I’m an anxious person, shaky and fretful, and when anxiety gets the best of me, I pop a pill. I hold out as long as I can before grabbing the amber prescription bottle, but when the physical jitters and mental goblins won’t blow off, then it’s time for Clonazepam. Swallow, wait, ahh.
Sort of. But the meds — those sedatives, so tiny and pink they’re almost cute — can blunt the edge, like sanding a jagged thumbnail on an emery board. Magic? Hardly. Mellow? Kinda.
I’ve blabbed about this, my fun, adorable neuroses, on these pages before. But it’s been a long time and things evolve.
No. No they do not.
I’m exactly in the same place I was in 2020, or, for that matter, 2010. I remain a quaking Jell-O mold, gulping pharmaceuticals to stanch dramatized grief. Get a therapist! you scream. Exactly a dozen therapists later, starting at age 13, I’ve sworn off them. They’ve been as helpful as talking to my dear Aunt Gladys, who’s deaf in one ear and has narcolepsy.
Meditation has been my most recent move. Like many novices, my frantic, hamster-wheel mind — Did I pay that bill? Should I call her? Do I have a brain tumor? — has so far derailed any quality concentration, but I’m working on it. Anything to snuff my mind’s overactive orgy of tripe and trivia.
The tiniest shard of unresolved thought can keep me up all night. So angst often translates to sheet-tearing insomnia. I will toss, turn, cuss up a storm. I finally convinced my doctor to prescribe me Xanax expressly for insomnia, as it is worrisomely habit-forming. (A previous doctor scoffed, “That stuff is crack.”)
My sleep success rate with Xanax so far is about seventy percent, which I consider worthy of confetti and party horns. Yet when it doesn’t work, look out. My pillow becomes a cloud of fluttering feathers. I chew it.
I take other meds for mental “stability” (insert: laugh track), but the anxiety tabs yield the most direct effect. The other ones are like background Muzak, a calm, ubiquitous hum. In thirty minutes or less, my low-dosage Clonazepam is like a mental muffle, quieting the chaos. (I’ve also tried cannabis gummies, but they just make me woolly and irrationally hungry. A whole box of Kraft Mac & Cheese, at midnight — not a good look.)
As I travel a lot, I’m blessed my anxiety is rarely a stowaway; it was never issued a passport. I’m sure that’s because I’m relieved of quotidian complaints and overblown worries, transported to a scrubbed reality. I’ve written: “In my travels, my angst all but evaporates. I am unshackled, life’s daily detritus dispersed by an existential leaf blower.”
I don’t need the pills in, say, Paris, though I bring them along for backup in case life kicks in and I start pacing and perspiring through the hallowed halls of Musée d’Orsay.
Who needs all this? It must stop. It’s not so easy, of course. I’m resigned to being wired this way, though nostrums like meditation and mindfulness and all that cognitive crap pave avenues of mild hope.
Meantime I have the sweet companionship of Clonazepam, itty pink pills that chirp, “It’s okay, pal. I’m here to soothe the dread and iron out life’s pesky wrinkles.”
I’ve heard it all before. Almost daily. I don’t believe a word of it.
Ah Chris. I’m sorry life doled out “fun, adorable neuroses” to you. Very unfair, if you ask me, which of course no one ever does. I have rare anxiety attacks, which immobilize me, rendering me unable to take any action. Instead I am frozen, skittering over everything that needs to happen, but powerless to choose a place to start. Xanax works perfectly with my body chemistry for that. Ahhhh. Almost instant calm. “Oh,” says my brain. “This is the logical first step for you. Let’s try this.” My best friend, when she takes the same dosage, goes to sleep for 12 hours! It’s amazing how unique our body chemistry is. Someone (a past therapist?) once told me anxiety manifests like the raised hair on a cat’s back when it’s alarmed. The right medical intervention works like a soothing hand, to calmly brush away the raised hackles. I never forgot that image. Makes total sense to me that the symptoms disappear during travel. Travel takes us to another world. So much is left behind. It’s part of why we love it so much. Here’s to living the best we can in our imperfect bodies. xoxo
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You leave the best comments, Anne. Thanks for commiserating and sharing your life experiences, which as usual are not only engaging but instructive. I don’t have anxiety attacks, just a general and pretty consistent thrum of angst that jigs and jags depending on the situation — “when it’s alarmed,” as you put it (or your therapist!). Unfortunately, those alarm bells, that raised cat hair, happens too often. Yep, travel is a balm. Gets me out of my buzzy head, mostly, and transports. Hear, hear, to “living the best we can in our imperfect bodies”! A perfect mantra. xo!
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