What they don’t tell you about inpatient psych treatment is everything, in short. To take the long route of things they do not mention would mean devoting an entire book series to the scandal of treatment--a story in and of itself. What they will tell you is that a 201 commitment may be voluntary, but they avoid mentioning you have to sign, or else you will be put on a 302--in other words, involuntarily committed. No one will mention that therapists are mandated reporters, or that children will have their fragile and chaotic worlds completely obliterated if they open their mouths; no one dare utter the truth about some of the caseworkers. No one mentions that many children in the hospital get taken from their families, or that their loved ones will abandon them, determining these children are too fucked up to fix. They forget to mention how an alarming number of adolescents get dump...
I'm sorry. I'm sorry for not being your idea of good-enough. For not being your type of person. For laughing a little too loud, and sounding a little too sound in my decisions. I'm sorry for that time I offended you with my intonation, facial expressions, and wording. I'm sorry for when I speak too much--for that time I came off as bossy. I'm sorry for saying something wrong. I'm sorry for being a woman--but really, for being a bitch. For being a threat, when I am equally intimidated, but you'd never know it because I put up a defensive front. There's a push to be perfect, but not too confident. Confident, but not too cocky. A leader, but not too bossy. Smart, but never smarter than you, and you never smarter than me. Large and in charge, but somehow small. Somehow, we are supposed to be all of these things, while still finding a way to love ourselves and others. I have much to learn, but if there is anything this world is teaching me, it's that ...