Glen Allen remembered in his own words
Blogger's note. I happened upon this, as so often is the case, while looking for something else. It was a piece I had seen before, reproduced on someone else's blog. I knew Glen Allen. We never met face-to-face, but we wrote to each other regularly for ten years while he went through storms that I can only imagine. How he functioned as well as he did, for as long as he did, is remarkable, and I strongly suspect the same could be said of Robin Williams.
After being out of touch for years, I learned Glen's fate in 2005, when I was at the apogee of my own storm: I opened my daily paper and saw his picture under the obituaries. Having just taken a massive overdose, he had wandered out of a psychiatric ward in Toronto and passed out beside the railroad tracks in sub-zero December. How people die says something about the way they lived, and it struck me as oddly apropos that he died like some of the street people he understood and loved so well. 
What I didn't know, because he never told me, is that he wasn't just a newspaper reporter but an award-winning print journalist, war correspondent, English teacher in China, volunteer in mental health services, radio producer for CBC's Morningside, and no doubt many other things he didn't think significant enough to mention. 
This piece is very long, but I run it here without edits. Without a doubt, it is the best piece on depression, bipolar disorder and mental illness in general that I have ever read, and it is typical of Glen that he generously shared it even while struggling with his own recovery. Even in the throes of a consuming illness, Glen Allen had a certain unmistakeable quality of grace.
(The following story appeared in the New Brunswick Reader on June 19. 
1999, under the headline 
Angels of Madness. Glen Allen was found frozen 
to death last week in Toronto.)
By Glen Allen
The anesthetist, head swathed in a surgeon's fez, plunges the needle in 
a ready vein and leans over and says, "You'll smell the smell of garlic 
and then you'll be out."
And out I am in this fourth of a series of eight shock treatments on 
the psychiatric wing of the Saint John Regional Hospital. While I'm 
unconscious, a nurse places two electrodes on my skull and the attending 
psychiatrist flips a switch, sending a powerful current of electricity 
into the addled spheres of my brain.
Odd as it may seem - odd because no one really knows why it works - I 
awake feeling refreshed in the recovery room where I am asked my name, 
the date, where I am. I not only answer the questions in rapid order but 
I note the clarity of the vivid colours all around, the pleasant 
ticking of a clock hung on the wall, the murmur of friendly voices. I am 
climbing out of the pit of suicidal despair that sent me to the hospital - 
the fifth stay in hospital in three provinces in two years - in the 
first place. And for the first time in a long time, I feel healthy and I 
tell myself that this is how other people, untroubled by the mania or 
depression that has come out of the dark closet of my mind every decade 
for the last 40 years, must feel most of the time.
Electro-convulsive therapy (ECT), as it is properly known, is the 
treatment of last resort for some psychiatric afflictions, notably 
depression, and I haven't experienced it for 44 years. A frightened and deeply 
depressed boy of 15 - by far the worst time in my life - I was given a 
series of treatments without the benefit of anesthesia and while I don't 
remember much beyond that first rude shock I felt well for 10 years, I 
left home and enjoyed a successful career in the construction industry 
from the far North to California until this strange and cruel malady 
caught up with me once again.
Manic depression, or bipolar disorder as it is now called in these days 
of political correctness, touches the lives of one of every 100 New 
Brunswickers. It is an often devastating malaise that can strike without 
warning, rendering its victims subject, initially, to inexplicable 
"highs" that can spin out of control. First comes "hypomania" - a time of 
great busyness and well-being and then follows full-blown mania when the 
afflicted persons will make great plans, sleep not at all, feel a sense 
of grandiosity, spend wildly and travel widely.
It can also be a time of delusion or even hallucination (hearing, 
seeing or smelling things that aren't there) marked by extreme irritation 
with family or friends who cannot share this experience. This condition 
leads the manic persons to believe that what they are doing is 
absolutely correct. They may, as I have done in the past, write floridly mad 
letters to everyone but the Queen simply because it seems necessary to 
alert the world to some clear and present danger, again the right thing to 
do.
But mania can go well beyond this epistolary extravagance. Earlier this 
year, in the grip of mania and hospitalized in Montreal, I saw my 
father - dead, lo these 35 years - in elevators and there was a constant 
jabber of voices in my ear, one of them a basso profundo saying over and 
over again with astonishing clarity in Chilean Spanish, "Los pobres son 
dijes" (The poor are good). Prior to this, I nurtured the idea - the 
same fevered idea I had had the year before - that I had to travel to 
Northern Alberta's Peace River country to complete a novel my father had 
written decades ago - one in which the heroine and her children seek to 
make a new home there but never actually arrive. I had hitched a ride 
with a trucker headed for Calgary. He insisted I leave his company 
somewhere south of North Bay, Ont., and get psychiatric help. ("You're out 
of it, man," I recall him saying as he reached over and opened the 
passenger door.)
I made my way to Montreal where I ended up in St. Luc Hospital and 
later a halfway house where a barrage of drugs including lithium 
established a calmer state of mind. After two months of recuperation, I returned 
to Saint John where my truly enlightened employer gave me yet another 
chance to ply my trade as a reporter. But within weeks, mania had come 
full circle: its sinister cousin, clinical depression had set in. I felt 
a blackness of mood, a sense of dread and despair and a longing to end 
my hopeless life I hadn't felt since an earlier suicide attempt and 
once more entered the hospital where, this time, ECT was the indicated 
treatment.
Looking back on it all now, I might have known something was amiss when 
I was yet a small child. My father was off at war and my saintly 
mother, I was convinced in my five-year-old mind, was a German spy. When that 
war ended and the Cold War began, I was sure that the Soviet Union, our 
latest enemy, would invade the leafy precincts of my Toronto 
neighbourhood. I remember staring at the Disney decals on my bedroom wall and 
believing that taken together they were a bizarre scroll of destiny: the 
world would end in fire.
Shortly after that, my parents split up and I was seized with a sense 
of power - perhaps my first "manic" episode - when I became their 
go-between. Each would have me memorize messages for the other and when my 
father - a man deeply hurt by the war - came to pick me up for Sunday 
outings in his 1947 navy Pontiac, I would do my best to heal the breach, 
subtly altering their second-hand messages so as to ensure that each 
knew the other was loved and deeply missed. In hindsight, it was the wrong 
course to take. They lived together in a stormy alcoholic marriage 
until both died of cancer in their mid-fifties.
But once this feat of wishful thinking was accomplished, I fell into 
the deepest of depressions, a malaise that was to last for years. Alone 
in my room for days at a time, I wept incessantly and wished for 
release. One desperate day, I cut across a wrist with a broken bottle and an 
alert doctor in a hospital emergency ward recognized the act for what it 
was, a cry for help, and recommended to my bewildered mother that my 
mental state be assessed. My parents shared society's distaste for 
anything that smacked of mental illness and had a deeply felt distrust of 
mental-health practitioners. They had already taken me out of school, read 
the angry and despairing poems I had fixed to my wall; they had watched 
as I refused food and the attentions of my friends, but they were 
reluctant to place me in the hands of the shrinks as if once there, there 
would be no turning back. But there was no alternative: I was taken to 
see the good Dr. Grant who clapped me in hospital and after rest and
conventional therapies of the day failed, suggested ECT.
And so it went. I would have eight or nine trouble-free years until the 
monster reappeared and I would be swept up in the rising and falling 
tide of mood. Indeed, in the sixties I spent time in a hospital in 
Chicago and 10 years later in Montreal, I jumped in front of a moving bus. In 
the mid-eighties, a full two years were blighted by bipolar illness. 
That was a time of sheer terror and misadventure. Among other things, I 
had concluded that the big banks were to blame for all of society's 
ills. I hired a video camera crew and forayed into one of the major bank's 
headquarters in downtown Montreal, shooting footage of executives at 
their desks. I was also convinced at one point that the Mafia was after 
me.
Then came last year and this - two botched trips out West, time in a 
hospital in Thunder Bay, then Montreal and three stays in the facility in 
Saint John, one of them in a coma following a suicide attempt.
All this time, all through these years I had been told by professionals 
that I had to take medication - namely, lithium - to ward off the 
depredations of an illness that is of the brain, not of the mind, an illness 
that is largely due to faulty genes and biochemistry being grievously 
out of whack.
But for years, especially when I felt well, I denied to myself and to 
the world at large that I had bipolar disorder. I wanted badly to be 
like other people, even given the fact that members of my immediate family 
had been stricken in the same way resulting in hospitalizations and 
suicide.
Instead of taking my pills, I would attempt to cope in other ways. 
Sadly, until the bottom fell out of my world in 1984, I drank heavily, just 
as my father had done before me. I also moved constantly. I always felt 
better for a time when I changed location. I have lived and worked in 
England, Italy, Algeria, three American states and seven Canadian 
provinces. After I married, I trucked my little family around, bag and 
baggage, as far afield as Chile and China.

.
 
But there were no cures, only palliatives. One of them - alcohol - was
ruinous. As for travel...well, as someone wiser once said, when you get 
off the bus you're always there waiting for yourself. Depression, my 
lone outrider, would inevitably close in just as a ship spotted as a tiny 
smudge on the horizon inevitably comes to shore, looming larger than 
life itself.
Manic depression is a mood disorder as opposed to schizophrenia, which 
is a disorder of the thought process itself. In it, there is a 
disruption of a person's normal emotional states, such as happiness or sadness. 
The moods of manic depression include at one end, utter melancholy, 
passivity and fatigue and thoughts of suicide and at the other, elation, 
grandiosity, agitation and, when extreme, delusions and hallucinations. 
Delusions can include grandiose beliefs: a person may think she or he 
has special talents or is related to a special person. A manic might 
also believe that he or she is the subject of whispers of friends and 
strangers alike, or that Lloyd Robertson is sending special messages during 
his newscast. Hallucinations are usually imagined sights or sounds. 
Auditory hallucinations are more common (although all senses may be 
affected) and may have a religious overtone, such as the voice of God or 
angels and may sound like commands.
Most people go through many more bouts of depression than mania, though 
to be considered "bipolar" a person must have gone through at least one 
manic episode. For some, it is a chronic illness that becomes more 
pronounced with age but a manic depressive typically goes through long 
periods of remission in his or her life. A person may be relatively 
symptom-free with only mild mood swings for years, then for any number of 
reasons (the primary one being discontinuing prescribed medication) the 
cycle returns.
There are manic depressives who experience only one cycle in their 
lives and others in whom the illness disappears at an early age. But 
complicating things is the fact that depression and mania can exist at the 
same time. As writers Diane and Lisa Berger state in their excellent 
primer on manic depression called We Heard the Angels of Madness, the term 
"bipolar disorder" deceives because the mania and depression "do not 
occur in even opposition. It is not like the North Pole and the South 
Pole; instead, it more closely resembles two points on the equator. 
They're side by side, sharing a border and overlapping.
Researchers don't yet have a definitive cause of manic depression but 
they do know that it runs in families and that defective genes must, in 
part, be at fault.
But all that said, why tell this tawdry story at all? I have lost all 
appetite for the confessional and take no pleasure in this exercise. But 
there are two points I would like to make in passing. One relates to 
stigma. The mentally ill, however much society has changed in recent 
years, are prey to an abundance of myth and misinformation that is, quite 
simply, astonishing.
Victims of major mental illness - schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and 
clinical depression - are still often shunned and tucked away, even 
though their maladies, most experts would now agree, are physical in 
nature, just like diabetes or heart disease. And the most serious of these 
diseases, schizophrenia, has disabled many of the 300,000 Canadians 
affected by it, many of them young people in their prime. They are our sons 
and daughters, wives and husbands, our neighbours and we have all too 
often tended to see them as a tribe apart, spoken of in whispers. They 
are no more "violent" than the population at large and their illnesses 
are, for the most part, episodic in nature. Most enjoy great islands - 
even archipelagos - of calm and productivity between short-lived bouts 
of illness. And they are much with us: one of five New Brunswickers, at 
some point in their lives will, like me, go beyond the brink and need 
the attentions of the mental-health-care system.
The other point worth making is that there is help out there. Each of 
13 regions in the province has a community mental-health-care centre 
staffed by a psychiatrist or two, nurses, social workers and 
psychologists. There are problems: there is a dire shortage of child and adolescent 
psychiatrists and public money is short indeed for the chronically ill. 
But for the most part, the work of this corps of professionals is 
largely unsung. While they may be too few for the demands placed upon them, 
in my experience - a view confirmed recently by an Ontario study - New 
Brunswick has one of the best mental health-care systems in the nation.
Meanwhile I have come through once again feel eminently sane. If the 
demons come calling again it won't be for many years hence. I have hope, 
I have met some interesting people along the way and am very glad to be 
alive.
For these blessings I thank the God of my understanding. Without Him by 
my side would I have been here to tell this sometimes sorry tale?
Dear Sir or Madam, will you read my book
 
    It took me years to write, will you take a look
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