Only The Lonely

There isn’t any point in denying that the outburst of sympathy and support that followed my confession to an attempt at self-slaughter last year (Richard Herring podcast) has touched me very deeply.


Some people, as some people always will, cannot understand that depression (or in my case cyclothymia, a form of bipolar disorder) is an illness and they are themselves perhaps the sufferers of a malady that one might call either an obsession with money, or a woeful lack of imagination.


“How can someone so well-off, well-known and successful have depression?” they ask. Alastair Campbell in a marvelous article, suggested changing the word “depression” to “cancer” or “diabetes” in order to reveal how, in its own way, sick a question, it is. Ill-natured, ill-informed, ill-willed or just plain ill, it’s hard to say.


But, most people, a surging, warm, caring majority, have been kind. Almost too kind. There’s something a little flustering and embarrassing when a taxi-driver shakes you by the hand, looks deep into your eyes and says “You look after yourself, mate, yes? Promise me?” And there’s something perhaps not too helpful to one’s mental health when it is the only subject people want to talk to you about, however kindly or for whatever reasons.


But I have nothing to complain about. I won’t go into the terrible details of the bottle of vodka, the mixture of pills and the closeness to permanent oblivion I came. You can imagine them and I don’t want to upset the poor TV producer and hotel staff who had to break down my door and find me in the unconscious state I was in, four broken ribs thanks to some sort of convulsive fit that must have overtaken me while I lay almost comatose, vomit dribbling from my mouth. You can picture the scene.


The episode, plus the relationship I now have with a magnificent psychiatrist, has made made my mental health better, I think, than it’s ever been. I used to think it utterly normal that I suffered from “suicidal ideation” on an almost daily basis. In other words, for as long as I can remember, the thought of ending my life came to me frequently and obsessively. But then it’s the thought behind the most famous speech in all history. To be, or not to be.


To be, or not to be: that is the question:


Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer


The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,


Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,


And by opposing end them? To die: to sleep;


No more; and by a sleep to say we end


The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks


That flesh is heir to, ’tis a consummation


Devoutly to be wish’d. To die, to sleep;


To sleep: perchance to dream: ay, there’s the rub;


For in that sleep of death what dreams may come


When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,


Must give us pause: there’s the respect


That makes calamity of so long life;


For who would bear the whips and scorns of time,


The oppressor’s wrong, the proud man’s contumely,


The pangs of despised love, the law’s delay,


The insolence of office and the spurns


That patient merit of the unworthy takes,


When he himself might his quietus make


With a bare bodkin? who would fardels bear,


To grunt and sweat under a weary life,


But that the dread of something after death,


The undiscover’d country from whose bourn


No traveller returns, puzzles the will


And makes us rather bear those ills we have


Than fly to others that we know not of?


Thus conscience does make cowards of us all;


And thus the native hue of resolution


Is sicklied o’er with the pale cast of thought,


And enterprises of great pith and moment


With this regard their currents turn awry,


And lose the name of action…


Take time to read it slowly to yourself or out loud. I don’t have Hamlet’s wit (or Shakespeare’s of course) but every logical or doubtful step from line to line expresses better how hard I thought about the advantages and cursed (as I thought) disadvantages against suicide. The speech, for the most part, stayed my hand. As it did Hamlet’s.


But medicine, much as some don’t like to hear it, can help. I am on a regime of four a day. One is an SNRI, the other a mood-stabilizer. I haven’t considered suicide in anything other than a puzzled intellectual way since this pharmaceutical regime “kicked in”.


But I can still be sad. Perhaps you might go to my tumblr page and see what Bertrand Russell wrote about his abiding passions (it’s the last section of the page). I can be sad for the same reason he was, though I do so much less about it than that great man did. But I can be sad for personal reasons because I am often forlorn, unhappy and lonely. These are qualities all humans suffer from and do not qualify (except in their worst extremes) as mental illnesses.


Lonely? I get invitation cards through the post almost every day. I shall be in the Royal Box at Wimbledon and I have serious and generous offers from friends asking me to join them in the South of France, Italy, Sicily, South Africa, British Columbia and America this summer. I have two months to start a book before I go off to Broadway for a run of Twelfth Night there.


I can read back that last sentence and see that, bipolar or not, if I’m under treatment and not actually depressed, what the fuck right do I have to be lonely, unhappy or forlorn? I don’t have the right. But there again I don’t have the right not to have those feelings. Feelings are not something to which one does or does not have rights.


In the end loneliness is the most terrible and contradictory of my problems. I hate having only myself to come home to. If I have a book to write, it’s fine. I’m up so early in the morning that even I pop out for an early supper I am happy to go straight to bed, eager to be up and writing at dawn the next day. But otherwise…


It’s not that I want a sexual partner, a long-term partner, someone to share a bed and a snuggle on the sofa with – although perhaps I do and in the past I have had and it has been joyful. But the fact is I value my privacy too. It’s a lose-lose matter. I don’t want to be alone, but I want to be left alone. Perhaps this is just a form of narcissism, vanity, overdemanding entitlement – give it whatever derogatory term you think it deserves. I don’t know the answer.


I suppose I just don’t like my own company very much. Which is odd, given how many times people very kindly tell me that they’d put me on their ideal dinner party guestlist. I do think I can usually be relied upon to be good company when I’m out and about and sitting round a table chatting, being silly, sharing jokes and stories and bringing shy people out of their shells.


But then I get home and I’m all alone again.


I don’t write this for sympathy. I don’t write it as part as my on going and undying commitment to the cause of mental health charities like Mind. I don’t quite know why I write it. I think I write it because it fascinates me.


And perhaps I am writing this for any of you out there who are lonely too. There’s not much we can do about it. I am luckier than many of you because I am lonely in a crowd of people who are mostly very nice to me and appear to be pleased to meet me. But I want you to know that you are not alone in your being alone.


Loneliness is not much written about (my spell-check wanted me to say that loveliness is not much written about – how wrong that is) but humankind is a social species and maybe it’s something we should think about more than we do. I cannot think of many plays or documentaries or novels about lonely people. Aah, look at them all, Paul McCartney enjoined us in Eleanor Rigby… where do they all come from?


The strange thing is, if you see me in the street and engage in contemplation I will probably freeze into polite fear and smile inanely until I can get away to be on my lonely ownsome.


Make of that what you will.


Sx


 

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Published on June 24, 2013 08:21
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message 1: by Godka (new)

Godka After reading this post, I felt like I should respond somehow, but I am not sure how to properly put in words what I want to say, what I want you to know. So this is more of a thing of just leaving here at least something (no matter how silly and no matter if you read this or not) in exchange for what your post gave to me.

I just want you to know that I've read it, I understood and I am thankful to you for being honest and brave to write about it. I can relate to many of those issues you wrote about. It's very hard to talk about things of this manner for me. So I don't talk about them with anyone. I keep them inside me, those ugly monsters. And I admire anyone who can honestly talk about them.

I am no master of words, so I rather keep this simple and short in a form of a silly babbling from a silly girl with a silly toothache.

But know this, I am gonna print this post and keep it somewhere close to me so I could read it from time to time. I do this with some texts that matters to me. And this one does.


message 2: by Arni Vidar (new)

Arni Vidar Bjorgvinsson As always you so eloquently put into words concepts that many experience but have serious problems explaining themselves intelligently.

I guess the extroverts (read: most people) can't really understand how it's possible to be lonely in a crowd of people, but it's quite possible none the less. You are not narcissistic for wanting your privacy and still some close company from time to time. I just hope you may one day find a partner in crime that can give you both in equally satisfying amounts.

You may not like it, and you may never read it, but you are a beacon of light and understanding in a dark world.
From one who understands you painfully well, I salute you good sir, and thank you for this post.


message 3: by Helga (new)

Helga - I don’t want to be alone, but I want to be left alone.-

This statement just screamed at me. I am both shy and very introverted and these words just say everything about what I want.

I think blog-posts like this one do a world of good, mental illnesses are hard to talk about and people fear the stigma around it.

I put motivational words of wisdom on my bedroom wall and read them every morning to get myself going every day. I am a single mom and a university student studying literature and if it weren't for my son getting up would be a challenge. I wish I had the courage you have to talk to people openly about depression and in my case also anxiety. I have tried and it's hard for 'normal' people to understand that I find it difficult to go to school everyday, as much as I enjoy it when I get there.

Mental illnesses are hard to understand when you don't have them or know anyone who does.

You are so much more than an inspiration and I do hope everything will work out well for you.


message 4: by Katharine (new)

Katharine I am another who understands you so painfully well. I can be in a sea of people and yet feel so utterly lonely. I don't know that it's something that everyone can understand--maybe only the most enlightened can? Like you, I yearn for companionship, attachment; and yet I dread it...dread not being alone, independent, not responsible for anyone else's feelings, impressions...and deeply fear the disappointment and the pain that goes along with it. Pain that drives me to want to raise my white flag in surrender.

I realized years ago that there is a difference between alone and lonely that (in my experience) many people understand. I can be alone and not be lonely, lonely and not alone, and so forth. Personally, I think I feel the loneliest when I'm not alone, as sad and somewhat paradoxical as that may be.

Your words, your struggle, your story; they all help me feel connected to another human being who feels the way I do; connected, though we've never met. And, to someone who has brought me tremendous joy through his many talents--another paradox, that some people who are so "troubled" can still bring so much happiness (you and Mr. Laurie come immediately to mind). I truly believe that the best comedy and insights come from the souls that have to fight to make it through the day.

You are most definitely not a narcissist; in fact, I believe you are quite, in fact, practically selfless. A narcissist wouldn't post what you have so humbly and introspectively. Take pride in yourself that you have fought this beast for so long and while doing so have accomplished so much and brought so much joy to so many around the world. Also be proud of your courage to stand up and fight and to speak out for what you believe and how you feel. Be proud that you are you. On your worst days (and I pray that those are behind you) and every day, remember that you, kind sir, are not alone, though we may not be in front of you, we are with you and cheering for you every step of the way.

There's so much I can say, and so much more that I want to say but can't yet find the words. Like Godka, I am going to print your post and keep it in my book of words that inspire me; a book I read through at least once a week to help shore up my strength to continue on and, as Dylan said, "not go gently into that good night".

One final thing, at least for now--Mr. Fry, you are dearly loved, respected, and admired; a God among men (and women)!


message 5: by Alex (new)

Alex Dear Stephen: this speaks to me so much; I have been there for a while and even though I'm on meds, there are still very sad days. You are brave and courageous and I can't thank you enough for your words, both in your books and in this blog post; you remind me that I am not so alone.


message 6: by Paloma (last edited Jun 25, 2013 06:18PM) (new)

Paloma Etienne Medication is just such a weird thing; when it works it kind of makes you normal - your normal. As an artist, one does wish that it doesn't slow you down or slur your words or cripple your creativity.

And that balance between feeling what you should (so that you don't feel life is something that happens to others), and what you shouldn't (don't want to be too sad nor too oblivious to pain) is fascinating.

Now, who are you before and after medication? Who is hiding in you? That is, my dear friends, my dear Stephen, my to be or not to be ...

Peace and love. Take care


message 7: by Luke (new)

Luke Nuth Some people have David Beckham and Michael Jackson as their idols, but I would like to say that Stephen Fry is one of my idols...I look up to him and upon hearing of the recent news, I felt upset because I both respect and admire the man that is Stephen Fry.


message 8: by Robert (new)

Robert "And perhaps I am writing this for any of you out there who are lonely too...."


Today, I have read and re-read this article over again and every time it just makes me want to scream "THANK YOU!" as loud as I can from a rooftop. I could scream it over and over again until my voice cracks or I pass-out from exhaustion, but it will never be enough- not even half.

I personally suffer from this "suicidal ideation" on a daily basis and just can't put into words how helpful this post is for me. Perhaps you know all about it, how hearing something like this from people who has been through it can do all the wonder. Sure, it may not last past a couple of hours or a few days at most but the act of putting yourself out there means so much to me that I needed to just attempt to say thank you.

I first read this blog post at approximately 10AM this morning, here it is now 6:14 and I'm still crying sporadically. I want you know that this does help. I want to you that while I always know that I'm not alone, every little bit helps and this post has given me something to chew over and cling to for the first time in months. Thank you.


message 9: by Erica (new)

Erica Ball I propose an amiable roommate.


message 10: by Mickaël (new)

Mickaël It takes a lot of courage to write so openly about your most private thoughts. I believe that you are an admirable person simply because you dare to face your own demons and share them with others who suffer from similar problems. Thank you for being so open and for giving others the courage to face their own problems. We all have to fight our own private battles, but if we share our stories we are never alone. (sorry for being slightly sentimental, but that's how I feel..)

I wish you all the best, Mr. Fry!


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