Living with
the mentally ill
When this semester began the second and third year
classes of Media were combined to take a joint course in Desktop Publishing by
Dr. Ngugi.
On the first day of class, there was a gentleman who
kept interrupting the professor. He uttered lewd comments about third year
girls. Actually, he reported one for ignoring to pay attention to him.
All this time Ngugi knew he will have a hard time
fending off questions and observations from the student who was officially
mentally ill. This happened for over a half an hour until our Class Rep, Susan
Wangari got fed up and shot, “Young man, for how long will you keep making
noise to us?” The sophomores only looked on. The seniors looked disapprovingly
at the young man.
That is the last time I saw the man. After class, his
colleagues whispered that he is mentally handicapped. They went on to say that
he hasn’t been like that. His fuse blew off just recently.
Today, in church there was a drunkard and crazy man
who kept imitating the singers until the ushers whisked him away claiming he
was “making noise”.
At home, these cases are commonplace. They dominate the
street talks. Mentally ill persons are discriminated, isolated and abandoned
because of their condition. There is one I know from my village who was
impregnated by a sane man and left to care for her child. Now she has four street
urchins. They are dirty, hungry and dangerous. They survive on petty thievery.
One such person slid to insanity so jokingly that
nobody ever believed it happened. Till this day they blame witchcraft and bad
luck. My ignorance drove me to greet her as I came to take home keys from my mom’s
work place. Every Teacher crossed fingers and watched me.
“Ndukangethye nye ikiti ii(don’t greet me, you dog)”,
she barked back and curled her arms around her bosom. Then she spit saliva in
my direction.
My friend Tom (the crazy woman is his aunt) pulled me
back and we walked away to town and told me I was lucky that she did not pour
the hot tea she was holding on me.
What I noticed about virtually all mentally ill
persons is that they crave for love and acceptance. Imagine being avoided by
people because you are not like them. And it is not your fault….well for others
it is their mistake.
They need to be rehabilitated. Let their families take
them back. Their old friends, their colleagues (like our case), their State and
everybody should ensure that they reform.
Take them to a psychiatrist or a psychologist, a
counselor, a pastor, a motivational speaker, somebody. It’s funny how educated
folks still believe in curse, witchcraft, and devil and blame the blameless for
problems which have scientific solutions.
What is sure for now is that the uptake of drugs such as miraa (khat) is
rife here and other hard drugs which can hasten the destabilization of a sober
mind. Take care!
The
writer is a student of Bachelors of Arts Degree in Communication and Media at
Chuka University. He blogs at musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email
your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com
No comments:
Post a Comment