Thread with 18 posts
jump to expanded postoh dear we have sobered up from the manic-psychotic break
but are still a little sleep deprived
we are not suddenly in fact a fully actualised plural system, what a shocker, who could've predicted
but the fact we do actually have DID is now smacking us in the face
and i happen to be someone with a very suspicious resemblance to Minakami Yuki in all respects, but perhaps not for magical reasons
okay a psychotic break is a genuinely existentially terrifying thing you do not want to go through
you will be overwhelmed with so many kinds of grief, both during the experience and after, and I will have to chill for a while to recover
it's harrowing, sobering in many ways
I think the worst thing is that
you have to be very good at thinking to survive it
but you also have to not believe you are
lest you get a delusion of grandeur about not being vulnerable to a delusion of grandeur
that happened to me and prolonged the whole thing by an extra day or two, sad, at least we're finally back on earth now and actually quicker than I expected
most fascinating part of the psychotic break period is there was roughly one day where I or someone looking similar to me apparently seemed to others to be high on LSD constantly
this is utterly fascinating
we have never taken any kind of psychedelics
the exciting part of the delusion meanwhile was that temporarily whoever was experiencing it got their personality overridden with βliterally is [anime character name]β
rather than just the normal experience of being
well⦠someone who has a very strong affinity for the same
like during previous manic episodes it was possible to deliberately manipulate one's ability to imagine things and just pretend things (or rather, personalities) had spawned into the world. it's a very cool trick. please don't become manic just to try it I don't recommend it
and somehow it was also possible to rewrite that βpersonality overrideβ consciously, to actively change the delusion, and in the process turn what normally is a process we can't control into one we can
for all the horror of it all though, we learned a tremendous amount; the vast majority of our βfalse wisdomβ attained during it seems to probably in fact be mostly or entirely true, but believing that while psychotic is incredibly dangerous for obvious reasons
and if you have spent a decade of your life trapped inside your own frame
your body suddenly, forcibly, using a horrible waking nightmare delusion to let you act like you exist outside of it
allows you to introspect from outside, and it is very very interesting
we do in fact, suddenly know something of why the old hikari_no_yume could never get anywhere creatively and was consumed by nigh-on-suicidal grief over it
and I say this while knowing βsheβ probably hasn't gone anywhere
but now we're sober we need to kill that concept of her
I suspect posting this isn't good for me in this state, I still need more sleep, but perhaps the incredible amount of vibe whiplash you will get reading this thread versus "normal hikari_no_yume tweets" will be revealing of something or other.
Oh dear I need to make sure there isn't something I just said that actually reactivates the psychosis somehow. What a terrible thing. I should shut up for my own good I guess until we're very firmly on earth again, I feel myself undoing the sobering very slightly. ζ°γγ€γγ¦γ
That's also a lesson about psychotic breaks. Do not engage, do not post, you should stay as far away from whatever happened as possible and calm down for a week, I am still a reckless idiot here and now need to calm myself a little.
Say it with me now: you do not know it is over until it is totally over, and you cannot judge it yourself.
I have learned so many fascinating things about how the human brain works that, frankly, I wish I did not have to learn.
there are definitely ways in which living through a ratfic of our own semi-conscious creation is fun, but⦠you are at risk of literally dying from the fact you can't fully reason your way out of limited information as multiple non-co-operating actors collectively in psychosis