Just Close Your Eyes ©️

There is a moment when the mythology of compassionate mental health care collapses. It doesn’t collapse dramatically, with sirens or headlines. It collapses quietly—at the end of a phone call.

The patient does everything correctly. Weeks of sleep have dissolved into fragments—two hours here, three hours there. A medication transition has detonated the nervous system: high-dose Zyprexa discontinued, Latuda introduced, the brain forced to renegotiate its chemistry like a star trying to hold together under new gravity. The result is textbook REM rebound: vivid nightmares, adrenaline surges, sweat, headaches on waking, a body that has forgotten the simple act of resting.

But the patient doesn’t panic. He prepares. A script is written. Calm, precise, respectful:

Four weeks of two to three hours of sleep per night. Nightmares. Heart pounding. Headaches on waking. Could we consider a short-term prazosin prescription to stabilize REM while the brain adjusts?

It is the kind of request psychiatrists claim to want—measured, informed, cooperative. A patient advocating responsibly for his own care.

So he calls. And the machine answers.

The nurse, gatekeeper for the psychiatrist—let’s call her Dr. Absentia—delivers the verdict with bureaucratic serenity. Your doctor is on vacation until the seventeenth. If it’s urgent, the earliest appointment is Friday. But you’ll need to see another psychiatrist first. You’ll have to explain everything again. Convince them.

Plead your case. The phrase lands like a meteor.

Because that is exactly what the modern mental health system has become: a courtroom where exhausted patients must argue for the legitimacy of their own suffering.

Trust collapses first. The idea that somewhere inside the psychiatric system exists a responsive intelligence guiding fragile human chemistry begins to crack. What replaces it is something colder: calendars, coverage rules, gatekeeping protocols. Care has been replaced by procedure.

Dr. Absentia may be a fine doctor. Perhaps she is resting beside some quiet coastline, recovering from the strain of managing other people’s minds. Psychiatrists deserve rest. No one is arguing otherwise.

But when a field deals with medications capable of rewiring sleep, mood, and perception, absence without continuity is not neutral. It creates vacuum. Patients drift in that vacuum.

The nurse’s voice isn’t cruel. That’s the strange part. It’s simply administrative. The tone of someone explaining airline seating policy while turbulence rattles the fuselage.

Your appointment is the seventeenth. Or Friday with someone else.

The patient—running on four weeks of fractured sleep—asks the only honest question left in the universe.

“Is this a fucking joke?”

The call ends. What follows is not hysteria. It’s clarity.

Because the truth begins to reveal itself in the silence after the line goes dead: modern psychiatry often functions less like a rescue service and more like an observatory. It studies the stars carefully while those same stars are collapsing.

No villainy is required for this system to fail. Only distance.

Left without access to care, the patient turns to magnesium. Three hundred milligrams before bed—a quiet mineral from a pharmacy shelf, older than any psychiatric protocol.

And the body listens.

The nightmares soften. Sleep arrives in fragments rather than explosions. The nervous system begins recalibrating itself without the guidance of the professionals supposedly responsible for it.

That’s the real explosion in this story. Not anger. Recognition.

Psychiatry possesses immense knowledge. Entire libraries of research exist on antipsychotic withdrawal, REM rebound, nightmare physiology, autonomic nervous system regulation. Prazosin is not an obscure experimental drug—it is widely used in precisely the situation described.

But knowledge means nothing when access is gated by scheduling software.

So the supernova occurs quietly, inside the patient’s understanding of the system itself. The realization that when the moment of need arrives, the person most responsible for navigating the storm will always be the one inside the storm.

Doctors may help. Clinics may prescribe.

But when the nights stretch long and the phones answer with calendars instead of care, the final engineer of stability remains the patient.

And that truth burns brighter than any prescription pad ever will.

Revenge of the Brain ©️

There is a strange place the mind goes when sleep disappears. It isn’t drama. It isn’t madness. It’s something quieter and more mechanical, like an engine that keeps running because no one has turned the key off.

For four weeks the nights have been two hours long. Sometimes less. I lie down around nine or ten, like a responsible citizen of the circadian order, and the body does what it is supposed to do. It falls asleep. The machinery still works. But somewhere around one in the morning the system detonates. I wake up sweating, heart hammering, neck tight like a rope pulled through the back of the skull.

The dream is always intense, cinematic, impossible to ignore. Not the faint nonsense people usually mean when they say they had a dream. These are full productions. The brain staging a theatre of fear in the middle of the night.

And then it’s over.

The eyes open. The room returns. But the nervous system has already gone to war.

There is no slipping back into sleep after that. The adrenaline has already signed the papers.

This is the part no one explains when you quit two REM suppressors at once. Marijuana disappears. Zyprexa disappears. The brain suddenly realizes it has been underwater for years and rockets upward toward the surface.

REM sleep comes roaring back.

Dreams become violent in their intensity. Not necessarily violent in content, but in emotional force. The mind trying to process years of backlog in a few frantic weeks.

Sleep scientists call it REM rebound. A clinical phrase for something that feels far less clinical when it is happening inside your skull at 1:27 in the morning.

The strange thing is that the system itself is still functioning. I can fall asleep. The brain still knows how to enter sleep cycles. But somewhere in the second REM phase the dream world becomes too powerful, and the body ejects itself back into wakefulness like a pilot pulling the lever on a failing aircraft.

Then comes the headache. Always in the back of the head, where the neck meets the skull. The muscles locked tight from the sudden surge of adrenaline. The body believing, for a moment, that the dream was real.

This is what severe sleep fragmentation looks like. Not insomnia in the usual sense. Not lying awake all night staring at the ceiling. Instead the brain falls asleep, dreams too hard, and wakes itself up.

Repeat. Night after night.

Meanwhile the day continues. The schedule continues. The rebuild continues. Life does not politely pause while the nervous system recalibrates itself.

So the body runs on something else.

Not mania. Not energy. Something closer to inertia. Momentum carried forward because stopping would require a level of rest that simply isn’t available yet.

The strange irony is that this chaos is actually a form of repair. When REM sleep returns after years of suppression, the brain overshoots. It dreams too much. Too vividly. Too violently.

But overshoot is part of recalibration.

Eventually the system stabilizes. The dreams lose their cinematic intensity. The nights lengthen again. The body remembers what eight hours feels like.

Right now though, the night is short. Two hours of sleep. A nightmare at one. A pounding heart. A dark room returning. And the quiet understanding that the brain is still trying to find its way back to normal.