Tuesday, 31 December 2024

Cryptic Messages and Not So Cryptic Messages

It is odd to write a post on New Year's Eve but I have no exciting plans and so I might as well just write because I can. When its your own blog you can call the shots. I suspect this post will be quite dull stylistically, quite prosaic, but there is still one important idea intended for general consumption concerning the reality of voices. The first part of this post is directed at the amorphous anonymous mass of people who somehow access this blog in some somehow clandestine fashion and which I have never been able to  satisfactorily categorise demographically in my mind; most of this post is a coded message to my friend Jess. In the future I do intend to get back to topics that made some people like this blog in the first place – perhaps one day I may even be able to come up with some adequate way of explaining or conceptualising the idea of probability. (In order to actually deal with the measurement problem in quantum mechanics we need some better understanding of the notion of probability but we cannot arrive at a better understanding of what probability actually is scientifically but only philosophically.)

I'll start by elaborating on something I said in the previous essay, concerning the voices I used to hear. Over the Southern Hemisphere summer of 2009 and 2010, I spoke almost continuously with a number of people: Jon Stewart, Jess, people from bFM, Barack Obama. On one occasion I heard John Ashbery. To remind readers, I had been speaking sometimes with Jon Stewart for quite a few months: after I met Jess he acted as a go-between, setting me up with her in my mind. (To my male readers: if you have a male friend it can be a truly generous and kindhearted act to play the part of intermediator between him and a girl. I got together with my first girlfriend after my best friend at the time told me; "That girl Danielle likes you.") During this period I was told or uploaded a lot of information about the situations of my imaginary friends: for instance, I thought Jon Stewart was having a mid-life crisis and had left his wife for a half Black, half Native American woman he'd met at a buffet. (Jess and I together convinced him to recommit to his wife.) I learnt stuff about Jess too, things I have never put in this blog – because I subsequently learnt that they were almost all untrue. To give a trivial example, I thought her father was Mark Sainsbury, at that time a television presenter on a New Zealand evening current affairs program. The voices faded away a few months into 2010 but the experience had been so intense, so realistic, that I continued to believe that I had actually spoken to all these people right up until the end of the year. In 2011, I hung out with Jess, actually only a few times, and interrogated her sneakily about her life, finding out in this way that most of the biographical information I had learnt about her was wrong. This is how I came to realise that you can't fully trust the voices in your head to impart true facts about themselves and why, when I started hearing voices again in 2013, I usually knew to take everything they said with a grain of salt.

There is a difficult choice I have to make now: should I be 'rational' (whatever that means) or admit that I see the spookiness of the world we live in? You see, even though the biographical information I picked up was incorrect somehow I knew all my friends, understood who they really were underneath. They always sounded like themselves. (I remember when Obama first spoke to me, at a hostel in Fjordland, he said, "I speak slowly – but I think like lightning!") It's at this point in the essay that I am going to stop being prosaic and start waxing lyrical, start becoming at least a little cryptic. What I am going to say now is that, perhaps, reality is a collective hallucination and during psychosis one shifts outside this shared dream into some other kind of dream. But it is not healthy to remain outside reality forever. I was thinking today about all the celebrity musicians who must hear voices – Eddie Vedder, Rhianna, Thom Yorke, Tom DeLonge from Blink 182, probably many others. I think though that in the end one must return to reality although it may be sometimes that one can change the reality one is returning to. It's a choice between the moon and the sun; some might say between being a person and being a robot. Is is possible to be a robot who knows that he is a robot but also knows what it was like to be a person? To spell out what I mean here, because some readers may be muddled, by 'robot' I mean an ordinary sane human being and by 'person' I mean someone who, for instance, can't help but be spookily aware of the full moon when it is hanging over the housetops.

In the film I wrote about you, Jess, I pilfered a whole lot of little bits of your life, your real life, not what I had been informed of by voices, not details that had come to me during the summer of 2009 and 2010. I mixed in elements of my own experience. It might interest you to know that both the psychologist I saw in 2014 and my father said to me, after having read the screenplay, "Why do you always write about yourself?" But I knew things about you that I didn't put in. I remember when I first met you in 2009 you told me that the New Zealand literary scene was full of arse-lickers and when I asked you what writers you liked immediately rattled off a list of female authors I had never heard of. This, together with some serendipitous shared recollections of a Larkin poem and an Eliott poem might be why I fell for you, although I think I fell for you the moment I saw you.

I still like you. The last time I saw you was a long time ago. We passed each other on Ponsonby Road and I think both didn't realise we had passed each other until after the fact – but I did see you. I was wearing a jacket that probably made me look like a rough sleeper. It was just after I had written the post about An Angel at My Table. In a less literal sense, you might have passed me in a supermarket. But I am trying to catch up. I only know tidbits of your life. I know you have two degrees that you must have done remotely although I wonder how you paid for them. I know you that you have many friends, often creative souls, although I wonder if they know the real you. I say this because I do have a few friends myself, friends I quite like but who don't know me at all. I know you've worked as a reviewer and poetry tutor. There is an aspect of your life, an aspect I can't be sure about and obviously don't know the details of, which makes me feel a painful mix of jealousy and envy, a mixture ordinary men wouldn't ordinarily feel because they wouldn't ordinarily fall for girls like you. I might be wrong of course. I suppose, assuming for the moment that one story in my head is true, one could say that this part of your life was a consequence of falling in with the wrong crowd and from poor impulse control. The psychiatrists probably think it's something akin to kleptomania. 

I look for signs in the world around me for clues as to what path to follow through the labyrinth. The signs recently have been mixed. There's a lot of Fleetwood Mac around these days and I wonder if maybe I'm Lyndsey Buckingham and you're Stevie Nicks with a twist. It might be you hate me or it might be that you're afraid I will abandon you. I actually don't easily end relationships myself even when the relationship is a dead end, a cul-de-sac. Leos are loyal. I've been with you a long time already in a sense. We could just be friends or we could be something else. The last ten years I have been under a curse, a curse which manifested itself in an inability to find the right words when writing and, I know you think this, a morbid fascination with quantum mechanics. An interest in science is the other side of my personality, something you should sympathise with given your interest in neuroscience. The dopamine hypothesis, anyone? I feel finally, though, that my life is going to change. Given the recession I am not sure how I'll find a job, let alone acquire a house either on the hill or off it. If you wanted that. So I'm not sure how to look after you, particularly considering how bad I am at looking after myself. I am thinking of volunteering for a political party, if they'll have me, and hoping that it may lead somewhere. I don't know whether I should write a novel, keep writing this blog, or become some kind of teacher. In a perfect world I could travel the country and talk to ordinary people about their concerns and in this way help inform public policy. Or perhaps I could help improve the Mental Health System. I haven't worked it out yet. Nevertheless I feel a change is coming. 

Thirteen years ago I accidentally killed you with a film script and I have spent the last thirteen years, without realising it until recently, trying to bring you back to life. On Ponsonby Road someone has written in chalk "Sell your soul for $" but even if I have brought you back to life, and I don't know if I have, I didn't sell my soul to do it. Certainly there hasn't been any money come my way. You wouldn't believe it but I think there were people in the world who thought I was going to endorse Donald Trump. I wrote in one post some time ago that I had gravitated towards the anti-woke Left (people like Sam Harris who also endorsed Kamala Harris); Americans may not understand what the terms left-wing and right-wing mean to Kiwis. Perhaps the Democrats themselves need to work out what they think the term left-wing should mean. If we did get together, there might be people who actually do think I have sold out and in a way they would be right: my 'illness', in terms of public perception, would have come circle. There is another option. But that would be your decision. 

I nearly wrote something I think I would regret but instead went to bed and this morning worked out what I really want to say, I think. You might not be chained to me but I am chained to you not only by something that might be love if love exists but also by crime. I said something to you once that to most people might seem inconsequential but which I have hated myself for ever since. It wasn't the question Rick asks Jess in the film I wrote although Rick's question was present in my mind during the time we hung out. You knew that I was Rick as well as myself in the film. Or perhaps Rick was my attempt to present a dumb but charismatic and confident womaniser, a kind of wish-fulfilment fantasy. You can probably guess why I decided to have a a character I'd created try to seduce you rather than someone more like the real me. But there are many things I am not responsible for. I am not responsible for a world in which people are too stupid to understand that a girl might be awkward about kissing a boy because she has never kissed anyone before or possibly because he has stinky cigarette breath or possibly for some other reason. I guess I'm responsible for suggesting that what happened between Rick and Jess was all that happened between us – but I wasn't responsible for the timing of the 2011 Christchurch earthquake. I'm not responsible for the way my film blew up the way it did and still don't understand why it blew up the way it did. I'm not responsible for a world in which people lie about their sex lives, a world in which men pretend to have had more sexual partners than they really have and women pretend they've had fewer. I'm not responsible for the hallucination or delusion I told you about (you were the first I told) and which although I never put it in my blog have since told lots of people about. To prove a point. I'm not responsible for a psychiatric profession that puts people on trial but never tells the accused the crime they've supposedly committed. I'm not responsible for clerical errors and bad listeners and deliberate lies and drugs that don't work. I'm not responsible for Mental Health Workers who can't tell that a terrible wind is blowing and that a person is screaming but no-one can hear her. I'm not responsible for Respite Facilities or David Bowie. I'm not responsible for people like my elder brother who won't believe that I'm straight until I have a girlfriend and perhaps not even then; nor am I responsible for young men who get convinced by psychologists that they're sexually muddled and then rush off to get married as quickly as they can to prove to their parents that they're not gay.  I'm not responsible for the fact that the stories we invent to explain ourselves and our actions are all just that – stories. I guess all this sounds like a litany of excuses but I am expressing myself this way for stylistic reasons. I love the fact that you put pineapple on your pizza and, if I'm permitted one joke, would advise my New York readers to give it a go.

Someone told me a little while ago (a real person) that there are some people who are so attractive that others are drawn to them like moths to a flame (although the person didn't use this particular cliche.) I know there are others, girls of course, who have loved you and probably still miss you. The reason I am being so bold is that I have half-read your most recent book of poetry at last and have finally noticed at least some of the references to me. There may be references to those others that I can't recognise.

I'll tell you something that might interest you although considering how well read you are you probably know it already. In 2004 I visited Carcassonne, a town in southern France; Carcassonne was the hub for a semi-Christian religious movement in the Middle Ages called Catharism. The Cathari were Gnostics. There are lots of religions in the world and, even within Christianity, lots of sub-variants; I think people don't pick religions but rather religions pick people; I wondered sometimes if the Cathari had picked me. Some people have a kind of abstract fascination with Gnosticism out of an academic interest in the Problem of Evil even though their own lives are not particularly crappy but there was something about Gnosticism that drew me in. I read some time ago that the cool cats from Carcassonne, the high priesthood, coupled up into male-female partnerships that were celibate; Wikipedia suggests that the Cathari were not particularly sex-positive at all. I'm not sure that I like this and I don't really think I want to be a Gnostic anymore. I don't think the material world is irredeemably evil, I think there are people in the world like the children in Gaza who have it much worse that I do, and I think it might be possible to make the world a better place. 

It might be that by writing this post I have burnt my bridges. If Taylor Swift were here, she might say, "Good for you; you've got it off your chest." I haven't fully assimilated all the poems in Naming the Beasts but I read enough of them, as I said, to notice an occasional detail from our small shared history – call me conceited or suffering from delusions of reference. You seemed to be speaking to me in code and this is why this post is largely written in code. This raises a serious issue: if we are to meet in person, what the hell are supposed to talk about? We can't sit across from each other over a beer or two and quote haiku at each other. Not that I have any haiku memorised. Perhaps we could go to a movie or I could bring you to my pub-quiz: my team-mates don't read my blog or your poetry and I don't think even the genius on my team will recognise your name. You could be an ordinary person among ordinary people. I also think you might not know how to contact me, because of garden-variety paranoia or a fear of secrets being spilled. I have an idea. We have a mutual friend, the guy I watched a play with (remember?). He has my email address. We fell out a number of years ago and if you approach him he'll find it very odd that you might want to contact me but I can't see why he wouldn't give you my email. You could tell him you lent me a book of Maori mythology that you want returned or something. If emails are being read, we'll just have to hope that the eavesdroppers are not wholly malevolent. Of course, like I said, you might hate me. Or you might prefer to stay in your lavender haze and keep me as just an imaginary friend. At some point I will have to stop waiting for you so I'll give you a week or wait for a sign. One last question. do you think I use too many dashes? I like dashes and Emily Dickinson liked dashes. It might annoy people but you can give me punctuation advice if we meet.

***

Despite appearances this essay isn't finished.  I wrote part of this post in the middle of the night last night and the other part this morning and I feel that somehow overnight a weight has been lifted of me. Perhaps this is what it feels like to be a robot again or to have done the impossible – to get out as straight. I'll tell you what I have just been thinking, standing on my verandah under the sun. I don't have to live in the world I lived in in 2007 where there was a secret clique of closet homosexuals controlling the world who would literally kill anyone who outed them. Maybe you're happier being gay. It's funny: I just looked at the poem "We Go Down Together" which, despite its title, so far as I can tell, contains no reference to sex at all. Is it the fate of modern poetry to be read solely by queer people who have no interest at all in understanding what the poet is actually talking about? Is this what the thunder told T.S.Eliot way back in 1922? Perhaps you could teach me how to read your poetry, not just the obvious one "Hard Sell". Also – could you be bisexual? There are lots of bisexual women in the world today. Or does a person get stuck in a rut after a while? I handled you badly back in 2011. Or, rather, to be more frank, I handled you well and you handled me badly. But that wasn't your fault. I said in a post once that when I first met you I thought you were a straight girl who had been misdiagnosed a lesbian. Did you give them any reason to think that or was it all a mistake? Could they have got it wrong with you as they got it so badly wrong with me? Or was it all inevitable? Did I actually do you a favour by accidentally killing you in my screenplay? I could comfort myself by thinking that but its cold comfort. I still want to see you and, if possible, want you to forgive me. It's odd – I got the impression that Jon Stewart, the real Jon Stewart, wanted us to get together but that's hardly surprising. What's more surprising is that the ghost of Janet Frame seemed to want us to get together. It's hard to know because no-one agrees what the word 'love' should mean these days. I'm rambling. Maybe if we could meet we could speak openly and honestly to each other and I could just tell you that I spoke to you in my head two nights ago without being afraid that people will somehow force me to start taking drugs again. And there is one thing about the episode I experienced over that summer which I have never told anyone at all but which I would like you to know and which, perhaps, you should know. You've always been the most interesting I've ever met (sic). I should probably check this post for spelling mistakes but, fuck it, I'm just going to publish it. Que sera sera.

Wednesday, 18 December 2024

Janet Frame and Pink Floyd

The intellectual interest that has preoccupied me most of my whole life, especially when I studied English literature a long time ago, has been interpretation, the interpretation of poems and novels and films and pop music, the last being, let's recognise this, poetry for the masses. I enjoy interpretation and in the last several months the hidden meanings of many pop songs, meanings almost always to do with sex and relationships, seem to just leap out at me in ways they hadn't in the past. There is a however a problem with interpretation – poems, say, seem to act directly on the unconscious minds of readers, bypassing their conscious minds, and so sometimes one can worry that setting out explicitly the meaning of a poem is to kill it. This is why you should never ask a poet to explain the meaning of a poem she has written and probably why the literary theorist Susan Sontag wrote her famous essay, "Against Interpretation". On the other hand, I think people like to read interpretations, that interpretations can often deepen people's appreciation of poems and novels and films and pop music. Years ago I kept a blog called Persiflage in which at one time I had written a fairly rigorous interpretation of the beautiful poem "Wet Casements" by John Ashbery. I thought this blog had ceased to exist but last year I found that someone somewhere had read the interpretation and had commented on it. In his comment the reader said that he had always loved this poem and had guessed that it had something to do with the Kafka story "A Country Doctor" but that he had never quite understood what it was about. He had greatly appreciated my interpretation and said, "Thank you" – his thanks breathed total sincerity. Presumably, rather than killing the poem I had helped this reader enjoy the poem even more.

Given this uncertainty about the moral value of interpretation, it may be that the best way to present an interpretation of a poem or song to others is to hint at the proper reading rather than to strip the poem or song completely bare. In recent posts I have hinted at proper readings of The Waste Land by TS Eliot and "I Am Invisible" by Janet Frame but I didn't really say exactly what I actually believe these poems to be about. Recently, since writing the post about it, I reread The Waste Land and for the first time in my life felt I actually totally understood it; I feel exceedingly stupid that I didn't understand it when I was twenty-two. The disquietude I feel with respect to the Janet Frame poem is that my understanding of this poem does not seem rational because it felt to me as though Frame was somehow commenting on my own life, even on my own recent life, even though the events I am thinking of occurred before I had read the poem and so could not have been influenced by it; it is a life Janet Frame (surely) could have known nothing about. 

I want to talk about Frame again and say something more about the poem I quoted. In it Frame that says she is invisible (like schizophrenics in the contemporary world and like ghosts) and then goes on to say:

Like decisions.
Like elsewhere.
Like institutions far from the road labelled Scenic Drive.

In the previous essay I speculated that Frame might have been aware of the up-market Respite Facility near Scenic Drive in Titirangi called Mind Matters that both Jess and I had spent time at although separately. The problem with this interpretation is that Frame may well have written this poem decades before Mind Matters opened – it is not easy, reading The Goose Bath, to know when particular poems in it were written; nor am I sure when Mind Matters was first established. Perhaps there is a more 'rational' explanation for the reference to 'Scenic Drive', perhaps a more sensible literary critic might say that it is a kind of pun (the seen vs the unseen). But I do not find this parsing satisfactory. Or perhaps it was a road called Scenic Drive where Frame was living when she wrote the poem – I suppose this might be possible but I don't know. In the previous essay I also speculated that perhaps Frame might have seen in Mind Matters a positive direction for the future of the Mental Health Service but I wasn't being completely honest. To me this line has an ominous quality, a hint of something dreadful, a horror hidden almost in plain sight, seems to be pointing towards some hidden menace. There is something sinister about it. This feeling is induced by the connotations surrounding the words "institutions" and "labelled". Those of us interested in psychiatric practice understand the eddies that coldly whip around this word "labelled": the word "label" is a loaded word. All psychiatrists do is label people, stamp clinical brands on people's foreheads, labels that have a pernicious effect on those labelled. In the 'seventies studies were carried out that showed that the people most likely to recover from schizophrenia were 'label rejectors', people who accepted the label for a time and then later rejected it. I have seen evidence that this is still true today. In her collaborative memoir, Finding Hope in the Lived Experience of Psychosis, Patte Randall, a woman some years older than me who had believed herself schizophrenic almost her whole life (even though her bouts of psychosis were far shorter than mine) says toward the end of the book, "I no longer believe that I have schizophrenia". One reason so few schizophrenics recover today is that the dogma that schizophrenia is a congenital incurable lifelong condition has become so entrenched among psychiatrists that it has become almost impossible to reject the label. 

There is stuff I find in "I Am Invisible" that may not have been consciously intended by Frame; in the end I cannot, therefore, present a fully 'rational' reading of it although I shall hint at an 'irrational' reading of it later.

The Goose Bath, from which I took this poem, contains many poems obviously written over a long period of time. I recommend it highly to readers, both here in New Zealand and in other countries. I think the poems are all works of genius. They are very well arranged. Easier poems appear earlier on and more complex poems later. It is divided into sections with common themes – there is, for instance, a section containing poems concerning Frame's responses to classical music. One section is all poems set in America – Frame had travelled to the United States after the success of her first novel Owls Do Cry and had obviously lived for a while in Baltimore. These poems include references to quintessentially American things like copperhead snakes and birch trees. The poems set in New Zealand, with their references to New Zealand cultural and natural fixtures like Plunket and pahutakawas may be less easily understood by Americans. If you do read her book, it is worth remembering when Frame probably wrote these poems. There is a poem in the American section concerning electric sliding doors, something that to a New Zealander in the 1960s would have been a novelty. There is a very simple jokey poem called "Fleas are Fleas", a poem quite a lot lighter than most of the poems in the book which for my own whimsical reasons I want to quote:

Fleas are fleas
because they do as they please,
they hop, do not sneeze,
and suck blood
from places where it is rude
for a flea
to be.

The reason I quoted this poem is that, even here, where you wouldn't expect it, there is a hint of Frame's capacious and idiosyncratic intellect. "Fleas are Fleas" is alluding to a very sexy poem written in 1633 by John Donne, "The Flea", a work described by Wikipedia as an "erotic metaphysical poem". I haven't yet read all the poems in The Goose Bath (I have been randomly sampling them) but every poem seems to me to be hinting at something profound, sometimes something dark and certainly often something metaphysical.

In 2002, when I was studying for my Masters in English, I took a paper in New Zealand Literature and, as part of the course, read three novels by Janet Frame, Faces in the Water, Living in the Maniatoto, and The Carpathians. The course was taught by Terry Sturm, who was a friend of Frame and who had repeatedly albeit unsuccessfully nominated her for the Nobel Prize in Literature. I recall him saying that Frame had anticipated Postmodernism – of course the idea that reality is a kind of social construction might come naturally to someone who had probably experienced psychosis. I also recall Sturm saying that people didn't realise that Frame had a keen sense of humour. If I remember rightly, there was a recording of Frame reading a short story involving potatoes and the cooked and the uncooked (a binary opposition found in the theories of structuralist anthropologist Levi-Strauss although it is possible that Frame was not aware of structuralism) and giggling at jokes other people probably weren't even aware she was making. Frame, for good reason, dealt with a lot of anxiety and was very shy. I got very good grades that year – except for the paper on New Zealand Literature. I failed it. I had decided that Terry Sturm didn't like me and, as a result of my own anxiety, had stopped attending lectures and didn't submit one of the two essays required for the course.

I might talk about 'schizophrenics' more generally and about a woman I knew, the relevance of this apparent digression being something that will become more apparent as the essay proceeds. There are certain vague stereotypes we all associate with the social kind 'schizophrenic' but in reality people diagnosed schizophrenic are people, as diverse as ordinary people and on average no smarter and no dumber than ordinary people. I met Katrina at a Coffee Group in 2010 or 2011 and found her to be a lovely person with an easy smile. Years later she was briefly receiving a monthly injection at the same time I was, not actually for very long, and she told me a little about her life. She had experienced psychosis when she was a teenager, been totally well and off medication for ten years, and then experienced another episode. Because she didn't want to take medication when she had begun to experience psychosis again, her psychiatrist (Antony Fernando) had prescribed fish-oil capsules; she told me that for a while she was taking fifteen omega-3 capsules a day. Eventually she (briefly) switched to actual antipsychotic medication. Katrina told me that she believed her first episode to have had a lot to do with the peer group with which she was socialising at the time; she also told me that she had during this first episode thought for a while that she was a cat, which I found interesting. She also told me that she would speak with celebrities in her head, celebrities like Rihanna. Katrina shared with me an insight that could be possibly described as achromatic. She told me that she didn't think the people she talked to were really the stars they claimed to be; rather, she told me, she thought they were guardian angels pretending to be celebrities.

Starting in January 2009, I would talk with famous people in my head. The first person I spoke with, readers will remember, was George W. Bush, very shortly after he had left office. Later in the year I adopted Jon Stewart as an imaginary friend. Over the New Zealand summer of 2009 and 2010, I spoke with many people, including Barack Obama, but my main imaginary friends were Jon Stewart and the girl I call Jess, who I'd met at the Hearing Voices group I have talked about before. I hung out with the real girl a few times in 2011 and in 2012 wrote my screenplay about her. Of course in saying all this I am simply recycling things I have talked about many times previously. However there is something I perhaps have not talked about before. In the screenplay, in the scene in which Jon Stewart addresses Jess directly from out of the television, he calls her "Jess Frame". The reason I gave Jess this surname was because the real girl, like Janet Frame, was also a gifted poet, was also diagnosed schizophrenic, and lived in Takapuna where Frame had lived after she was released from hospital and where, in a hutch out the back of Frank Sargeson's house, she had written her first novel Owls Do Cry. I also decided to give the girl Frame's surname because I had an intuition that Frame was a straight woman who had been misdiagnosed a lesbian, and, I know it sounds incredible, now strongly believe that I was right.

In 2013 I became ill again and in early 2014 was put under the Compulsory Treatment Order that I was only released from early this year. Over the last ten years I often experienced fairly severe psychological distress – I kind of had intrusive thoughts concerning the people treating me. I would for instance experience thoughts saying things like, "Today Simon Judkins died" or "Today Jennifer Murphy resigned." These thoughts weren't auditory hallucinations and if they were 'voices' they didn't seem to belong to anyone. These thoughts were my reaction to the terrible stress of having been officially diagnosed schizophrenic and having been put under the Mental Health Act for truthfully saying I was heterosexual, and possibly also an emotional reaction to medication induced cognitive impairment. I guess the term psychiatrists would use for these kinds of cognitions is 'thought insertion'. These intrusive thoughts went away perhaps four or five years ago. At night, while lying in bed, I would again sometimes still talk with my imaginary friends. On one occasion in 2016, I spoke with Stephen Colbert and a week or two later spoke with John Oliver. Mainly though over the last ten years it has been Jon Stewart and the girl I call Jess who I heard in head. Usually Jon would just say, "Where are you now, my friend?" Of the two, it has actually been the girl I call Jess who was the most important voice. On a couple of occasions she would warn me the day before something distressing was to occur. She would sometimes give me important advice. Although I would often pretend that they really existed when speaking with them, during the day I would tend to kind of bracket out these experiences; the fact that I occasionally spoke with people at night while lying in bed didn't affect my day to day life. They were friends who understood my situation when no-one else did. Sometimes, years ago, I thought it might be the real girl who was talking to me – I thought she might be reading this blog and communicating with me telepathically about it. Eventually though I realised that this voice, that I thought belonged to Jess, knew things about my life that the real girl couldn't possibly know. I would say that my subconscious mind had conjured this voice up and, for some reason, had decided to clothe itself in the persona of the girl I had known (I suppose that this would be the most 'rational' explanation) except for the fact that it seemed that this voice seemed to know the immediate future. It seemed to be a guardian angel pretending to be the girl I knew (and wish I could know again). Early this year, the night before the consultation at which my psychiatrist decided, unexpectedly, to release me from the Act, without giving any explanation for his decision, I heard her again in my head. She said, "Usually I warn you when something bad is going to happen."

I have been quite 'well' for some time. I think the clincher was the post about The Wasteland in which I endorsed Kamala Harris. In this post I killed myself. I have been trying to kill myself since 2007 but I didn't know how to do it. Of course, when I say 'kill myself' I am speaking metaphorically but hopefully at least some of my readers will know what I mean. Not long after this I read the poem "I Am Invisible", the poem I quoted in the previous post. After I had read this poem, and I think after I had quoted it in the previous post, while lying in bed during the day I heard the voice I call Jess in my head. She said, "I thought you would have worked it out."

Although I shall come back to Janet Frame later, I would like to switch to a different although related topic. I want now to talk about a couple of songs by Pink Floyd, one of the great rock bands of the twentieth century, a band whose success depended in no small measure on the effect its first lead singer Syd Barrett had on the rest of the band. Syd Barrett's story is devastating and there is value in reading about Barrett's life on Wikipedia. Hopefully the entry on Barrett won't change tomorrow. The real girl Jess is based on kept an enormous poster of Syd Barrett on the wall of her hutch back in 2011, not a picture of him when he was older and had shaved off all his hair including his eyebrows but rather a picture of him when he was still young and cool, still very good looking, before he had lost his mind. What I want to do now is to quote and interpret two songs from the end of Pink Floyd's first great success The Dark Side of the Moon, released in 1975, the first of the two flowing into the next, the first called "Brain Damage" and the second called "Eclipse":

The lunatic is on the grass.
The lunatic is on the grass.
Remembering games, and daisy chains, and laughs,
Got to keep the loonies on the path.

The lunatic is in the hall.
The lunatics are in my hall.
The paper holds their folded faces to the floor
And every day the paperboy brings more.

And if the dam breaks open many years too soon,
And if there is no more room upon the hill,
And if your head explodes with dark forebodings too,
I'll see you on the dark side of the moon.

The lunatic is in my head.
The lunatic is in my head.
You take the blade, you make the change,
You rearrange me 'till I'm sane.
You lock the door and throw away the key,
There's someone in my head but it's not me.

And if the cloud bursts thunder in your ear,
You shout and no one seems to hear,
And if the band you're in starts playing different tunes,
I'll see you on the dark side of the moon.

All that you touch and all that you see
All that you taste, all you feel
And all that you love and all that you hate
All you distrust, all you save
And all that you give and all that you deal
And all that you buy, beg, borrow, or steal 
And all you create and all you destroy 
And all that you do and all that you say
And all that you eat and everyone you meet
And all that you slight and everyone you fight
And all that is now and all that is gone
And all that's to come and everything under the sun is in tune
But the sun is eclipsed by the moon
 
I am not going to give an absolutely rigorous line-by-line interpretation of these songs but just make a few observations about them for people who might miss things. The word 'lunatic' is etymologically related to the word 'lunar' – in olden times madness was supposed to connected somehow to the moon. In 1975 there was a stereotype associated with madmen that they would sit in parks and make daisy chains – I don't know how this stereotype arose or why it went away. There is obviously a reference to newspapers arriving daily at the singer's doorstep containing articles about schizophrenics. The most important part of the song "Brain Damage" though, its core plot point and something that modern listeners often miss, is set out most clearly in the verse which talks about a blade. Roger Waters and David Gilmour are referring to lobotomies. Even though this practice had been, I think, largely phased out by 1975, the idea of lobotomies still featured strongly in the popular imagination back then. People online pretend that psychiatrists had a valid scientific rationale for lobotomising people but this is not true. I believe that the first lobotomy was performed in 1935 but it might have been earlier: back then people had almost no understanding of the human brain at all. Some sadistic psychiatrist one day simply decided that it might be fun to deliberately inflict brain damage on people feared and ostracised by society, people often thought of as animals, to see what would happen, and the practice caught on. One technique was to stick a needle through the ocular cavity of the patient and then swish around the frontal cortex like mixing a martini. It caught on because it seemed to make patients more pliable and compliant (although it also led to severe cognitive deficits in a number of areas including self-reflection), because psychiatrists had no better tools at their disposal, and because of the prevailing nihilistic materialism embraced as scripture by doctors, psychiatrists, and psychologists at the time, a view that mental illnesses were organic diseases that required organic solutions, a view that only dissipated in the 1960s when New Age hippy countercultural ideas of 'peace, love and understanding' became more fashionable. The man who came up with lobotomies described the procedure as "soul-surgery" – but I think lobotomies separated people's souls from their bodies. I think lobotomies "locked the door and threw away the key". It is tempting to say that lobotomies exiled people to "the dark side of the moon" but I don't think this is what Waters and Gilmour meant by this phrase - I have a hunch about what "the dark side of the moon" signifies but it is not something I can easily articulate. 

The most famous fact about Janet Frame's life, the fact that everyone knows even if they know nothing else, is that she was almost lobotomised in the 1950s, a catastrophe that was only averted because a book of short stories she had written had unexpectedly won a prestigious award. The psychiatrist treating her apparently told her, according to her autobiography, "I want you to stay as you are. I don't want to see you changed." Later, when she was living out the back of Frank Sargeson's house, she would alarm him every morning by describing the terrible nightmares she had nightly – and who can blame her? Her brush with a more real kind of death, a death of the soul, might have influenced the lines in "I Am Invisible" in which she talks of "a world in which decisions about being and non-being/ are made by light".

What is the significance of the reference to "the hill"? In 1970, John Lennon, after the dissolution of the Beatles, released the song "Working Class Hero", a song which has some relevance to any halfway good interpretation of "Brain Damage" and "Eclipse". I am not going to quote all the lyrics of "Working Class Hero" but only the most pertinent verse.

There's room at the top they're telling you still,
But first you must learn how to smile as you kill,
If you want to be like all the folk on the hill.

A working class hero is something to be.

In Fleetwood Mac's Tango In The Night, Lindsay Buckingham also talks about a hill. The song is "Big Love", a title that also named a TV series readers might remember about a Mormon man and his three wives. It is called "Big Love" because Buckingham is saying that he can love more than one woman at once; I think in it Buckingham is anticipating Elon Musk. 

You said that you loved me
And that you always will.
Oh you begged me to keep you
In that house on the hill.

It seems to me that "the hill" is a metaphor for the social level monopolised by the elite, the rich and powerful, and that there must be a tradition of rock musicians using this metaphor perhaps starting with Lennon. Of course, John Lennon, the members of Pink Floyd, and the members of Fleetwood Mac were themselves rich and influential or aspiring to be so and so "the hill" might have concerned them more than it concerns most ordinary people. However the Pink Floyd songs seem to be saying something much deeper than John Lennon is in"Working Class Hero", something a lot more arcane: they seem to be positing a spooky connection between the people at the bottom of society, the lunatics, and the people at the top, the people on the hill. In early 2010, for a period, I conversed exclusively in my mind with Jon Stewart and Barack Obama. The impression I had at the time was that they were talking with me because I was the only person either could really talk to. Of course I am not saying that I was literally communicating with either Jon Stewart or Barack Obama but the lasting effect of these couple of weeks is that I have since viewed Obama as a real person with his own virtues and flaws, a person I could relate to, even a kind of friend, although he is undoubtedly much smarter than I am. I guess I entertained the delusion that I was talking with them partly because I had the grandiose notion that I was somehow special. The conception is interesting: a 'schizophrenic' wandering around a music festival at Mt Smart Stadium in Auckland in January 2010 by himself, in constant conversation with a popular and influential comedian/political pundit from New Jersey and the then United States president, looking for a girl he has met at a Hearing Voices group and who he is convinced is somehow present somewhere in the crowd. It was a world that my celebrity friends could never experience themselves firsthand, a world of ordinary people that their fame isolated them from. The insight I think I had then was that the real people who I thought I was talking to were probably both voice-hearers themselves – and this is something else we can possibly infer from the Pink Floyd songs. The people on the top of the hill are as crazy as the people at the bottom. Roger Waters and David Gilmour are prophesying a future in which the "dam breaks open", in which the madness spills out and down the hill to infect others, a world in which they themselves and perhaps their audience will go mad and potentially be forcibly lobotomised.

I started watching the Daily Show in 2008 and people may forget what Jon Stewart was like then. There was an intensity, a ferocity, an anger directed at the people he opposed, albeit an anger always tempered by his lewd sense of humour and engaging self-deprecation. A righteous indignation. One of the first interviews I saw him do back then was with Tony Blair, Blair having recently left politics and converted to Catholicism. This interview is impressive and should be viewable on Youtube. In later years Jon Stewart I believe suffered his own spell of mental illness but has come back now older, wiser, and much more mellow than he used to be. He almost always seems to express the exact same opinions I had formed – such as, for instance, when in 2015 he said that Boyhood should have won the Oscar for Best Picture. It is almost uncanny. When our opinions differ it is usually because he is ahead of me. More rationally one should say perhaps that he often expresses views that very many people share but do not realise that they share with others. I know of a number of Mental Health patients here in New Zealand who really like Jon Stewart because he speaks to them (metaphorically). It is also worth comparing the world as it was in say 2008 with the world as it is now. Back then social media existed but was far less prominent than it is today. The major issue back then was still the war in Iraq. Many on the Left, such as Jon Stewart and the journalists I read here in New Zealand, couldn't understand why Bush had decided to invade Iraq. Sometimes it seemed as though there was some kind of hidden conspiracy or secret cabal behind it. Where was the truth? What were the real motivations? There was a mystery, a dark mystique associated with the Bush administration, a sense of shadowy puppeteers pulling strings. Was it all really about oil? When I was 'ill' many years ago I sometimes thought that Bush had invaded Iraq because Saddam Hussain was doing something unspeakably terrible to the population of his country, that it was so terrible Bush couldn't tell the American public or the world about it, and that this is why they had cooked up the 'weapons of mass destruction' pretext to send in troops. I think I was giving Bush too much credit. By contrast today, the US has a president who puts every single dumb stray thought on Twitter or rambles about it during one of his endless rallies. There is no mystery or mystique associated with Trump at all. There is thus a perception today, partly because of social media and Youtube, that the social gap between the top and the bottom has narrowed. Impoverished Americans genuinely believe that Donald Trump is their friend, that even though he is about to become president again he is not part of the deep state and is as ignorant of the conspiracies it is engaged in as they are. In reality there are still underhand dealings and secret handshakes and covert donations and veiled promises and threats occurring in smoky rooms over port and cigars in clubs at the top of the hill as there always have been; economically, in all the ways that really matter, the gap between the top and bottom is larger than ever, while the inner workings of government go completely undiscussed by a mainstream media that is only interested in optics and soundbites and manipulating public opinion. One can only hope that Trump will nevertheless genuinely try to help the people who like him and got him elected. Trump has always liked the people who say they like him. It would be nice to think that there can be genuine communication between the top and the bottom as opposed to something possibly illusory, delusional.

I want to come back to Janet Frame. I made an error in the previous essay when I said that Frame never published any poetry while she was alive – she published one slim book called The Pocket Mirror in 1967. I can remember reading a poem called "The Dead" many years ago, one of several poems by Frame with that title, and another poem called "O Lung Flowering Like a Tree", both of which I found in an anthology of New Zealand verse, and the latter of which I wanted to teach at Secondary School. There is a difference in style between these poems and the poems collected in The Goose Bath. In the second volume of her autobiography, An Angel at my Table, she includes a number of poems she wrote when she was young – these poems are so difficult as to be almost indecipherable, almost as though she had deliberately chosen to put in her most obscurantist poems. There are other things about An Angel at my Table that are odd. In it she is quite disparaging of Frank Sargeson but there are poems in The Goose Bath (which remember was published posthumously), poems about Sargeson and addressed to him, which suggest she was in reality quite fond of him and valued his friendship. I noticed that An Angel at My Table has become a popular pick at local bookshops again but I kind of wish New Zealanders might instead consider reading one of her novels instead. To put it bluntly, Frame had an agenda when she wrote An Angel at My Table. She was deliberately trying to kill herself. Therefore An Angel at My Table may not have been absolutely honest. Years later, the famous New Zealand historian Michael King wrote a biography of Frame called Wrestling with The Angel, a book which I believe is taught in psychology courses around the world – though I haven't read it, the title hints that King must have found Frame a somewhat intractable subject. Of course the mythology that grew up around Janet Frame was that she was a creative free spirit who had been misdiagnosed schizophrenic and almost lobotomised as a result – I think it is possible to say today though that she might indeed have experienced madness or psychosis, perhaps as a result of her diagnosis and treatment, but recovered. Perhaps this is the secret that Frame was trying not to divulge, to King or to most others; perhaps her insight, her creativity, was inextricably linked with the madness she had suffered. 

King said in an interview once that he had found out things about Frame that he had decided not to include in the biography or tell Frame about in order to spare her embarrassment. This fucks me off. He should have told her. I imagine whatever it was was something she had already guessed, and it may well have been something to do with sexuality. It is likely that some people in New Zealand back in the day thought she was a lesbian because she had been institutionalised for a time, was intelligent, was single, and had lived in a hut in the back yard of known gay writer and so probably knew many gay people at a time long before homosexuality was legal in New Zealand; my theory that she had been actually diagnosed a lesbian is something that can possibly be inferred from reading An Angel at My Table but not something I can be absolutely confident about. It is certainly common enough today, as readers will have gathered from this blog, for people who are diagnosed schizophrenic to be deemed queer as well, but I cannot be sure if this was true in New Zealand in the 1950s. Back then, though, homosexuality was still considered a mental illness and, possibly here and certainly around the world, was 'treated' with ECT and sometimes lobotomies. If Frame in An Angel at my Table is not telling the whole, it is worth remembering it was published in 1984 – homosexuality was not legalised in New Zealand until 1986. Attitudes today are far from perfect but they were much worse back then. I am not suggesting Frame was actually gay or bisexual; rather I am suggesting she may have presented herself in her autobiography as more homophobic, and less perceptive, than she actually was when declaring her heterosexuality to the world.

I arrive now at the crazy notion that much of this essay has been circling around. I believe that the voice in my head that I attributed to Jess, the voice of my guardian angel, actually belonged to the ghost of Janet Frame. Although one cannot be absolutely sure why Frame described herself as invisible in the poem I quoted in the previous post, one simple fairly plausible interpretation of "I Am Invisible" is that Frame is representing herself as a ghost. When I read this poem, what, a few weeks ago, after I had a chance to process it, I could only interpret it as concerning my own life and I think the life of the girl I call Jess in this blog. It freaked me out. The notion that the ghost of Janet Frame predicted our lives at least two or three decades ago, and has been helping me and perhaps her as well, is an almost overwhelmingly frightening thought. Who am I? Do I have my own distinct identity or am I just a character created by Janet Frame before I was born? The other day a more reassuring if still preternatural construal of these seeming coincidences occurred to me. In folk religion there is a notion, although not a notion people usually give much serious consideration to these days, of restless spirits that wander the earth seeking closure – think of those fictions people sometimes write or tell in which the ghost of a murder victim lingers around long enough to finger the culprit. Think also of the ghost of Hamlet's father in Hamlet. Perhaps before the ghost of Janet Frame could go to sleep or move on, however you would like to think of it, she needed to help change the world's attitudes to both schizophrenia and to sexual differences; exposing the cruelties inflicted on the mentally ill in her own day had been her life work. Perhaps she needed to fully clear her name. Perhaps she picked me to help her. I suppose an attempt to change people's attitudes to conditions like 'schizophrenia' had become the purpose of this blog although I did not set out to do this initially and although I do not think this blog or whatever Jess is currently trying to do with her own life are sufficient in themselves to effect this change. Or perhaps Frame speaks to and helps other New Zealanders diagnosed schizophrenic. In the introduction to The Goose Bath, eminent contemporary New Zealand poet Bill Manhire quotes some lines from a poem in The Pocket Mirror, perhaps without realising how spooky they are:

I must fight and fight
with my red and yellow head
even after I am dead, to stay
my own way, my own way

Readers may think that I am insane for suggesting that the ghost of Janet Frame once used to speak to me. Should I increase my medication rather than go off it altogether as I intend to do soon? But there are plenty of seemingly crazy notions floating around, plenty of crazy people in the world who we don't think should be sedated. There are people who believe the world was created in 4004BC. There are people who think the hurricanes that recently hit Florida were the result of weather manipulation by the Biden administration. There are people, like my father, an atheist, who told me last week that he didn't believe in the Big Bang because he doesn't believe light can be red-shifted. There are people who think the solution to the Cook Strait ferry debacle is to privatise the operation. Even if this seemingly crazy notion is indeed a delusion, antipsychotic medication can't alter people's beliefs – it is only the passage of time that can enable incremental changes in a person's worldview. I am well at the moment and in a fortnight's time it may well be that I will have changed my mind about this in the same way that I changed my mind a very long time ago about whether or not I had ever literally telepathically conversed with Barack Obama.

Despite all the many coincidences, the girl I call Jess is not Janet Frame. Jess is not only smart but hot. She still has all her own teeth thanks, in part, to the fact that, unlike when Janet Frame was growing up, the drinking water in New Zealand today is fluoridated. Because I don't know how to contact her I would like to ask her to figure out a way to contact me, if only for the two of us to have a beer together and have someone else to talk to who might understand. If your family have have a problem with me, you can tell them that I am almost out of the Mental Health Service and am currently trying to figure out how to find gainful employment. Of course you may not read this essay – although I sometimes think many people read this blog there is not a single person I've ever met in my actual life who has ever admitted to reading it, although a while ago my elder brother, who doesn't like the fact that I keep this blog, brought up physics in a way that displayed his complete ignorance of it, and occasionally in the past my former step-mother, a high court judge now retired, has made cryptic comments that seemed to refer to posts I'd written. If you are reading this essay, you could consider possibility of us walking together "with our crescent moons of sight in our personal darkness".

The unifying idea behind this essay I think concerns the identities behind the voices I heard and it may seem that I have contradicted myself – I have said that I don't think that Jon Stewart or Barack Obama literally spoke with me but I have also just said that, at the moment, I believe that the ghost of Janet Frame might have literally spoken to me. Yet it may be there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy. If I could talk with Jess, I would like to ask her if she ever heard a voice that wasn't literally mine but seemed to belong to someone very much like me. I would like to know if Jon Stewart ever heard a voice that seemed to belong to a literature student with an interest in physics and politics living in New Zealand even if this voice wasn't literally mine. I don't think this is something I will ever know for sure; I am resigned to this fact. If it were the case though that Jon Stewart had heard someone like me, it might be evidence, not for God and certainly not a Christian or Jewish God, but for some kind of higher spiritual reality. There is something consoling in this thought. There is another poem by Janet Frame that I want to quote:

 THE ICICLES

Every morning I congratulate
the icicles on their severity.
I think they have courage, backbone,
their hard hearts will never give way.

Then around ten or half past,
hearing the steady falling of drops of water
I look up at the eaves. I see
the enactment of the same old winter story
– the icicles weeping away their inborn tears,
and, if they only knew it, their identity.

I quote this poem not because I ever cry myself but because I want to tell others that, despite what this poem seems to be saying, I believe it is possible to come back from tears; on occasion perhaps something beneficent can act through tears.

All the references in this essay to poems and songs etc may give people the impression that I am incredibly erudite but in fact it's more that I'm like Jamal Malik in Slumdog Millionaire. I'll give an example. The poem "Wet Casements" that I mentioned in the introduction to this essay contains a reference to the bridge at Avignon (a town in the south of France) and is thus alluding to the French folksong which begins "Sur le pont, d'Avignon/ on y dancer, on y danse". I first interpreted this poem in 2004; because I had actually visited Avignon a couple of months previously I knew something vital to any true reading of the poem – that the bridge at Avignon doesn't go all the way across the river. I hope that this essay, though, will reach the people I want it to reach. 

Wednesday, 27 November 2024

A Poem by Janet Frame

The other day I found in a bookshelf a collection of poetry by Janet Frame, The Goose Bath. For some reason I had never read it before but have decided recently to work my way through it. They are wonderful poems. Although Frame loved reading and writing poetry, she is today generally remembered for her novels and her three-part autobiography. She never published any of her poetry while she was alive; The Goose Bath was published posthumously. One story I've heard is that Frame didn't want her poetry published but I bet she knew that her verses would somehow make their way out into the wider world after her death. What I would like to do here is transcribe a poem that made an impression on me.

I'M INVISIBLE

I'm invisible.
I've always been invisible
like poverty in a rich county,
like the rich in the secretive rooms of their many-roomed houses,
like fleas, like lice, like growth beneath the earth,
worlds beyond the sky, the wind, time, ideas –
the catalogue of invisibility is endless,
and, they say, does not make good poetry.

Like decisions.
Like elsewhere.
Like institutions far from the road labelled Scenic Drive.

No more similes. I'm invisible.
In a people-world of binocular vision I'm in the majority after all
as you and I walk with our tiny crescent moon of sight in our personal darkness
through a world where decisions of being and not-being
are controlled by light
helped by tears and the sleep of inattention or death.

I'm invisible.
The lovers reach through my life to touch each other,
the rain falling through me courses like blood upon the earth.
I am carried in no-one's head as knowledge.
I give freedom to the dancers,
to the speaking of truth.
It is this way. There's no-one here to eavesdrop or observe,

and then I learn more than I am entitled to know.

Janet Frame died in 2004. I am not going to interpret this poem here. Although I think there is value in interpretation I don't want to interpret this one. I shall make just two comments about it. Frame references a road called Scenic Drive. There is probably more than one Scenic Drive in New Zealand but the Scenic Drive I know of is in Titirangi, in West Auckland, very near where the highly up-market Respite facility that both Jess and I spent time at although on separate occasions once existed. Mind Matters closed down at the end of 2009 or beginning of 2010. Perhaps Frame had heard about it before she died and saw in it a positive direction for the future of the Mental Health Service; she may not have known that the whole purpose of Mind Matters, it felt to me at the time when I was there, was to eavesdrop and observe. My second comment is that the mention of dancers makes me think of modern pop stars; there is probably an upmarket kind of Respite facility in Malibu that both Miley Cyrus and Kurt Cobain went to, perhaps because of addiction or perhaps because of mental distress resulting from the enormous pressures celebrities deal with. The meaning I find in this poem may be different to the meaning you find in it but hopefully we can agree it is a beautiful poem. Perhaps Frame did know more than she was entitled to know.

Thursday, 31 October 2024

The Waste Land and Other Matters; An Endorsement

It is less than a week until the American election. The purpose of this blog has never been to interfere in American politics, something that I probably am not entitled to do as a New Zealander; however I feel given the stakes, and given that I have American readers, I should say something about who I would prefer to be the next US President. I will make my recommendation to my American readers towards the end of the essay. However I shall talk about other things first. I intend in this essay to say something initially about a matter related to sexuality and then talk a little about my own past, making as I have for a long time the rather egotistical assumption that people might be interested in the life of a 'poor little schizophrenic living in New Zealand'. (In using the word 'schizophrenic' to describe myself, remember that I find this term extremely problematic, especially the doctrine that it is a condition from which it is impossible to recover.) My relationship with the girl I call Jess has been a significant topic I have returned to repeatedly over the years and I want to talk about her again. I shall discuss the Big House again. I want then to talk a little about poetry and shall discuss perhaps the greatest poem of the twentieth century, The Waste Land by TS Eliot and relate it to schizophrenia. Finally I intend to make my endorsement. I caution the reader: in this essay I use the word 'gay' a lot.

Before I dive into my main topics I want to elaborate on something I mentioned in the previous essay, just to be as comprehensive about my own life as possible. In 2009, I saw a private psychologist for a period. This was organised by my step-mother I believe. I saw him weekly for perhaps a month or two late in the year starting around October or November. This private psychologist told me when I first met him that he had chosen not to refer to any notes written about me by workers in the Public Health System. Although I believe now that this psychologist may have been quite a good man, I was experiencing psychosis at the time and so wasn't able to take full advantage of his help – if I had seen him in 2008 or 2010 I might have been able to talk about the causes of the illness I suffered, such as what happened at bFM. I didn't use the words 'gay' or 'straight' with him at all although I can remember that, at the time, I thought that the Borders chain of book stores had been taken over by closet homosexuals and I alluded to this indirectly when talking to him. I think I said this because I had always loved the Borders bookshop on Queen Street and was unhappy with the direction it had taken at the time.

Much of this essay will be concerned with sexuality and sexual attraction, in particular, as you'll see, heterosexual sexual attraction. In talking about sexuality again, I once again need to remind readers at the onset that I am heterosexual – by heterosexual I mean that I only fall in love with women, only get sexually aroused around women, only want to have sex with women, and only fantasise about women when I masturbate. I know spelling this out may seem vulgar but hopefully this blog is read by adults – I would expect children to be more interested in TicToc than abstruse essays about the kinds of esoteric matters I usually discuss. When one realises that this is perhaps the best definition of the term 'heterosexual' one can arrive at, one immediately recognises that whether a person is heterosexual or not cannot necessarily be accurately established by observing a person from the outside. Generally we infer it from, say, whether the person has a partner or spouse of the opposite sex, or from other subtler clues. Generally we tend to look for signs of homosexuality rather than of heterosexuality. Insofar as there are external indicators we can associate with heterosexuality, these signs are not themselves coextensive with the meaning of the word 'heterosexual'; gender and sexuality are not, in my view, performative in the way Judith Butler, as I understand her, has argued, but are rather persistent aspects of private subjective experience. Now, I don't want to suggest that people who do not tick all four boxes above have to come out as gay or bisexual. In the end people are allowed some secrets. And for some people some kind of homosexuality may be a phase that they go through during adolescence. However in the last couple of months I have worried that some kind of false rumour might have somehow got out about me, for reasons I won't get into here, and so I wanted to state absolutely unambiguously that I am still heterosexual before plunging into the rest of the essay. The other reason I need to preface this essay with this statement concerning my own sexuality will become clear later.

The first matter I wish to discuss is the notion of 'coming out'. When when we think of homosexuality and, perhaps today, bisexuality, we often think of people 'coming out as gay'. Billie Eilish was outed by the magazine Variety earlier this year and then decided to come out publicly as gay by, among other things, releasing the song "Lunch". Her alternative to coming out would have been to fight the report by Variety by suing it for defamation – but maybe she realised that taking such a step would only damage her own reputation, the perceptions others had of her. Perhaps she had Tom Cruise as an example of how such a reaction could backfire; perhaps she sensed that having been outed there was no way back in. In the UK, TV presenter Philip Schofield, who is married with two daughters, came out publicly as gay in The Sun in 2020. The impression I gathered is that The Sun had incriminating evidence against Schofield and did a deal with him – either he give them an exclusive interview in which he would announce he was gay or they would out him whether he wanted it or not. Subsequently it was revealed that Schofield had been having an affair with a much younger man and that The Sun, as part of the deal, had agreed not to mention this in their front page article. After the affair was revealed by other media outlets, Schofield was forced to resign. A New Zealand columnist, perceptively, said about this whole scandal that it seemed Schofield was allowed to be gay but not allowed to do gay.

When celebrities come out as gay they do so with a splash. However in the ordinary world the process is much more incremental. A person may come out as gay to some friends or family members and then news of the coming out tends to spread among the person's other friends and acquaintances. This is an aspect of 'coming out' that people seldom appreciate – in the real world, a gay person always comes out to some other person. Coming out is not, in the workaday world, a singular event; a gay person may have to come out repeatedly to different people. Some gay people, say some teachers and academics, may be openly gay to their friends and their families but not openly gay to their students. Although we tend to think of gay people as being either in or out, of course if you apply some critical thinking to the issue, you realise the truth is far more complex; the gay person may be 'in' to some people and 'out' to others. How then do we decide if someone is openly gay or in the closet? Presumably the difference between the two is that we should consider someone to be in the closet if he or she tells the people he or she has come out to to keep it a secret; a person should be considered to be openly gay if there is a tacit understanding that the people he or she tells can tell other people. 

There is another significant issue here. Can you always be sure that someone else has come out as gay to you? Once again people understand this notion quite naively. People tend to suppose that when a gay person comes out they do so by clearly uttering the phrase, "I'm gay". But often it is not so clear cut – a young female friend of mine, for instance, 'came out' by starting to come to pub quiz with her girlfriend; she never used the word 'gay' around me at all. I often meet gay people who, in a sense, come out by implication, by for instance bringing up the novel Maurice by EM Foster. Sometimes, in fact, it is possible to think someone has come out when he or she hasn't, when the person may not be gay at all. People who have read this blog for years will recall that one of the main events that triggered my first psychotic episode is that I thought a couple of men at the radio station I was working at in 2007 had come out as gay to me and that I had to keep it a secret. I realised a very long time ago now that they did nothing of the sort.  Early on during my first psychotic episode I thought, wrongly, that Dr Phil had come out as gay on the Letterman Show. In 2013, I thought a family member had come out as gay for absolutely no reason at all. Twice I have thought men I've known had come out as gay to me because they used the word 'gay' in an odd contextless way. It has occurred to me recently that possibly I could have been wrong. One reason that the situation is so fraught is the enormous stigma the word 'gay' carries; sometimes it seems that only gay people and homophobes can use it, the latter employing  it as a derogatory epithet. Generally people avoid using the word 'gay' at all and, in fact, often gay people themselves avoid using it. Just saying this word out loud can arouse suspicion. In one of his first episodes back on The Daily Show, Jon Stewart used the word 'gay' and I could just sense then and the next week that merely using the word had burned him, as it had burned Kurt Cobain when he used it in the song "All Apologies." It is possible that someone I know thought I had come out to him early this year, not because of anything I said myself but because of something someone else present said when talking about another person entirely. (I don't really want to go into details about this here.) And of course, as readers will remember, one of the other significant mistakes I made much earlier in my life that led me to become ill later on is that in 2001, at the age of twenty-one, as part of a university course, I wrote a gay spy film, without reckoning with the enormous homophobia of the people who knew that I had written it. I had no inkling at the time, back in 2001, that writing this film would make people think I was gay myself although I began to sense this shortly after. It bothered me at the time but I didn't realise then that it would eventually ruin my whole life. All this can be taken as the explanation for why I opened this essay by saying, once again, that I am heterosexual – just so there is no possible confusion. Because I am not gay I have never come out as gay to anyone at all.

The second topic I want to talk about concerns Jess again. It also again involves sexuality. There is something about my relationship with her, something I had known subconsciously for a long time but which I found so painful that I couldn't face it directly and so have never talked about before in this blog.  I feel I should set it out at last. It is likely that when we were hanging out in 2011 she thought I was bisexual. I think I should explain why she might have thought this.

I met Jess in late 2009 at a Hearing Voices group, something I have talked about before. One occurrence at this group seems worth a digression because it is so relevant to other matters I have discussed in this blog. During some sessions there was a young guy present who, perhaps because he was being bombarded with voices, was almost catatonic. I asked him if he listened to the radio at all. He said, "I listen to Kim Hill!" Kim Hill was for a long time a very prominent radio personality here in New Zealand. The significance of his reply is this. Earlier that year, The Listener had put Kim Hill on its front cover with the caption, "Kim Hill is not a lesbian!" Sometimes in this blog I have to spell out the obvious – this young chap, like so many of the other patients I've met, was afraid that people thought he was gay. I believe this fear, a fear that I noted in many other patients and felt myself, justifiably, was probably justified in his case as well – I think psychiatrists tend to think all psychotics are either potentially or actually queer. But like almost every other patient I've met this young man was unable to use either the words 'gay' or 'straight'. In the real world and even in the Mental Health System straight men and women never say that they are straight unprompted. Often, also, patients often believe that many people around them, mental health workers and other patients, are secretly gay. It is a reaction to the culture of the Mental Health System. By saying that he listened to Kim Hill this young chap was trying to assert by implication the fact of his heterosexuality.

I myself was then also still incapable of using either the words 'gay' and 'straight' out loud. However, in late 2009, for some imbecilic reason, I thought that I had succeeded in the aim I had when I first became a patient, that I had 'come out as straight'. This was partly because my medication had been changed from Risperidone to Olanzapine. During one of the sessions, I talked about "Coming out the other side". It is quite possible that Jess thought I meant by this that I had come out as gay when I really meant that I thought I had comes out as straight. At the last session at which she was present, she talked about a family drama that had upset her and then quoted the first verse of Philip Larkin's "This Be The Verse". The first stanza runs as follows;

    They fuck you up, your mum and dad,
    They may not mean to but they do.    
    They give you all the faults they had
    And add some extra just for you.

Unable to help myself, maybe just because I wanted to demonstrate that I knew the poem, I quoted the last stanza.

    Man hands on inhumanity to man;
    It mounts up like a coastal shelf.
    Take my advice – get out while you can
    And don't have any kids yourself.

Jess hated this. At the end of the session she was swept away to Respite and on the way out said to me, tearfully and sarcastically, "Good memory!"

This, by the way, is not the only version of this poem but is the version I knew. Philip Larkin, one of the great poets of the twentieth century, is worth a digression. This poem may make people today think that Larkin was gay. Certainly Larkin I don't think ever had any serious relationships in his life. However his problem was not that he was gay but that he was very shy. He once wrote a poem, a poem that was never published in his lifetime, documenting his failed attempts to pick up a woman at a party. Larkin was very good friends with the novelist Kingsley Amis, father of Martin Amis, and it is interesting to note that in his highly fictionalised autobiography Martin Amis proposed that it was actually Philip Larkin rather than Kingsley Amis who had been his real biological father.

It may be that these references to "coming out" and "getting out" may have made Jess think I was gay. Another reason she may have thought this was, as I indicated in the previous essay, the urban myth that psychosis can be triggered by a homosexual experience, an urban myth that psychotics pick up on. To reiterate, my illness was not caused by a homosexual experience and nor was hers. However, certainly back then, all Mental Health Patients lived under a cloud of suspicion. I recall not long after we first met, Jess asked me if drugs were involved when I first became 'ill' and when I saw her in 2013 it seemed to me that she was fishing to see if my first psychotic episode was caused by a homosexual experience. There is a third possibility. It is possible that someone in the Mental Health Service told her I was gay. In 2011, she expressed a little interest in my Key Worker, Kate Whelan, who she had seen just before I first met her – at the time I wondered if she was interested in Kate because she thought Kate was a lesbian (for the record I briefly though Kate was a lesbian in 2007 but changed my mind permanently shortly after); I also wondered, although I now think this very unlikely, if Jess herself might have had a little bit of a lesbian interest in Kate. I now think this is very unlikely because I believe Jess was neither gay nor bisexual back then. It may be though that Kate had said something to her.  For whatever reason, when I first started hanging out with Jess in 2011, I truly suspect that she thought I was gay and then, when she received evidence that I wasn't, decided that I must be bisexual or had been somehow sexually confused. (I got hints of this sometimes.) When seeing her in 2011, I tried to indirectly indicate that I was completely straight many times, although not obnoxiously, and, in 2013, when I was again experiencing psychosis and was texting her with song suggestions every day, I thought that some of my song suggestions might prove to her that I was straight, although I didn't have a clear idea how to achieve this. The song that prompted her to get in contact with me that year was "Perfect Day" by Lou Read. It may be that a part of the illness Jess suffered in 2012 and 2013 was a result of cognitive dissonance concerning me. In an earlier essay I said that I believed that Jess was like me, preoccupied with matters to do with sexuality without being gay herself, and I am sure that there was an element of truth to this, but it is possible my views of her were warped by her views of me. As I said above, the idea that when we were hanging out Jess thought I might be bisexual or had been sexually muddled somehow is a possibility I find quite painful. 

I remember in 2013 there was a moment, not long after she had read the screenplay I had written about her, at a bar on the waterfront, when I sensed that she wanted me to kiss her but I couldn't do it. There is something very pitiful about the memory. I felt then and still today that both she and I were in the grips of some kind of malevolent fate.

I want now to turn to a different topic, although a related topic. I want to talk about the Big House again. I had hung out at the Big House for some years beforehand but didn't move in until early 2006. For much of that year I was completely preoccupied with Teachers Training College and the job I had every Saturday working for the TAB and wasn't really involved in the life of the flat. Sometimes, I think, Maya would come up from Katikati to visit but our 'relationship', if you can call it that, was something both she and I kept secret, she by design and me more or less unwittingly. My relationship with Maya was bad for both of us and both of us were responsible for this. As I've said, although the Big House had an openly gay resident in 2006 (he tried to get on New Zealand Idol) and although it is possible that the Frenchman who moved in in 2007 after I left bFM might have been gay, all of my other flatmates were straight. The Big House had twenty residents, half of which, by deliberate policy, were male and half female. However it may not have been obvious that all of us were straight. Men in the real world often engage in what Trump in 2016 called 'locker room talk' – a man might say to another man, for instance, "She's got a nice rack!" However my flatmates and I in the Big House didn't do this. Occasionally a male flatmate might mention that he'd kissed a female flatmate at a party or a female flatmate would confide that she'd slept with the drummer from the band Opshop the previous night; otherwise there was no obvious way to tell, except by picking up the vibes people gave off. Many of my flatmates were coupled up and one female flatmate, who was later diagnosed with Borderline personality disorder, went through a succession of boyfriends all drawn from the Big House pool. As often happens in the real world, the men would tend to hang out with the men and the women with the women but this says nothing about any of our sexual orientations. I was attracted to all my female flatmates although, and this is something that I also find painful, it is possible that because I almost never gave it away, my flatmates may not have been sure that I was heterosexual, and as I have described in other posts, it is possible that a rumour that I was gay when went around some of my flatmates in 2007, perhaps when I was working at bFM or perhaps after I'd left.

I'd like to relate a story here. For a period every week a couple of us male flatmates together with some other guys from outside the flat would gather in the dining space to play poker for small amounts of money. It is possible that some of these others playing each week might have been gay but I wasn't sure. This weekly poker game was advertised on a chalkboard in the kitchen. One evening, the evening of the weekly poker game, I was in the kitchen with a female flatmate, Em. Em was dressed up for a night on the town. I thought Em was just about one of the most gorgeous women I'd ever met. She said something; I looked her up and down, completely reflexively, and involuntarily called her beautiful. She became all flustered, ran to the chalkboard, and wrote down under the advertisement for the poker game, "More dicks wanted!" This memory is significant because it was about the only time I'd ever given myself away. I didn't know then and still don't know today whether Em had found me calling her beautiful flattering or offensive, whether I'd complimented her or mildly harassed her. In 2009, when I was experiencing psychosis, one of the peculiar things that happened to me that year was that everyone I saw on the streets had t-shirts with slogans emblazoned on them that seemed to relate to events in my life. One of the shirts I saw sticks out: I saw a chap wearing a t-shirt that read, "Poker? I hardly know her!"

Interestingly there is a song by the New Zealand band, the Tutts, called "K", which I am sure is inspired by parties at the Big House or rather the reputation these parties had. The song, which was released in 2008, makes reference to a bathtub in the back yard – the Big House had a bathtub in the back yard. You can listen to the song and watch the video for it on Youtube.

Earlier I talked a little Philip Larkin and, to make a change from stories about my own life, I might dabble in a little literary criticism. This might be of more interest to people who haven't followed my story for years because what I have to say here is self-contained. What I want to discuss nevertheless has great relevance to the general subject matter of this essay and my blog generally. I would like to talk about perhaps the greatest poet of the twentieth century, T.S Eliot. Early in his career, Eliot made his name with the poem "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrolk", a poem about an ageing bachelor who has missed his chance for love. I know great chunks of this poem off by heart and will quote a section from near the end;

I grow old, I grow old;
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.
Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare eat a peach?
I shall wear white cotton pants and walk upon the beach.
I have heard the mermaids singing each to each.
I do not think they will sing for me.

It was later in his career that Eliot created his masterpiece, The Waste Land. The Waste Land, published in 1922, emerged from a period of profound emotional and spiritual despair, despair that led Eliot to follow it up with the poem The Hollow Men, and then convert to High Anglicanism, probably as a reaction to this spiritual crisis, as a way to save himself; he went on to pen some important poems with religious themes, poems that are also very great but do not quite rise to the heights of The Waste Land. I studied Modernist poetry in 2002 and I can remember the lecture we had concerning The Waste Land. Ordinarily we would sit around and discuss the book or the poem; in this lecture, the then Head of Department, Ken Larsen, simply marched backwards and forwards and repeated over and over again that The Waste Land "was about nothing." We were being told that this was the official line and that we shouldn't attempt to deviate from it.

The Waste Land is in many ways a difficult poem – it begins with an epigraph in Sanskrit and contains quotations in German. It is full to the brim with allusions to the whole history of English poetry, from The Canterbury Tales onwards. It was originally published with an appendix to help readers track all the allusions back to their sources. At the same time it is often very easy to read. Consider the lines:

A rat crept softly through the vegetation
Dragging its slimy belly on the bank.

These lines are not themselves hard to understand. But it is not at all easy to work out why Eliot decided to include this reference to a rat in his poem at all. The poem is full of religious imagery but is also very much concerned with sex and love or rather the absences of love – sex without love, sexless relationships, frigid women. Eliot like many poets was very sensitive and The Waste Land is at once a poem inspired by his own life and a commentary on the world he lived in, on the deeper meaning of existence. Sometimes a person can suffer an emotional and spiritual crisis that has to do with sexuality; sometimes the upshot of such a crisis is that the person finds God. Something like this happened to Mike Patton, lead singer of the band Faith No More, as hinted at in the album King for a Day, Fool for a Lifetime (although I don't think he found God) and something like this happened to Kurt Cobain. In each individual case, the initial cause is probably different but the result is similar, a plunge into a sort of abyss, the ending of something, a type of death. In Eliot's case it probably had a lot to do with his then wife Vivienne. In doing a little superficial research for this essay, I found speculation by one critic that Eliot was uncomfortable with female sexuality; my feeling from reading and thinking about this poem is that what made Eliot uncomfortable was rather his sense that other people were having sex when he wasn't. I think what motivated Eliot to write The Waste Land was partly sexual frustration. This might seem reductive but Freud and evolutionary psychologists, despite their differences, agree that the fundamental meaning of life lies in love, sex, and reproduction; if this sexual drive is blocked or cannot be satisfied it will inevitably lead to psychological distress or depression. Especially if it goes unrecognised by others. Although John Ashbery, in a poem called "An Outing", may be mischievously suggesting that Eliot was gay and loved Ezra Pound, I think Eliot was straight. But it may be that a rumour that Eliot was gay had somehow circulated among his acquaintances, or that Eliot was worried that it had. Perhaps Eliot had sensed something like a rumour, and this rumour, if it did indeed circulate, brought about this crisis, this enormous anguish. In the second part of the poem there are the following lines:

Under the brown fog of a winter noon
Mr. Eugenides, the Smyrna merchant
Unshaven, with a pocket full of currants
C.i.f. London: documents at sight,
Asked me in demotic French
To luncheon at the Cannon Street Hotel
Followed by a weekend at the Metropole.

In this passage, Eliot seems to be describing being hit on by a homosexual. This is something that straight men don't like at all. For straight men there can even be a kind of horror associated with it. Imagine you're a straight man, a man only sexually attracted to women, but you're not getting any action, and then an unshaven male Smyrna merchant propositions you. It raises the spectre of a natural sex drive being diverted down an unnatural channel. Now, in suggesting that sexual frustration and sexual paranoia was a large part of what motivated Eliot when he wrote The Waste Land, I do not want to diminish the poem or detract from all the other meanings, religious, social, that people can find in it. But it might explain a lot.

In fact The Waste Land can provide great insight into the world of serious mental illnesses, the people here in New Zealand and around the world unfortunate enough to be diagnosed schizophrenic. I believe that at the root of much schizophrenia is an unsatisfied and possibly unsatisfiable craving for love and sex, for erotic love as opposed to platonic love (although there can be a desire for platonic love, for friendship, as well). I also believe, and this is very important, that most schizophrenics are heterosexual or start off heterosexual. Janet Frame, as I argued in the essays I wrote about her, was straight but worried that others thought she might be a lesbian; she might have even been, unknown to her, diagnosed a lesbian. In 2013 I read an autobiography called Blue Messiah by Peter Finlay, a New Zealander diagnosed schizophrenic. Finlay never had sex in his entire life but his book is full of references to the attractive women he sometimes met. On one occasion he told one of psychiatrists, "I have been on earth a hundred times and I have never had sex with a woman, and if I don't get to have sex with a woman in this life, I'm not coming back!" If sexual frustration and sexual paranoia lie behind much schizophrenia, this might seem to imply that we could cure schizophrenia by getting schizophrenics laid, but this would be a lunatic proposal. It is not actually the answer. All Mental Health workers have to do is simply recognise that most of their patients are heterosexual, recognise that they are humans beings with desires for love and sex. One reason patients often experience psychological distress is that, almost as soon as they become 'clients' of the Mental Health System, they acquire a fatalistic sense that love and sex and children, an ordinary life, is not something they will ever enjoy. Partly this results from the bullshit theory that schizophrenia is genetic, hereditable, a notion that patients pick up on almost immediately. In 2007, very shortly after I became a patient, when I was in Respite, I remember a female patient asking me, "Are you going to have children?" I understood exactly what she was getting at and replied, "Well, I have a lot of cousins." I was an evolutionary biologist back then and gave some credence to the notion of kin selection.

The perverse and evil truth though is that, even though most schizophrenics are heterosexual, I think there is a subcategory of schizophrenia that the psychiatrists associate with latent homosexuality. I do not know to what extent psychiatrists see schizophrenics as actually or potentially queer but it may vary between psychiatrists. Until relatively recently psychiatrists probably, like I used to do, simply divided the world into heterosexuals and homosexuals and didn't recognise all the other sexual varieties. Psychiatrists are far stupider than people realise. I also suspect that the psychiatrists don't have in their textbooks any adequate definitions for words like 'heterosexual', 'homosexual' or 'bisexual'. In the 1950s, psychiatrists apparently defined homosexuality as a sociopathic hatred of the opposite sex, a definition that must seem patently idiotic to most of us today, but it is unclear to me if psychiatrists today have any better definition. Homosexuality was once considered a type of mental illness but was removed from the DSM in 1973; the truth though, a truth that psychiatrists don't want to publicly admit, is that 'sexual confusion', deemed a kind of schizophrenia, is still treated with drugs; sometimes, in fact possibly quite often, this 'sexual confusion' may sometimes be diagnosed when it is in fact quite absent. It is probable that certain kinds of psychotic symptom are seen as evidence that the sufferer is a latent homosexual. Furthermore it is likely that psychiatrists think that if a patient is worried that others around him or her think him or her gay, that this should be taken as proof that the patient is indeed actually gay and is in denial. (Freud thought something like this.) If a patient says he or she is straight this is taken as evidence that he or she is gay. This seems insane but I think it partly explains why patients, once they've been in the system for a little while, start avoiding using the words 'gay' and 'straight' altogether. I have seen a lot of evidence for this over the years: psychiatrists and psychologists themselves, even when they're straight, seem unable to actually say that they are straight. I have heard that, often, gay men and women worry that others think that they are gay for a time before they come out, and so the psychiatrists probably decided that this worry was a symptom of latent homosexuality.  I get the impression that they believe this type of schizophrenia can be cured or at least alleviated by the sufferer coming out to a psychiatrist or a psychologist, although the real reason they believe this is just because it confirms their prejudices. However I believe that often the paranoia comes first, before the homosexuality. This paranoia affects all Mental Health patients as a result of talking with each other, of being in the system, and of talking with Mental Health workers who often see all their patients as potentially queer. The ability for patients to pick up on this 'theoretical' paradigm and culture verges on clairvoyance. Admittedly homosexuality is almost never discussed explicitly and this is why patients and workers somehow all independently arrive at the 'cat/dog' code, a code no one fully understands. If a patient is exposed to this attitude for long enough, an attitude that may sometimes even be adopted by members of the patient's own family, especially if the person's family have no understanding of schizophrenia at all, it can indeed sometimes result in 'sexual confusion'. Even when such 'sexual confusion' does not occur, being exposed to attitudes of this sort for many years can only exacerbate and prolong a person's mental distress. To think that a heterosexual man or woman might be sexually attracted to people of the same sex and/or not attracted to people of the opposite sex is a terrible thing to do to that person. And to coerce a person into 'coming out', effectively against his or her will, as I believe psychiatrists sometimes do, is certainly no way to cure him or her. 

Why then might the psychiatrists believe this, that sexual paranoia is an indicator of latent homosexuality? Partly it may be that this theory has taken hold and individual psychiatrists don't want to rock the boat by admitting that not only is it wrong but that it is pernicious, pathological. Or they believe it because it sometimes seems to be true and don't want to admit that a theory alone could be a cause of homosexuality. Rather than admit that that this theory might be actually harmful, that they might be missing something, they desperately look for confirming evidence. I doubt that there has ever been any robust research into whether this theory is true, and if sometimes true, why it would be true; I don't even know how such research could be carried out. Psychiatrists are all idiot sheep; none of them want to admit they have no idea what they're doing. The existence of this theory, and I admit I only have circumstantial evidence that it exists, might partly explain why so few schizophrenics recover. And terribly, as I've indicated, this theory can sometimes become a self fulfilling prophecy. I believe Kurt Cobain could have been diagnosed schizophrenic and, even though he was married to a woman he loved, a woman he was having sex with, he still killed himself because he thought others thought he was gay. 

In laying out my thoughts concerning schizophrenia and psychiatry I do not know whether I am making the situation better or worse. To suggest, as I have suggested, that a diagnosis of homosexuality, even when made clandestinely, can cause a person to become homosexual might seem a shocking and seemingly irrational conjecture. It is not altogether irrational nevertheless. I believe it possible Michel Foucault turned gay because a psychiatrist told him he was homosexual; this might partially explain his hatred of psychiatrists. Many years ago Jon Stewart said on his show, "Sunlight is the best disinfectant" and although he was talking about a different matter related to sexuality and although he may have since arrived at a different position, I have a sense that talking openly and honestly about all this, about matters to do with sexuality, although sometimes uncomfortable, is the best way forward. The sexual paranoia I have discussed partly springs from widespread homophobia. We need to live in a world in which we can ask people how they identify and believe them, and this requires a world that is far less bigoted.  I am not sure of the best way to achieve this amelioration. Psychiatrists have historically been terribly prejudiced, terribly homophobic, and many of them still are today; there is still a view that many patients might be secretly gay.  This needs to change. I think that if a patient either directly or indirectly says that he or she is straight in the world we live in now, that that person should be believed. One reason for my own recovery is that in this blog I have been directly dealing with matters to do with sexuality for a long time – unlike, say, TS Eliot or Mike Patton or most mental health patients generally, I decided to confront the issue head-on, if only in this blog. (I seldom talk about it with friends and family.) Another reason I think I was able to recover is the enormous progress the world has made with respect to issues to do with sexuality in the last ten years. I can only hope that by telling the truth as I see it that perhaps working together we can find some way to make the world a better place.

I arrive now at my endorsement. This blog has often been concerned with mental illness and sexuality and I have sometimes criticised the Left because I think it perpetuates a false view of both. Many people on the Left, and not only of the Left, put great faith in psychiatry, but I believe we need to completely rethink our understanding of mental illness. I sometimes sense that some people think I am anti-science but I am not anti-science, I am just anti-psychiatry; even though this may make it seem that I am aligned with RFK Jr, I simply do not believe in the medicalisation of mental illness and the total reliance of psychiatrists on medication as almost the sole form of therapy. With respect to sexuality I also have had misgivings. For a long time many on the Left pushed the doctrine that people were born either gay or straight, although this dogma has weakened in recent years. The reason for this was simple. If gay people cannot choose not to be gay, they cannot be held morally responsible for 'lifestyles' that the heterosexual majority finds distasteful. It was a way to battle homophobia. However in this blog I have argued that for some people sexuality can be fluid. Because I also want to say that most people, in particular most mental health patients, are simply heterosexual, I have argued that we should use the word 'bisexual' for people who have fluid sexualities, to distinguish them from heterosexual people, although even this may be too simplistic because it seems to imply that bisexual men and women are bisexual their whole lives and it may be more accurate to say that some people sometimes go through a bisexual phase. In arguing this way, I am aware that my view may make seem like a veiled criticism of openly gay men and women, people who identify strictly as gay. I am thinking of people like Jonathan Capehart, Pete Buttigieg, Grant Robertson, and comedians like Bowen Yang and Troy Iwata. But these men seem to me to be good people. It may be that the visibility and confidence of such openly gay men (and gay women like Chapell Roan who I like very much) is the best way to fight homophobia, and that people whose sexualities have been fluid but don't want to talk about it with others find such openly gay men and women comforting. It may also be that people who sometimes worry that others think them gay find the confidence of openly gay men and women reassuring.  I am not sure about this. I feel that an important function comedians perform in society generally is that by making jokes about things in their lives that they find embarrassing they make their audiences feel better about decisions and disasters in their own lives that they feel ashamed about. I would say to such openly gay men and women that they are performing a social service just by being candid, that they shouldn't feel ashamed, should be proud, should try not to internalise the homophobic attitudes of a prejudiced chunk of society. There is a paradox involved here but I am not sure how to get around it.

Issues to do with sexuality and mental illness are not obviously at the forefront of the current political battle but they may be bubbling away under the surface. On the surface the political debate concerns immigration and inflation and tariffs, and, for some people, climate change and the war in Gaza. Some of my readers may be considering voting for Trump but, perhaps because they have jobs and families, have not been paying close enough attention to what is actually going on to be fully informed. To me it seems like the election is a war between Good and Evil. Trump is a buffoon but something malign seems to be acting through him. Tucker Carlson, who appeared at a recent rally in support of Trump, in a private email called Trump "a demonic force, a destroyer". Battle lines have been drawn. Many stars support Harris and many billionaires, including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Peter Thiel, support Trump. It is not clear to me why these billionaires support Trump although they may see it as a way to augment their fortunes and influence. I sometimes think these billionaires hate ordinary people; I don't think they give a shit about the steel industry in Pennsylvania. Here in New Zealand, former Prime Minister John Key recently came out in support of Trump even though Trump had, among other things, done great damage to New Zealand by scuppering the Trans Pacific Partnership. This election is not obviously about mental illness and sexuality but I believe though that if there are issues to do with mental illness and sexuality that are in some covert way influencing the election and that require recalibration, conversations concerning them should occur within the Left, perhaps not in any obvious way, because it is the Left that is most likely to have the best answers; the Republicans have no answers at all apart from bigotry. This is why I support Kamala Harris and urge all of my American readers who have not yet voted to throw their support behind her. In a recent interview with Stephen Colbert, Kamala came across as authentic, as a real person who actually cares about real people. Trump pretends to care about the working class but all he really cares about is himself. Even if you disagree with the Biden-Harris policy with respect to the war in Gaza, this is no reason not to vote – Trump, who has always been cozy with Netanyahu as he is with all right-wing authoritarians, would be much worse. In endorsing Harris, I am aware that my opinion will only have weight to the extent that people actually like me. I may have taken too long to make my position explicit; voting is already underway; the opinion of a blogger in New Zealand may carry no sway at all; it may be that I am preaching to the choir. Nevertheless I felt it was important to make my recommendation known.