 Good morning Hank, it's Tuesday. This video is about my mental health, but I want to say here at the outset that I am not a psychologist and that in general I think we should listen to experts when it comes to mental health and also when it comes to other things. But I can only speak to my personal experience. Okay, so it seems to me that the stuff happening way down inside of us is difficult to talk about, partly because those experiences aren't really accessible by the senses. You can't usually see or hear psychic pain and it's difficult to describe without simile or metaphor. Like I might say that it feels like there's a void inside of me or like my insides are twisted or like my brain is on fire. I can say what it's like more than I can say what it is. So I have obsessive-compulsive disorder, which is mostly seen in the popular imagination as being about like excessive hand-washing or neatness or whatever. Because those are things you can see, you know? They're not like the formless and sensate horrors of psychic pain. They're behaviors that you can like portray in a movie. But for me at least there's a reason the obsessive comes before the compulsive in the name. So I experienced these obsessive-thought spirals in which intrusive thoughts, that is like thoughts that I don't want to have that seem to come from outside of me, sort of hijack my consciousness. Now everyone has known some version of not being able to choose their thoughts. Like after you lose someone you may find yourself thinking about them all the time. You may see a sunset and think about seeing a sunset with that person. Or you open a car door and remember driving with them, etc. But for me these obsessive-thought spirals happen all the time and they can take over for days or weeks or months. Like I might worry out of nowhere that my food is contaminated or somehow poisoned and then suddenly that will be the only thought I'm able to think. The thought I'm either thinking or distracting myself from all the time. And when that gets bad I can lose all control over my thoughts for an extended period of time to the extent that I can't follow what's happening in a TV show or read a book. This is exhausting of course, but it's also kind of terrifying because one, I can't stop being scared of the thing I'm scared about. And two, if I can't choose my thoughts and I am at least in part made out of those thoughts then am I actually the captain of this ship I call myself? And the more you think about that, at least for me, the more it becomes sort of the premise for a horror movie. Right, so the compulsive behaviors I use to cope with these obsessive-thought spirals repeatedly checking my food for contamination for instance or spending hours googling what will happen to me if I eat moldy bread. Those are for me ways of trying to comfort and calm myself. Like I'm not checking over and over again to be eccentric or whatever, I'm doing it because I cannot stop obsessing over the fear that I might have eaten living mold and I will do whatever I can not to be strangled by that thought. Mental illness is highly stigmatized in our culture, but it is also sometimes romanticized. We see TV shows where in order to catch a terrorist a mentally ill person must go off their meds or we see obsessive detectives whose obsessiveness allows them to crack cases that others couldn't. That kind of thing might be true to some people's experiences, but it hasn't been true to mine. Like I don't feel like my mental illness has any superpower side effects. In fact, when I'm stuck inside a thought spiral, I find it very difficult to observe like anything outside of myself. I become a terrible detective. So when I started the book that has become Turtles all the way down, I wanted to like try to find form and expression for this way down nonsensorial experience of living inside of thought spirals. The book is fictional, totally fictional, but it began for me with thinking about what it would be like to be this one particular 16-year-old girl, Asa Holmes, who's trying to be a good daughter and a good friend and a good student and maybe even a good detective. While also living with terrifying thought spirals that she cannot see or hear, but that are nonetheless very real. So like that's a bit of an introduction to the story and how I came to write it. I also want to say to anyone out there concerned about their mental health, please, please seek help. I've put some resources in the doobly-doo below. I know it can be difficult to get effective treatment, but there is hope even if your brain tells you there isn't. The vast majority of mental illness is treatable and lots of people with chronic mental health problems have fulfilling and vibrant lives. Hank, DFTBA. I will see you on Friday.