Thursday, April 20, 2006
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
HIGHWOOD HOUSE
I slouched into Highwood House, immediately spotting the swirling pattern of the threadbare carpet, unmistakeably from a pub. This disorientated me even more than I was already and I was still thinking about it when I was directed to my first port of call. The kitchen was long, thin and full of well used equipment and stained stainless steel work-surfaces. The task I had been set was to make myself a sandwich. With two silent housemates preparing something or other in their own world I attempted to do something for myself for the first time in months. Then I realised I was in a kitchen with a knife again. After drowning in black and choking on happy pills in Sandalwood Court for six weeks I didn’t know that there was a darker shade waiting for me here. The rules at Highwood were simple, at least they seemed to be to me, they were all shit. The locked mental ward I had come from didn’t seem to need rules; it was taken for granted that you couldn’t do anything without a pill or a nurse by your side. But at this deceptive house with its vomit yellow walls and homely chintz curtains, the iron fist slammed the do’s and don’ts on the table as soon the first sandwich had started to make its way down. No phone calls or letters for two weeks No visits for a month No trips outside the grounds for a month After a month the other housemates will vote on whether you are allowed out or not Visits will also be decided by a housemates vote No mobile phones £10.00 spending per week maximum, including tobacco purchases Immediate inclusion in the daily work rota. The white coats seemed very attractive in comparison to this. At least I was given my own room before being ushered into the nightly discussion session. I didn’t like the highly charged atmosphere much as the first subject was broached. It seemed that two of the housemates were being accused of having a relationship, another no-no under the house rules. The two accused had an air of confrontational arrogance that was successfully winding up the inquisitors dotted around the room. Jack, a Doc Marten booted feminist type was taking none of the abuse she was getting without shovelling double back into the face of whoever was nearest. Finn, her dishevelled maybe lover said little but his look of superiority said it all really. He had an air of ‘I’ve got it all and no matter how hard you squeeze you won’t get it out of me’. Once the recriminations against them had died down a little, the action turned to a little chap with a receding hairline and noticeable nose. He was being quizzed as to whether he knew about the ‘relationship’ and whether he was in league with them, protecting them against the rest of the house. He vociferously and ferociously defended himself and I took an immediate liking to him as he wheeled his detractors in and then let the line go again with quick wit and humour. Without realising it, my turn was fast approaching. My maiden speech to the house was a rambling digest of where I had come from and why, I actually thought I was getting away with it quite well. I hadn’t bargained on the barb like questions that darted my way when I thought I had finished. Soon I was sat in front of an aerial picture of Clifton Suspension Bridge expanding on my favourite theme – suicide. It seemed that this lot could smell my thoughts of knotted sheets or pill cabinets and were having none of it. They seemed compassionate and genuine and when I had finished my stint I felt a glow of friendship that I never got on the mental ward. I sloped off to my room only to be intercepted by one of the support workers. ‘In the circumstances Michael, we think you would be better off sharing, I’ll show you to your new room’, my impassioned monologue on killing myself had served only to deprive me of my much needed solitude and throw me in with a complete stranger again. ‘I’m Dave’ said a big eyed, swarthy chap in a friendly but nervy way. After about an hour of silence he spoke again. ‘Look, I don’t really like to say this because you’re new here, but all that talk of suicide has made me really uncomfortable, you see my brother killed himself last Christmas’ I could see tears welling up in his eyes and vowed not to say another word during my time at Highwood House. My worries and confusion meant nothing during the night as raging toothache took over until the orange glow of dawn through gold polyester curtains told me it was time to get up. I went straight to the notice-board and saw that I had been assigned laundry duty, a relatively cushy start by all accounts. To the left of the rota, hanging dog eared from a drawing pin was another sheet of paper. This piece of A4 was destined to haunt me throughout my stay at Highwood and certainly set my first morning off to a bad start. Designed I’m sure to be motivational, a photocopy of Rudyard Kipling’s ‘If’ was just what I didn’t need in my state. I could feel the words being engraved inside me ready to attack me from within at some point in the future. Nothing at Highwood seemed to be by accident and Kipling’s words did all they could to intimidate me, I wasn’t even sure I wanted to be a man anyway.‘If you can keep your head when all about you Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you, But make allowance for their doubting too;If you can wait and not be tired by waiting, Blah, blah, blahThen you’ll be a man my son’ Getting to the last line was a struggle in itself given that for me at the moment everything was not only ‘If’ but also ‘Why’, ‘What’ and ‘How’. Of course, silence was far from the agenda that had been lined up for me. After a rudimentary lesson in how to use a twin tub washing machine it was time for my first morning session. I was told that every day I would have to keep an honest and accurate diary that reflected my thoughts and general mental health. I would then have to read this to the other housemates the next day. In one month I would be expected to present a ‘warts and all’ life story that included how I had ended up where I was. Both of these tasks would also include a grilling from the other residents, which judging by the look of them would be by far the worst bit. To a ‘Daily Mail’ reader this would have been evidence of the existence of ‘the dregs of society’. A heavily tattooed young guy with an expression like a bulldog and a fierce East end accent sat opposite me. An astonishingly thin and haggard forty something woman was by my side and the little chap with the nose was sat twitching at my left. There were eight of us in all and most of the session was taken up by them introducing themselves to me and me to them. If I hadn’t felt so sorry for myself, their brief stories of how they ended up at Highwood House would have made me weep. I soon realised that this was a heavy duty rehab and that the bullshit I spun at the Priory stood absolutely no chance of working here. Anna a particularly vicious looking heroin addict gave me an early taste of what the next six months were going to be like. She relentlessly questioned me with the why’s and how’s of my drinking and effortlessly provoked a line of cold sweat that snaked down my back as she interrogated. Thankfully the session had an end and we broke up for tea and biscuits. It was a bit like a very strange tea party until someone put the stereo on and loud trance music changed the mood. The little bloke with the nose sidled up to me and we started to talk in a more relaxed way. His name was Paul, he was Irish and full of contempt for many of the other residents. He asked if I was still feeling suicidal and I said that I didn’t feel too good. He invited me to join him on the swings in the garden which were left over from Highwood’s days as a home for disabled children. I was soon revealing to Paul that the previous night the swings were fixed in my head as being the perfect height to lob a sheet over and hang myself. He didn’t look surprised but he did seem genuinely interested. Months later I realised that the next two hours of talking crap were his way of getting me off the subject of suicide for a while. The crap we talked did uncover a shared sense of humour, particularly for the ridiculous and there looked to be plenty of that at Highwood. Having laughed for the first time in months, I went back to my room considerably more comfortable with life. Dave wasn’t there so I whipped out my mobile and rang Sally, when I was searched on the way in they didn’t take the phone so even though it was against the rules I thought I’d give it a go. After a stony couple of minutes explaining what life was like inside a rehab, the door opened and Anna looked at me gabbling away and launched into a tirade about rule breaking, this was just what my slightly more comfortable self needed. I was marched to the office where I handed my phone in, suddenly two weeks until my first visit and six months until I could leave both seemed like eternity. The dramatic removal of my access to the outside world got me thinking again. I felt trapped, just as I did when the benefits of drink ran out but the physical dependence made stopping impossible. I asked to see a support worker and Dan, a calm, tanned Californian took me into the office. Behind him on the wall were entry dates and proposed exit dates for all of the residents. Bottom of the league was my name – Michael Scott 23rd September 1999 leaving May 23rd 2000. This made me feel even worse. ‘I want to leave’ I said, not caring what the response would be. ‘OK, where would you go? Back to your drinking? You said last night that you couldn’t drink again, give this a chance’ ‘But it won’t work and I’m just going to get more and more depressed’ ‘You have been here a day and I am sure that given more time you will start to see why you are here, why don’t you try another 24 hours and we’ll talk again tomorrow?’ These was my first experience of the classic Highwood persuasion tactic, set a target sufficiently near in the future and kill off any potential objections. I sloped off to my room and waited what the afternoon session had to offer. Once outside, Lynne the tall, toothy support worker, handed me a spade, a piece of paper and a pen and directed me along with the others to a piece of the garden by the budgie cage. ‘Today, we are going to bury ‘can’t’’ This sounded disturbingly like the fun and games at the Priory, which I could pick out just over the hedge behind the budgies. I duly listed the ten things ‘I can’t do’ and buried the piece of paper, everyone else did the same thankfully with the same air of derision as me, maybe I did have something in common with this lot after all. Unfortunately the word ’can’t’ triggered off a reaction in me and I was straight into a whirlwind of self doubt. Leigh, the house manager, caught me in the middle of a full on sobbing session in the empty Meeting Room and asked me what was wrong. ‘I can’t cook and when I’ve finished doing the laundry I’ll be put on the cooking rota and I can’t cook and everyone will hate me’ She obviously met this sort of idiot before, I had only recently emerged from under my stone of alcohol and responsibility was a skill I had yet to acquire. ‘Don’t worry, try your best and people will appreciate it, no-one here is a professional cook and they won’t expect you to be’ She still rejected my request to stay on the laundry for another week, but I did feel slightly reassured by her sympathetic attitude which contrasted with her hard features and brusque manner.
