At the educational conference I was the first person to talk at the session on: The Impact of SSI and SSDI on Going to Work.
My co-presenter detailed how to apply for these benefits and how to use the Ticket to Work and PASS Plan options to find a job so you can stop collecting SSI and SSDI.
At the start of my talk I quoted lines from the Anne Sexton poem “For John, Who Begs Me Not to Enquire Further.”
She is a famous poet who had her own mental health challenges and is no longer here. Sadly, like a lot of gifted artists, she took her own life.
Yet the lines from her poem are often quoted. She tells the reader that she has nothing else to give and that what she has to give can be hopeful in its own way.
After I quoted the lines I told the audience: “This is my story. It’s the only story I have to tell. It’s unusual and a little atypical. I tell it to uplift and inspire others.”
I’m here to say that what you feel can be healed. Pain can end. I’m a firm believer in using our pain as the catalyst for self-growth and finding out what our life’s purpose is.
I stand by the motto: “service above self.”
It’s true that you get what you give–plain and simple–you get what you give.
Other forums exist in which to spread hate of psychiatry, hate of people who are different from you, and any other kind of hate.
This blog will always be not just a hate-free zone it will be a healthy zone.
It comes down to this: my ethic is: “This is my story–it’s on the table. You can take it or you can leave it.”
In the next blog entry I’ll talk about the new dynamic of holding a job circa 2016.