Echoes of a Shattered Life

Can resilience exist in a shattered life?

You know, I kept on talking about empowerment and stuff, but whom am I kidding really, when my own life is havoc?

I used to think that anything is possible in this life. And it does look like, on the surface.

I have a Bachelor in Interpreting and Translation from Belgium, that I completed dutifully and profoundly in French. I gave it all. My late mother hoped at that time that I would meet a nice Belgian guy, marry and stop the problem with visas (I was Russian back then) once and for all. But I didn’t. I got distinction instead for my diploma.

While I did date, and had a guy who was ready to do anything so that I stay, – I packed my belongings and moved to Amsterdam to do my second master degree for which I had won a bursary.

It was in Amsterdam that I got my first psychosis – a phenomenon that would pursue me for the rest of my life, but it didn’t stop me from pursuing a life with purpose. I felt real happiness only once, I even remember that I acknowledged it for myself. I was standing in my kitchen then in Sheffield, when my son was four years old and we were a proper happy family: me, my son, his father and our cat.

‘’I am so happy,’’ I told myself then, watching my son playing lego while I was making dinner, waiting for my son’s dad to come back from work.

It all went away, unfortunately, and it wasn’t my fault. I didn’t have any ‘psychosis’ at that time for good five years. It just shows the role of stability and security in our mental health. I ended up in a psychiatric hospital three months after me and my son’s father broke up.

But I had a PhD earned at a British university and somehow managed to continue raising my son, single-handedly, by working across three universities giving lessons on media studies. I was also writing a lot at that time in the field of mental health, thinking that I could empower others – those who like me had to live with a diagnosis of serious mental illness above their heads. In reality I was chasing for some work stability among total uncertainty of zero-hours contracts, ending up being sectioned twice under Mental Health Act, preventing me from my dream to secure a permanent contract where I already worked, breaking my heart and confidence. They didn’t even invite me for an interview, despite the fact that I was on their casual employment list for good three years by then.

I found a job in another country and we moved with my son and our cat. The husband of my mum moved with us, and my mother was supposed to follow, but it all collapsed, because they both passed away suddenly, leaving me and my son without any family or any support.

Who am I supposed to empower with my own story? I am still grieving for my mother like mad, I struggle to tolerate massive stress, I am on psychiatric meds, and still battling with occasional psychoses, and I am single. A single mother, with a teenager son and a moody cat, struggling to function. This is who I am. Not a super-hero, trying to prove something to someone without being asked to do so.

I just live on. For the sake of my son.

If this echoes you, share this journey.



8 responses to “Echoes of a Shattered Life”

  1. I have had psychosis as well and I appreciate hearing your thoughts.

    1. Thank you so much for reading and for your thoughts!
      I hope I can write something more optimistic next time!

  2. Well, join the crowd.
    There is only room in this universe – it seems – for a few rock stars.
    But that doesn’t mean that we can’t try to support each other. The rock stars aren’t going to do that for us. And while it is easy to convince many of us that we have nothing of value to contribute, that can’t be true, and must be a story perpetrated by weak beings who are afraid of strong beings. Even a rock start needs an organization to put on his shows.

    1. Thank you for your comment Larry!
      Yes, I agree. Everyone needs help. As human beings we need to support each other!
      You just proved it with your comment!
      Thank you so much for that and for reading my blog!

  3. I have a lot of mental illness in my family. I understand your situation perfectly. Bon courage!

  4. This resonates with me, though I’ve never had a husband or a son. But I’ve had a cat! A tortoiseshell burmese, she died a few years ago. Cats are beautiful, supreme beings — I love going for long walks because the local cats seem to know I’m coming and emerge from the shadows for pats.

    I’ve never gone to university, let alone done a PHD — though I’m more than capable of it. When you’ve had manic depression since you were were 15 you have such an intense and compressed surfeit of pain and passion, sitting down to write an essay and do research isn’t the catharsis you need. That’s why I worked as a musician: uncut, ungoverned release.

    Now that I’ve settled down I’m thinking of doing either an English or philosophy degree. As far as the Russian language goes, I wish I could read and speak it, actually, so I could read Dostoevsky and Nikolai Berdyaev in the original. Language shapes consciousness and aesthetic subjectivity, so I imagine what Russians read and what I do is more than subtly different.

    You sound a bit pensive in this article. That’s good, believe it or not. The shadows ground the truth as much as joy.

    Have you read Night Vision, by Mariana Alessandri? She uses existentialist philosophy to critique the brittle modern fixation with toxic positivity. It introduced me to writers I’d never heard of, like Audre Lorde, Bell Hooks, and Gloria Anzaldúa. Gloria Anzaldúa suffered from devastating depressions, which fed her compassion and lyrical prose.

    1. Dear Steve,
      Thank you so much for your reflection!
      Yes. I totally agree with you that toxic positivity sounds fake, and we don’t need these hypocritical perks, we rather need the truth!
      I have been struggling lately but this is life, this is how it goes sometimes.
      Very interesting recommendations about what to read! I will check them! Thank you for that!
      Cats ARE supreme beings, absolutely!
      They sense the energy and can remove negativity! When my cat enters the room it always brings smile on my face!

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About Me

I am a doctor of philosophy, a university lecturer, and a lover of cats, fine wine, dancing, theatre, and human eccentricity. I was born in the Soviet Union (Moscow). I am fluent in four languages, and have spent all my adult life studying (except from 18 to 19) working and living throughout Western Europe. Despite a surname-Netchitailova- that translates from Russian into English as “unreadable”, my great passions in life are reading and writing. My personal struggles have made me appreciate the manifestations of weirdness that exist everywhere.

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