.AGENTS
IN MY BRAIN:
How
I Continue to Survive Type-One Manic Depression
Second
Edition
By
Bill Hannon
Manic
Depression is also Known as Bipolar Affective Disorder
Includes
Symptom List
2017
Table
of Contents for Agents in My Brain. Second Edition. Chapter Names:
1. KGB Bloodhounds. 2. Healthy, Optimistic High School. 3. Camp:
Good Times. 4. My Great Fall Falls Apart. 5. Depression Slows
My Swimming. 6. Melanie Carson. 7. Hotel California Israel.
8. Dr. Kelly Pretends to Practice Outpatient Psychiatry. 9.
College Freshman Half There. 10. Summertime and I Can’t
Cheer Up. 11. Sophomore Space Cadet. 12. Introduction to Getting
Fired. 13. Satisfactory Progress Towards Flunking Out. 14. Manic
Delusions of Law Enforcement. 15. Another Year of Depression
and No Good Doctor. 16. The Good Summer of 1981. 17. A Search
for a Happy Environment. 18. Getting Diagnosed and Ascending
from the Depths of Depression. 19. Learning That Antidepressants
Can Be for Long Term. 20. Lousy Medical Practice Leads to My
Contemplating Suicide. 21. Brains Yes: Personality No. 22. I
Want a New Drug. 23. Hanging Around. 24. I Really Need a New
Drug. 25. Finally Trying Antidepressants for Six Weeks. 26.
Manic Lawsuit Aided by Secret Agents. 27. Conclusion 1997. 28.
The Years 1996-2013 Being Almost OK. 29. Meredith. 30. Update.
Appendix A: Symptom List. Appendix B: Resource List. Unnumbered
Notes. Acknowledgements. Index.
Chapters 1, 7, 14, and 26 originally appeared in the
first edition of Agents in My Brain by Bill Hannon (Open Court,
1997). Chapters 28, 29, and 30 in this second edition are completely
new. The remaining chapters are substantially revised versions
of the ones that appeared in the first edition.
Copyright
Bill Hannon 2017.
The story you are about to read is true. The names
of people and places have been changed in order to protect the
privacy of my friends and family.
Chapter 1. KGB Bloodhounds
My name
is Bill Hannon. Like thousands and thousands of other manic
depressives type one, when I was extremely manic, I got the
delusion that I was a CIA/ FBI agent. The “Save the
World from Crime” delusion is common in American manic
depressives, because so many of the TV shows, movies, and
news stories are about “The Cops vs. the Criminals.”
The idea that we should “Build More Prisons,”
was a ridiculous manic delusion that I don’t believe
now. Other American manic depressives think they are God,
Jesus, Pope, or President. Egyptian manics might think they
are King Tut.
Manic
depressives type-one get delusions when they are manic. Delusions
are ridiculous ideas or reactions drawn from normal sights
and sounds. This is different from hallucinations which are
sights and sounds that are not really there. Manic depressives
type two don’t get delusional, but do get the other
symptoms of mania, so it is sometimes a problem. Both types
get badly depressed at times.
It was
April 1981. I was a twenty-one-year-old college student at
the University of Washington in Seattle (UW). I had been in
touch with reality, but depressed, for the entire year before
that. I had already had manic depressive mood swings for over
four years. I had been normal, happy and healthy until I was
seventeen. In my manic illness, I began a crusade to stop
crime. My plan was to get the Washington State Legislature
to build a lot more prisons and keep them completely full
of criminals. In my manic confusion, I wrote a letter to the
governor in which I intended to say something against violence.
However, the letter was worded so poorly, so incoherently,
that the recipients didn’t know what the letter meant.
They figured I was mentally ill, and was speaking of violence.
They couldn’t tell if I was against violence or in favor
of it. They thought the letter was possibly some sort of threat.
A bit later, I decided that the FBI, CIA, and/or Secret Service
had checked out my background so carefully that they realized
that I was a good guy, the letter was not a threat, and I
was so law-abiding, that they wanted me to be an FBI agent.
I was that delusional, that out of touch with reality. Being
manic, my judgment was way off. I didn’t know that there
was something wrong with me. I felt excited, happy, and energetic.
However, my speech and writing were hard to understand I sent
a letter to Governor Evans which was meant to say:
Dear Governor
Evans, We
are all in too much danger. The penalty for attempted first
degree murder is only three years in prison. The penalties
are way too short like this, because there is a lack of prison
space . . . Please build more prison space. Sincerely, Bill
Hannon
Instead,
my letter was hard to understand. My intent was just to describe
the general situation in the state, namely, that anyone with
a motive for violence might go ahead and commit a crime. However,
my letter was incoherent. It was more like:
Dear Governor
Evans,
Someone
could kill you. You better build more prisons . . . This is
a matter of life and death! Sincerely, Bill Hannon
This looks
alarming, but at the time I thought it was just fine because
I wasn’t thinking straight. I had been manic a year
earlier for a four-month period. I wrote some strange letters
to professors at that time. There were references to violence
that were misunderstood in those letters also. I was trying
to say something against violence, but one sentence did not
lead to another, and my choice of wording was inaccurate.
The inaccurate wording probably reminded the readers of the
myth that mentally ill or confused people are often dangerous.
This myth is widely believed in our society. The incoherence
alone in my letter to the governor probably would have alarmed
any reader who believed in the “mentally ill people
are dangerous” myth. Add in the references to violence
that they could not figure out, and the governor’s security
guards apparently interpreted my letter as some sort of threat.
They sent some people around to ask questions about me. I
didn’t know about that until a week or so later. I was
utterly surprised that they thought my letter was some sort
of threat. I had thought my letter was a clear statement against
violence and crime.
I had
been a college student, doing a political science internship
with a state legislator. When that internship with State Legislator
Denslow ended, because the college quarter was over, I was
free to lobby the other representatives about criminal justice
legislation. I wanted to stop crime. I hoped for some legislation
that would establish mandatory minimum prison sentences for
each felony, and also would create the necessary prison space.
I talked to many representatives— Democrats who were
basically against the idea and Republicans who were almost
all in favor. The house and senate were controlled by the
Democrats. Governor Evans was a Republican. The head of the
house appropriations committee was named Steve Leroux. The
appropriations committee was going to have a hearing on appropriations
for prisons at the end of March. I hoped to get a chance to
speak at that hearing. I had a presentation planned including
this song that I wrote:
The whites
kill the whites, and the whites kill the blacks, and the blacks
kill the blacks, and the blacks kill the whites, and the green
grass grows all around, all around, and the green grass grows
all around.
The point
of my song was that something needed to be done about all
the killing. We shouldn’t just sit back and accept it.
Also, too many of the Democratic legislators seemed to be
saying that if I wanted to put criminals in prison, then I
wanted to put blacks in prison, and therefore I was a racist.
The Democrats seemed to be saying that criminals should be
forgiven if they commit a crime and they’re black. This
never made sense, especially because black criminals usually
have black victims. Most crimes in Washington State are committed
by whites, and race should have nothing to do with sentencing.
My idea that I could convince the whole legislature to do
something, all by myself, was a grandiose delusion. My mania
led me to falsely believe that Representative Leroux really
would let me speak at the appropriations committee hearing.
I called four television stations and two newspapers and told
them to be at the hearing. I planned to be a big splash on
the evening news. I even mailed out postcards to lots of people
I had known, saying I was running for Congress in 1980. Being
unrealistically optimistic was a symptom of mania. This was
the third time in my life that I experienced a freaky and
very severe manic episode. I had been normal until I was seventeen-and-a-half
years old. Being manic feels very good. It is very exciting
and fun, even though it is bizarre. The criminal justice appropriations
hearing took place on April 3, 1981. One of the television
stations I had called was there, and there was a bunch of
people testifying. Representative Denslow had said I was going
to be on the agenda, but when I got there, the agenda that
he made up did not have my name on it. I was annoyed. I was
hyper because I was manic. The hearing started, and people
talked about a replacement for the women’s prison because
the current one wasn’t adequate. I began to distribute
my handouts. The handouts compared the cost of prisons with
the cost of crime. I thought prisons were inexpensive compared
with crime. My handouts had my suggestions for the minimum
penalties that people should serve for all the various crimes.
I was moving around a lot at the meeting to pass out my literature,
while people were testifying to the committee. I’m sure
now that was against the rules.
Also,
when I was seated, I kept trying to see Leroux through a narrow
aisle which was my only view of him. He kept leaning one way
or another. I was just trying to see him in order to pay attention
to him when he was talking. Later I learned that somebody
thought I was looking for a path to rush Leroux and attack
him.
Also,
I know that I looked nervous because at the beginning somebody
told me so. I was just nervous about speaking and from being
manic. Of course, I didn’t realize that I was manic.
I thought I could personally convince the state legislature
to build a new five-thousand cell maximum security prison
for the state by addressing the committee that day. I was
out of touch with reality, and I didn’t know it. It
was fun and exciting. I was proud of the great knowledge of
how to stop crime that I thought I had.
When
time was nearly up at the hearing, I yelled out from the audience,
“Representative Leroux, you said I could speak, how
about a chance?”
Everyone
just ignored me. Later, I was near Representative Denslow’s
office, and he told me that one of the governor’s bodyguards
had been around asking questions about me.
He asked,
“What did you say in that letter?”
I said,
“Well I wrote, ‘Your life is in danger from all
the crime’.”
“Well,
it was poor judgment to say, ‘Your life is in danger’.”
“Yeah,
I guess.”
That
was the end of that discussion.
Later
that night, my dad came over and said, “Bill, I’ve
got to talk to you.”
I said,
“Let me guess, you got a call from the FBI?”
My dad
said, “No. No. I got a call from Dean Carlson (Commissioner
of Prisons). He said you were at some legislative meeting
acting in a disturbed manner.”
I said,
“Really?”
“Yes,
they thought you were going to rush the chairman.”
“Rush
him?” I said surprised.
“Yes.”
“Rush
him? That’s ridiculous.”
He said,
“Look, I want you to go see Dr. Dan Holley. He’s
younger than Dr. Kelly [the psychiatrist I was seeing then],
and he can help you.”
I said,
“Okay, okay, okay, I will.”
I didn’t
argue because I knew I had already accidentally annoyed the
governor’s bodyguards, and it wouldn’t hurt to
see another psychiatrist on an outpatient basis. My dad gave
me Dr. Holley’s phone number.
I called
the number my dad gave me to make an appointment, and they
made a point of getting me in the next day. I went to see
Dr. Holley in his office, and decided that not only was he
a psychiatrist, but also an agent for the FBI or CIA.
He talked
to me for a little bit and then said, “I have a drug
I want you to try.”
I told
him I didn’t do drugs other than my mood leveler Lithium,
and I wasn’t interested.
He convinced
me to take the prescription slip. I had been on mood leveler
Lithium for a full year because I had been tentatively diagnosed
with manic depression a year earlier at the age of twenty.
Obviously, the Lithium was not working too well at this point.
When I left his office, I went to a bookstore to look the
prescription up in The Physicians’ Desk Reference. The
name of the drug was spelled “Sineguan” on the
prescription slip that Holley had filled out. I looked it
up and found an entry for an antidepressant called “Sinequan.”
Obviously, the “g” should have been a “q”
on the slip. I took this misspelling as a hint that I was
not really supposed to take the drug being prescribed. I looked
at the list of side effects, and one of them was hallucinations.
I decided that Dr Holley had prescribed this drug as an FBI
trick. I thought the FBI knew I would look up the side effects.
I thought they wanted to see if I would deliberately induce
hallucinations in myself, so that I would have a defense for
murder. I thought they wanted to see if I would try to use
the insanity defense. Hallucinations show insanity. I was
really paranoid. I had the unrealistic fear that the FBI was
watching me and playing this dirty trick on me. They couldn’t
arrest me, because I hadn’t done anything. So, I imagined,
they were pulling dirty tricks on me. I didn’t get the
misspelled prescription for Sinequan filled. I’m not
a murderer, and I didn’t want hallucinations. I know
now that it was just as well that I didn’t take the
Sinequan, because it would’ve probably made my symptoms
worse. It was an antidepressant, not an antipsychotic for
mania, the manic stage of the disease. In reality, it wasn’t
a trick; it was just an erroneous and misspelled prescription.
Over the next several days I lost touch with reality further.
I still had no insight into my situation. I thought I was
fine, but I really wasn’t. For example, I was reading
the University of Washington student newspaper. In the paper,
there is a classified section for fraternities and sororities.
There are usually ads in there like, “Hey Jim and Dave
of Sigma Delta Phi, thanks for the great time Monday. Love,
your little sisters Stacy, Sandy, Angie, Sue, Dawn, Jane,
Laurie and Mary.”
Well,
being manic, I started to think that all those ads were directed
at me. I thought of anyone I had ever known with those girls’
first names, and figured they had all gotten together to get
in touch with me. I was ecstatic. For one thing, they were
probably in love with me. For another, they had probably heard
about my plans to run for Congress, and wanted to work on
my campaign. I felt very flattered.
After
a while, I thought the FBI and CIA had realized that their
concern about my letter was completely unfounded. I figured
they realized I was a good guy. I thought they had checked
me out carefully, and had found that I was very law-abiding.
I had even reached the rank of Eagle in Boy Scouts.
I also
developed delusions about music. I thought the choice of songs
on the radio, and sometimes the actual words of songs being
played, were being altered by the FBI or CIA to have a special
meaning for me. I figured that my car was bugged, my house
was bugged, my phone was tapped, my mail was being opened,
and I was being followed. By now, though, I thought it was
not being done to guard against something bad I might do,
but instead, so that the FBI could keep track of what I was
doing. By keeping track of what I was doing, the FBI would
best be able to help me get elected to Congress. I was overjoyed.
They wanted to get me elected because they had figured out
that I was tough on crime. I was not violent. I wanted to
stop violence. They couldn’t overtly help me, because
as federal employees, they couldn’t get involved in
politics, I thought. So, they had to help me covertly. This
was all according to my grandiose delusions. The fact that
my house was bugged (or so I thought), let them know what
radio station I was listening to, so they could alter words
of songs to give me secret messages.
In a
few days, I had another appointment with Dr. Holley. I forget
exactly what he said, but I remember he told me he had been
a lieutenant colonel (a high rank) in the Air Force during
the Vietnam War. I decided he still was in the Air Force intelligence
branch and was my commanding officer. The intelligence community
would help get me elected to Congress. It was very exciting.
I told him I was going down to Tacoma to visit my friends
at the University of Puget Sound (UPS). I had gone to school
there for my first two years.
He said,
“Take my card along and give me a call if you run into
any trouble.”
I went
down to UPS about nine o’clock at night. I thought a
whole caravan of cars was following me down there. I got to
UPS and went to the house of some friends. They had just gone
to sleep when I got there, but I had called so they knew I
was coming. One of their roommates was gone, so I tried to
sleep in his bed. I think I just lay there a few hours. Then
I got up and started looking for my shoes. After some trouble
finding my shoes, during which I woke one of my friends, I
went out and drove around for a while. Then I came back to
their house and sat in the living room for the rest of the
night. My mind was filled with great, fun, optimistic thoughts.
It was exciting to be running for Congress, and to feel so
good, instead of being depressed. I didn’t realize that
I was out of my mind. This was a manic phase of manic depression.
I had had two previous manic episodes since age seventeen-and-a-half,
but since then, I had mostly been depressed. It felt good
to sit in my friends’ living room and make great, optimistic
plans. The next day, my friends in that house got sick of
me, and they sent me over to Jewish House where I knew a couple
people. Jewish House was a residential house for Jews on campus
who wanted to keep kosher and observe other Jewish traditions.
I guess Tim, one of the guys there, was writing a story and
needed a new character.
One of
my friends in the first house later sent over a note saying,
“This is your new character,” I guess meaning
me.
I didn’t
really notice. I was too busy talking to them, trying to pick
up secret coded information from them, and give other information
to them. It was fun. I thought I was finally doing something
fun and exciting on this campus rather than hanging out in
my dorm room being depressed. Before I dropped out, that’s
what I did. I hung out in my dorm room and was depressed.
As I
talked to the people in Jewish House, I jumped from topic
to topic, I’m sure. I remember I kept doing an imitation
of an Israeli trying to speak English: “I eh, don know,
eh, how do you say in English?”
Also,
I kept throwing my head to one side like you do when you first
lift your head out of a pool to get water out of your eyes.
Swimming lives on in my mind when I feel good. I enjoyed being
on the swim team when I was healthy in high school.
At Jewish
House, there was a poster on the wall which said, “Consider
Yourself One of the Committed.”
Of course,
this meant committed to Judaism, but I kept thinking it could
mean being committed to a mental hospital, because my dad
had been saying that I was nuts. It was a suspicious poster.
I thought
my car had been stolen. Eventually I found out I had just
forgotten where I parked it. The people I had been talking
to at Jewish House were Tim and Rita. I told them I thought
my car had been stolen, and Tim wanted to call campus security,
but I told him not to. Later when I was out walking around,
Tim called campus security, and I think, reported that I was
acting strange, and that I didn’t want to call them
when my car had been stolen.
That
evening I was in the student union, and a group of campus
security guards came up to me and asked, “Are you Bill
Hannon?”
I said,
“Yes.”
They
asked, “What are you on this campus for?” (I had
dropped out of UPS a year earlier, and I was now attending
UW.)
“I
cannot say.”
Then
they started pushing me and asked, “Why can’t
you say?”
“I
cannot say why I cannot say, and quit pushing me or I’ll
get you guys arrested.”
“What
for?”
“Assault.”
“Well,
we think you’re on campus to threaten a professor.”
“No.”
A few
minutes later they left me alone. I had written anticrime
letters to some professors during my manic episode a year
earlier. The problems with the 1980 letters to professors
arose from my misunderstood references to violence. This was
the same problem I had just repeated in the 1981 letters to
the governor. Being manic makes a person impossible to understand.
People can get the meaning exactly backwards. The likelihood
of misunderstanding is increased by the abundance in the media
of misconceptions about mental illness. Too often, mental
illness only makes the news when some killer is pleading insanity.
Most people arrested on suspicion of murder are perfectly
sane, and perfectly guilty. On the other hand, most mentally
ill people are perfectly peaceful. They are two different
groups. Criminals, in their desperate attempt to stay out
of jail, end up slandering and libeling mentally ill people
by saying they are one of us. They only wish.
Sometime
later, after talking to the security guards, when I was out
walking around campus, Rita called my high school friend David
Frish, and my psychiatrist, Dr. Holley. I had given her their
names and phone numbers, because I thought she was CIA also.
I guess she told them I was crazy.
I spent
the evening wandering around campus, looking at the things
people had written on their dorm room doors, thinking that
the writing contained secret messages to me or about me. I
thought I should send some secret messages as well as receive
them.
I thought
the song “Dirty Water” had to be sung to one particular
girl, so I knocked on her door and started singing it.
She said,
“Bill, I don’t know what you are talking about.”
So, I
left. I was also looking for Brett Pritchard’s house.
He lived in a college owned house the address of which I didn’t
know. The campus directory just gave the name of the house.
I was going to speak to him about the fight against crime.
His father was a Congressman. Also, that evening, I crashed
a few parties that were going on in dorms. I just walked in.
I stayed for just a minute, because I thought I was on a secret
mission that I couldn’t tell anyone about, and then
I left. Around 10: 30 pm or so, I went back to Jewish House
and told them I was going to stay there and sleep. I had prearranged
to stay in the room of a friend there because he was out of
town. He was a friend of mine from my dorm floor freshman
year. I was getting into bed, but first I was stumbling around
his room, and I accidentally unplugged his clock radio. When
I plugged it back in, it blinked 12:00. I didn’t know
why it did that. I thought it was another clue. 12:00 midnight
is the witching hour. Witches are criminals and should be
punished.
I started
singing, “Ding dong the witch is dead,” and I
started sweeping with a broom I found, because witches ride
broomsticks.
Then
Rita said I was making too much noise, so I left. Then I decided
that the whole campus was a CIA training base, and everybody
was supposed to switch dorm rooms to confuse the KGB, the
Soviet Union’s spy agency. I went to the lounge of a
dorm, and watched the late night Associated Press news on
television. The news was printed on the screen, and would
gradually scroll up. I blinked a few times or several times
after reading each word or sentence. I thought the CIA could
tell what I was reading by shining lasers through the TV screen
into my eyes and back to the television. Of course, I thought
the information was coded secrets. For example, some of the
news was about the National Long Course Swimming Championships.
When it got to the breaststroke, I thought they were telling
me that if I did well on this mission, it would make up for
all the bad breaststroke races I had participated in. I thought
this was all very exciting and fun. I thought I was very clever.
It was good to have a sense of purpose.
I stayed
in the dorm lounge for a while, then I left and went walking
around campus. A small cocker spaniel started following me.
At first I thought nothing of it, but then I thought it was
sent to trail me by the KGB. It probably had a microscopic
radio transmitting device on its collar. So, in keeping with
the delusion that everyone on campus was supposed to switch
dorm rooms to confuse the KGB, and in keeping with the delusion
that the dog was trailing my scent for the KGB, I did what
people do in the movies when bloodhounds are chasing them.
I crossed water. It washes off the scent. The dogs lose your
trail. That way the KGB wouldn’t be able to capture
me. I took off my jacket, shirt, shoes, and socks, and swam
across a pond on campus that had a dormitory on the other
side. I stopped in the middle to pour mud on my head. I thought
to myself, this is a crazy way to make a living. I wondered
if being a CIA agent was enough to impress Melanie Carson,
a woman I had a huge crush on in high school.
I kept
thinking about the song that has the line, “Save my
life I’m going down for the last time.” I pretended
to have trouble swimming as I thought of those lyrics. I had
no trouble swimming, but it was cold. It was April 12, in
Tacoma, Washington. It was about 6:00 a.m. when I got out
of the pond, ran into the dorm, and into the men’s showers.
I took a hot shower to warm up. So far, nobody had seen me.
After about ten minutes in the shower, I got out. I walked
down the hall and saw someone’s name written on his
door. It was “Brewster.” “Ster” was
a syllable that reminded me of a nickname I used to have.
The door was unlocked, so I walked in. There was nobody there.
I used a towel to dry off, and I changed into some dry underwear
that I found in a drawer. It fit. Then I put on some pants
and a shirt, and they fit. I thought I had arrived at my new
address, the one I was supposed to go to in order to confuse
the KGB. I read the class schedule of the room’s occupant,
and then I started reading his letters from home. I figured
I would have to take on his identity. I was getting comfortable
and even turned on a radio. Soon the real occupant of the
room came back. (He had been watching the space shuttle launch
down the hall.)
He asked,
“What are you doing in my room?”
I said,
“It’s my room now.”
He said,
“No, it’s my room.”
“We’re
all supposed to switch rooms. Go over to Jewish House and
they will tell you about this.”
“You’re
wearing my clothes.”
“No.
They’re my clothes.”
“No.
They’re mine,” he said angrily, throwing his arms
up in the air. “Oh, God.”
“Go
over to the Jewish House and they’ll
explain
this to you.”
He said,
“No,” with an angry look on his face.
I said,
“Well, then call the police.” I thought the police
would side with me.
He called
campus security who then called the police.
They
got Dr. Holley on the walkie-talkie phone link, and I heard
him say, “Yeah, he’s a psycho.”
They
handcuffed me, and drove me up to McCormick hospital in Seattle.
As I got out of the police car at McCormick hospital, I faked
an epileptic seizure, but the cops just grabbed me, and brought
me up to the psychiatric ward. When I got onto the psychiatric
ward, I tried to figure out who was CIA and who was not. I
also tried to figure out who was a Pacific Lutheran University
(PLU) alumnus, and who was a UPS alumnus. I thought there
was a friendly rivalry within the CIA between the two schools,
since they were in the same town, Tacoma.
I acted
bizarre for several days while I was in the hospital. I tried
to talk in code. Code, I thought, was usually words that had
double meanings. However, I immediately agreed to take medication
because Dr. Holley, I thought, was my commanding officer in
the CIA, and he said I should take it. He said that I would
get out of the hospital quickly if I took the medication.
He also said I was schizophrenic. Feeling that that was a
serious illness, I decided to take the medication. Of course,
deciding that I was schizophrenic was incorrect, but not so
surprising at this particular point, because when someone
is acutely manic, it’s hard to tell if they’re
acutely manic or schizophrenic. The treatment for the acute
stages are similar. As I look back over my medical records,
I see that I was given the treatment for mania, (the manic
phase of manic depression) while I was in the hospital. I
had been on mood leveler Lithium, the most common treatment
for manic depression back then, and I hadn’t missed
a dose. Dr. Holley continued the Lithium, and gave me the
antipsychotic medication Thorazine and the antipsychotic medication
Prolixin in addition. Medication eventually proves to be the
hero of this book. Gradually, I got better. Slowly I realized
that the hospital was not a rest and relaxation haven for
CIA agents. At first I wrote a lot of irrelevant notes to
be put on my chart, then I gradually quit writing them. Eventually
I wrote postcards to some of the people I had told that I
was running for congress.
In the
postcards, I said, “Sorry for bugging you. I’m
in a psychiatric ward diagnosed with schizophrenia. My running
for congress was a strange delusion.”
I was
well enough to realize that I had been crazy.
I was
in the hospital for about three weeks. The antipsychotic medication
made me catch up on sleep, which helped me a lot. After about
a week, my delusions were gone, and they transferred me to
the open ward. There were therapy groups, where we sat in
a circle and talked, recreation groups, where we played games,
and occupational therapy, which is better described as arts
and crafts. When I started to get better, my high school poker
friends started calling me and visiting me at the hospital.
They lived in Seattle and we were still friends four years
after high school.
In the
upcoming months of June and July 1981, two of my friends,
Jim Eckhart and Jack Johnson were getting married to their
girlfriends of several years. On one of the last days I was
in the hospital, at the end of April, Jim, Jack, Phil Holland,
Stan Gold, Dave Frish, and I met and discussed plans for a
stag party we would throw for Jim and Jack. Having morals,
we opted for a clean stag, where we would just have dinner
and play poker.
You have read Chapter 1 of
the Second Edition of Agents In My Brain, "KGB Bloodhounds,"
© Copyright Bill Hannon 2017, By Bill Hannon.
Available
at
amazon.com by Archway Publishing.
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