathly pale I recoiled from my reflection.

I sat on the toilet and started to cry. I had met the enemy enough times to know it by sight. Not now, I prayed. Please not now. Globs of mascara ran down my cheeks, and I wiped them away, heedless of the streaks they left. It was 7:57. I had three minutes to wrestle my brain chemistry into submission. Oh, sure, I knew there was another option. I could tell Jeff what was going on. But this was a man who didn’t even like his peaches bruised. What would he think of a damaged psyche?

Maybe he would understand. Maybe I would find the courage. Maybe they would invent a cure.

Maybe, but not tonight. As the doorbell rang and rang, I huddled in the bathroom, shivering. I was terrified — not just of Jeff finding me there, but of me never once finding love.

When it was finally quiet, I rinsed off the rest of my mascara and tossed my cocktail dress into the hamper. Then I buttoned up my gray flannel nightie, and settled in for the long night to come.

I never heard from Jeff again.

THAT was five years ago — five long years of ups and downs, of searching for just the right doctor and just the right dose. I’ve finally accepted that there is no cure for the chemical imbalance in my brain, any more than there is a cure for love. But there’s a little yellow pill I’m very fond of, and a pale blue one, and some pretty pink capsules, and a handful of other colors that have turned my life around. Under their influence, I’m a different person yet again, neither Madame Bovary nor Hester Prynne, but someone in between. I have moods, but they don’t send me spinning into an alternate persona.

Stability, ironically, is so exciting I have decided to venture into dating again. I have succumbed to pressure from friends and signed up for three months of a computer dating service. ”Who are you?” the questionnaire asks at the start.

I want to be honest, but I don’t know how to answer. Who am I now? Or who was I then?

Life seems so much tamer these days: deceptively quiet, like a tiger with velveted paws. Every so often the sun shines too bright and I think, for a moment, that I own the sky. I think, how wonderful it was to be Gilda, if only in my own mind. But then I remember the price of the sky. So I take off my makeup, rumple my hair and go to the supermarket in sweats. The gold sequined shirt languishes in my closet. I’m thinking of giving it away.

Not just yet.

You can order your copy of Manic: A Memoir on Amazon.

8 Comments

  1. hi terri,
    i guess im type one. After i had a severe delusional episode i was diagnosed. which led to losing my job, some friends.. and a whole other list of other things that im not going to run down.

    i just wanted to say i identified with your use of the term “the enemy”

    as of late i have been in a deep depression for almost a year. i moved to china from ny. i was doing great for the 1st few months.. but i had to quit my job when “the enemy ” reared its ugly head. its such a painful sense of impending doom. the loss of control and self loathing. i wish we didn’t have this problem. i totally understand the situation. I made several friends when i first arrived in shanghai. when they met me i was up beat, funny and outgoing. but after falling into deep depression avoided them. what new acquaintance would want to commit to a friendship with someone like me? and i didnt feel secure in my relationships with these people enough to explain to them my situation. how would it go without sounding like “yea im a nut job.” months later some still call me or leave me an email. i just ignore them because what can i say?

    luckily i have my parents to support me in this time.. i fear that my depression is starting to rub off on my father now though. through trying to understand me. i think my parent s perhaps have deep seeded issues that they are just not savvy to being raised in chinese culture. my mother has a severe anti social behavior which i was raised with and inherited. now im rambling..

    im not on medication, mostly due to the fact of my family and friends telling me to “get over it” for the past few years. maybe its time i face facts and start taking medication seriously.

    anyways i just wanted to identify with you.

    i hope we can find the strength we need

    -Jay

  2. Your book, “Manic,” is fabulous and I needed to read it. It helped relieve me of guilt over my bipolar, at least relief for now.
    I’ll give it to my daughter who is a young attorney.
    My bipolar has ruined my life’s possibilities. Now, at the age of 55 I’ve begun Abilify with Celexa. What comments do you have on Abilify?
    Or comments/observations about other medications for bipolar?

    Thanks,
    Kate

  3. Kate,

    Hi, I am Joe’s wife (the author of the Bipolar Disorder for Dummies book) and the reason he became interested in bipolar in the first place. I never know whether to call it a disease, a disorder, a lifestyle or WHAT. It just is what you are… even though Joe always tries to correct me and say it’s not what I am but what I have. Whatever…. As far as I’m concerned, if you don’t have it, you pretty much are clueless to understand it… although I must admit I am eternally grateful for the wonderful, “normal,” calm, patient and kind people who don’t have bipolar (like my husband) who have been there to get me through the really rough times.

    I also really enjoyed Terri Cheney’s book Manic: A Memoir. I thought she did an awesome job at describing the roller-coaster mood rides.

    I can’t comment on Celexa, since I’ve never been on that medication, but I have been on Abilify in combination with Lithium and Seroquel and the antidepressant Wellbutrin. I think that combination was a bit too sedating (for me), but I would think Abilify in combination with a medication like Celexa might be a good combination. I hope it works well for you. I’d like to know if you think it’s working well, though I know everyone is different. I think I also had weight gain issues with that medicine combination, but that could have been any one of the three (Abilify, Lithium or Seroquel)… that’s the problem with going on so many meds. at the same time!

    Right now I’m on Wellbutrin (antidepressant) with Topomax as my mood-stabilizer (which is not my psychiatrist’s first choice, but I prefer it because it doesn’t cause weight gain). I have to exercise and watch to make sure I’m sleeping enough. I do enjoy working, but I have to keep the stress low, so I’ve opted for an assistant teaching position. I guess I feel it’s like life is a balancing act, and I’ve just got a few more things to juggle than most other people. But maybe everyone feels like that.

    I think the important thing is to do whatever it takes to get through the day… and to ask for help when you need it, because I’ve found that there are tons of places and tons of people who will help. It just takes admitting that you need the help. I’m sounding sappy here, but that’s just the bottom line to me.

    Anyway, I’d really like to know how things work out for you.

    Cecie

  4. Hi,

    I juast wanted to say reading your story was like me going back in time from my own life. I love meeting new people because I cam just be as I like which is up for a laugh bubbly and centre of attention. Although when these people want to meet me again I start to worry that they won’t like me and htey only liked the cat they saw that night.

    I am starting to axcknowledge this and try not to let it happen, I have felt like this since I was about 12years of age…..Being diagnosed with Bipolar late last year was a big awakeing for me, althought I am glad as I have somewhere to go for help and there are books out there to help.

    Knowing people are going through the same feelings and moods that I go through is a HUGE help as I constantly compare myself to pweopel around me but of course I shouldn’t….The medication is a nightmare tho I have gained loads of weight and eat just to pass the time as I am scared of getting too high. Although I enjoy being high I am sooooooo scared to go back into hospital as I had a very bad experience I was taken off all meds and went through HELL with halucinations and vivid dreams etc etc…

    Im starting a college course in a few weeks so i am actually quite proud of myself as this time last year I was running around thinking I was an angel and my mission was to save people!!…Hee Hee gotta laugh if not you’ll cry!

    Cat xXx

  5. I loved the book and this article too, but I have to say this article is a bit misleading in that Terri tells us at the end of the book she’s on social security disability. The article would have you think that all is hunky dory at the end. Life is stable and good. The book hints at the same but ends with more doubts and questions about Terri’s future and new identity as someone Bipolar and relying on social security disability. I’m on social security disability too, which means that life is a daily challenge to remain stable, I am often not symptom free, but without the stress of working I am much more able to take care of myself and keep mood swings more in check. I think all too often people want happy endings, they are rarely that clean cut with Bipolar.

  6. I am the mother of a 17 year old daughter who was diagnosed with bipolar 1 last year after being misdiagnosed with unipolar depression by a doctor who refused to listen to her symptoms. I have done extensive reading about the disorder, but the books that helped me the most were the fist person accounts. I read yours early in the game and much appreciated your insights.

  7. Hi Terri,
    I have bipolar mood disorder I. Im 29 years old and have struggled with the disease for 7 years now. Its an everyday struggle that no one can see. I think thats the hardest part. Its not like cancer where everyone knows what you go through to some extent. Its a silent killer that destroys the joys in my life. Im reading your book now and I love love love it!! I feel for the first time in my life that someone else understands. No one I know gets it. Not my mother, best friends and certainly not my boyfriend. Hes been with me through the worst of times. From my weeks of depression to my 2 stents in the loony bin. It gives me a sense of relief to know Im not alone. You’ve really inspired me to tell my story. Id really like to work on writing a book of my own. Have you ever thought of putting on writing workshops for people with bipolar disorder? I think you would be great at it! Thanks for the best book Ive ever read and all your strength to tell your story so someone else can feel a sense of belonging. Thank you, Rachel

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