THE STRANGER | Personal Writing

The Stranger

Category: Personal Writing

Music is Sanity

THE STRANGER | Shangri-la | Michelle Lara Lin in Shiatzy Chen

Photographer: Wayne Lin
Location: The Presidential Suite in Shangri-La Taipei, Taiwan
Outfit and accessories by Shiatzy Chen, ring by Possibility

Lately I have been battling another episode of depression. To compensate for the pitfalls of bipolar disorder, I take meticulous care of myself. I run, eat healthy, sleep well, frequent the mountains, meditate, read, and relax. These practices really help mitigate the intensity of all episodes– whether manic, depressive, or mixed. However, they are not panaceas for mental illness. I am still tormented by nightmares every night. Some days I feel terrible for no good reason at all. I find myself wishing to die and put an end to everything. Then I begin to helplessly scrummage my mind to rationalize and justify my mood–did someone die? did I lose an arm? In a society that preaches happiness with the sort of sickening fundamentalism akin to religious martyrdom, depression that doesn’t happen for a justified reason is stigmatized. But of course, these futile attempts to rationalize my depression only make me feel worse. There is no rational explanation for my mood, except for this illness that sends me cycling through extreme episodes.

THE STRANGER | Shangri-la | Michelle Lara Lin in Shiatzy Chen

Last night, a friend linked me to a few of his favorite Erik Satie pieces. I laid down on my bed, closed my eyes, and listened to Gnossiennes and Gymnopédies pieces. What I felt was indescribable. It was a sensation that was beyond words. In my normal and hypomanic states, classical music has never had this type of effect on me.  I had no clue what was happening. I felt like I was undergoing a transformation, entering a new realm, a multiverse–a metamorphosis of the mind. Tears were trickling down my face, but they were tears of joy. I was in ecstasy.

In Twilight of the Idols, Nietzsche writes:

Without music, life would be a mistake.

In context of the book, I believe that Nietzsche meant to suggest that life without music would be a mistake because music offers a type of metaphysical solace that cannot be found in linguistics or symbolism. But I believe that music, particularly in Nietzsche’s case, couldn’t have just been a metaphysical solace. It served something grander than that. For many who are tormented by mental illness, music is not just a solace, is a sanctuary.

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Thank You

THE STRANGER | Michelle Lara Lin

Photographer: Wayne Lin

This article includes a gift certificate giveaway from Urban Philosophy. Details are at the end of the entry.

Wow. I am shocked by the reactions to my last entry where I spoke about the crash from mania in bipolar episodes. To be honest, I expected a lot of negativity. I have never stood in front of any of my friends or family members, looked them in the eye, and told them that I have a mental illness. I have only done it subtly and indirectly: through the writing on my blog.

THE STRANGER | Michelle Lara Lin

THE STRANGER | Michelle Lara Lin

THE STRANGER | Michelle Lara LinTHE STRANGER | Michelle Lara Lin

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The Fall from Mania

THE STRANGER | Michelle Lara Lin by Meagan Cignoli

Photographer: Meagan Cignoli
Dress: Yuna Yang
Necklace: Possibility

My latest shoots are intended to blur the line between fiction and reality. To replicate but distort experiences that I have either witnessed or am personally familiar with.

Those affected by Bipolar I experience manic episodes. They can last from weeks to a year. These are episodes that are the extreme antithesis to depression: a perpetually elevated mood, no need for sleep, high energy levels. More extreme manic episodes can result in grandiose delusions and hallucinations. At the end of a manic episode, during the transition to a depressive or mixed state, many experience a crash. I call this crash The Fall From Mania.

THE STRANGER | The Fall From ManiaTHE STRANGER | Michelle Lara Lin by Meagan CignoliTHE STRANGER | The Fall From ManiaTHE STRANGER | Michelle Lara Lin by Meagan CignoliTHE STRANGER | Michelle Lara Lin by Meagan CignoliTHE STRANGER | The Fall From ManiaTHE STRANGER | Michelle Lara Lin by Meagan Cignoli

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