Wait for Me: Chronic Mental Illness and Experiences of Time During the Pandemic

Author:

Zelvin Lindsey BethORCID

Abstract

AbstractAs someone diagnosed with severe chronic mental illness early in my adolescence, I have spent over half of my life feeling out of step with the rest of the world due to hospitalizations, treatment programs, and the disruptions caused by anxiety, anorexia, depression, and obsessive–compulsive disorder. The effect of my mental health conditions compounded by these treatment environments means I often feel that I experience time passing differently, which results in sensations of removal and isolation from those around me. The global shutdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic seemed a way for normative bodies to experience the passing of time the way I always have. In this paper, I extend Dr. Sara Wasson’s analysis of the ways in which chronic pain resists narrative coherence to my own temporal experience of chronic mental illness, specifically my embodied experience of the pandemic. I use that embodied experience as a case study for examining how the reciprocal nature of time and narrativity, as outlined by Dr. Paul Ricoeur, can create isolation for those struggling with their temporality due to chronic mental illness. To acknowledge and grapple with the ramifications of discursive and material privilege involved in such situations, I include an analysis of Robert Desjarlais’s 1994 article “Struggling Along: The Possibilities for Experience among the Homeless Mentally Ill,” in which he investigates a similar phenomenon of being outside of structured sequential narrative time in the residents of a Boston shelter for the mentally ill.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Policy,Health (social science)

Reference9 articles.

1. Adams, Tony E., Stacy Holman Jones, and Carolyn Ellis. 2015. Autoethnography: Understanding Qualitative Research. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

2. Desjarlais, Robert. 1994. “The Possibilities for Experience Among the Homeless Mentally Ill.” American Anthropologist 96 (4): 886–901.

3. Frank, Arthur W. 1995. The Wounded Storyteller: Body, Illness, and Ethics, 2nd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

4. Fournier, Lauren. 2021. Authotheory as Feminist Practice in Art, Writing, and Feminism. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.

5. Ricoeur, Paul. 1981. “Narrative Time.” In On Narrative, edited by W. J. T. Mitchell, 165–86. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

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