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« Favourites v Underdogs | Main | Vertigo by John Crace - copies up for grabs »
Saturday
Oct012011

Breaking the fourth wall

One of the things we love about being away on holiday is the feeling of complete detachment from reality back home. That's the whole point of it. Detachment. Escapism. A rest to refresh and rejuvenate and forget about work, bills and the London Underground. Sun it up, party, eat well drink well, sight-see...it's everything but home. The part that hurts is returning. You think in some misconstrued way that whilst you had the time of your life that back home things have somehow moved on when usually nobody actually notices you were gone and nothing has changed. Within a day or two of returning to work, you're back to mundane normality, consumed by routine. What is usually lost as you work yourself back into the routine are some of the moments of clarity you found yourself possessed with whilst swimming around in a pool or drinking an ice cold beer in the hot-tub. Epiphany's a plenty, but only if you remember to pack them in amongst your shorts and t-shirts.

Now by losing them (those moments of clarity), it might be the case that when you're back home the deeply philosophical musings don't hold actual weight back in the real world. So they become instantly worthless whilst you go about doing what you've always done in that oh so comfortable bubble you live in until it's burst next time you book a week abroad.

In my case, I've simply decided that there is not enough honesty and transparency in who I am. To myself. It's probably something that hardly warrants sharing. This is a Spurs blog, I blog about Spurs. But this is my blog and instead of conforming, biting my tongue and generally appeasing part of my audience because I feel obliged to do so - I shouldn't. I'm uncomfortable with it. I require change so my focus is never lost.

This is not to say I spent my holiday thinking about social networking and blogging. I spent time thinking about family life and my past. I guess having this blog allows me to chronicle anything I wish to throw at it, I just don't wish to do so half as often as I should. Reading Vertigo (John Crace) also brought back memories, crashing down on me with hefty reflection. Crace cites his depression and how Tottenham Hotspur was something he still anchored too during his lapses. Some how football transcends. We simply can't turn away from it even when losing ones mind.

Not to delve into too many of the details regarding the holiday, but the main reason we were out in Lanzarote was because my missus sister was getting married there. What with it being a wedding, there was drama. Masses of drama. It changed my opinion on certain people and also gave me perspective parallel to my life that I did not have before. Hence all the deeply philosophical thoughts I had when I wasn't on baby duty.

So what relevance to the Spooky persona and blogging has my week long break birthed? Life story time...

In the five or so years leading up to 2006 I was fighting something I didn't understand or wish to ask others for help on. That was the first problem. I'm naturally not an open person, I don't tend to make very good first impressions and it takes me a while to find that comfort zone to be relaxed and myself. But even then, I probably wouldn't share anything with you that sat outside socialising, music, football etc. I don't open up to family and friends - even best friends - so if there was something wrong, nobody would know. So in those five years I continued this pretence that my head was screwed on when it wasn't. When surrounded by people I knew I could act it out, when alone I had to find things to do to keep me occupied.

Travelling with the Spurs away support and spending hours on message boards were ample distractions in attempting to fool myself and others. I gradually started to slowly slowly detach myself from my closest friends and spent more time clubbing with people I hardly liked because it was an easy way to gain access to drugs. I didn't have a single relationship in this time period leading up to 2006. I'm talking about actual relationships here, because anything with emotion meant grafting. Far easier to just f**k and the internet was a glorious way to meet people with the same mindset. Two or three different people per week, every week (give or take) for almost two years. I'd boast about it if it wasn't so tragically lonely (in hindsight). Sure, it passed the time and populated the hours leaving my head in an unscrewed position, never wanting to notice and no inclination to do anything about it.

With every passing week, I was further away from the person I should have been without the relentless pretence and superficiality.

Friends wondered why I was so distant (I practically lived within 500 meters of three of them), never venturing out. Family had similar concerns. But there I was, smiling and pretending, no one dared to question me. I continued to live in the moment, as two people. The first being the one person people saw at work and around friends/family (when I bothered to make an appearance). The other was equally fake spending money on hotels, powder and pills whilst holding down any remanence of the real me, trapped deep inside with no want to escape.

The façade began to crack. Mainly because I could no longer handle the excess. I had spent near enough 50k (accumulating to almost 100k in the end in amongst other spending) on getting f***ed and being f***ed. Or more to the point, making sure I didn't face it head on. I started becoming resentful of people showing concern. I gave up on the sex because meeting people in hotels and other locations started to drag me down, it felt like too much of an effort and I could no longer stomach the talking.

I stopped going out altogether (other than work which started to become a major struggle) because I couldn't face it. I had no zest or energy to be around anyone. And yet I still found myself at White Hart Lane, probably because I had somehow convinced myself that being there was like being surrounded by people who would not focus on anything but the football. Which was always the case. It was a safe environment. I tricked myself into believing this was proof, the fact I was at the game, that there was nothing wrong with me. Work continued to degrade. The cracks had reached the brickwork and the foundations were about to collapse.

The paranoia leading up to the event in 2006 was unlike anything I had experienced prior. I've been on a dance floor in a club surrounded by gargoyles and followed by black helicopters, but dark and twisted trips on hallucinogenic drugs and the proceeding come down is one thing. This was altogether something completely different. No matter where I was and what I was doing, I felt I was being constantly watched. Not in some clandestine sort of way. Just this unexplainable fear that they knew I was living a lie and that they were waiting for me to implode. I felt I was under constant scrutiny when spoken to, even when walking down the street. Standing in a queue in the post office took monumental effort. Even picking up the phone to talk to someone. Anything where I had to confront other people. All too much to handle.

Those cracks were now becoming obvious to those close to me at work. Easy to hide from friends and family, not so easy when spending eight hours in the office.

I had panic attacks, but brushed over them as just being nervous rather than an ever growing fear. Further embarrassment followed, again, mainly to do with the paranoia and not being able to adapt to simple work tasks. Embarrassment was replaced with anger. I started to lash out (verbally - although I also had fits of rage usually involving punching walls and trashing furniture). At home, I was struggling with sleep more so than ever. Night terrors and sleep paralysis when my eyes did happen to shut, insomnia at all other times. Which meant sitting up all night thinking about it all, attempting to somehow keep up that pretence but unable to do so. I had myself for company and I could not handle it. Gone were all the distractions.

Eventually, I was sent home from work. I don't know what it was I said or did, but it was enough for my manager to ask me  to best take some time out. That weekend, I left home the one time, to go to Upton Park and watch us lose 2-1 to West Ham. I even found time for food poisoning that evening. I was not eating well, so it's laughably ironic that the one time I do I get sick off it. More so considering half our players were equally sick that morning. I returned to work only for things to progressively get worse very quickly. I was given a phone number, asked to call it, then see a doctor and get signed off from work.

That's basically the moment of the event in 2006 that finally had me in that escape hatch ready for launch. Sadly it took a breakdown for me to propel forward. Spent the best part of a year off work, numb on anti-depressants and beta blockers and talking to a psychologist/psychiatrist (I forget his title). I remember one moment during the process of being signed-off when a doctor (he was to assign the case to said psychologist) asked me how I was feeling. A stupendously stupid question if I'm honest. What exactly and how exactly am I meant to react to that? I was obviously f***ed beyond the point of standard sanity, looked like sh*t and he wanted to asses me by asking for my opinion on how I felt? That's the opinion of someone who spent years avoiding the truth, other than the activities that played out to aid that distance between the lie and reality. I told the doctor I was paranoid. He told me I could not possibly be paranoid if I was admitting to being paranoid.

"A truly paranoid person does not claim to be paranoid. They simply believe they are being followed or watched or that someone or something is out to get them".

It was an open invitation to lash out and I did, stating that he was also in on it and that nobody not even someone assigned to help me was willing to help and that he was simply part of the laughing crowd staring at me from the corner of their eye. Or something to that tune. I guess that was enough for him to get the ball rolling on treatment.

The sessions with the psychologist went well. Took a while. The problem when you hide behind a persona created to fool not just others but yourself is that you end up having to lie in order to protect the actual lie. Took a while to break through the various layers.

He told me to continue to follow football and to continue to write and partake in forums. Which I did. This helped because I was then asked to write down how I felt and it was an easier way to convey certain emotions that had been trapped for so long. Even if it (football/forums/blogs) all felt as inconsequential as anything else in my life at the time, although football was a distraction and so was writing about it - and in both instances, the only two things that any sane person would parake in (compared to how I was behaving at all other times).

I continued to cheat actual genuine social participation, face to face. One step at a time. Once I was able to write down my thoughts, I progressed from there and was able to talk up front about them. I continued on the prescribed drugs. I even made a breakthrough outside of the treatment, admitting to my parents (my mother more so than my father) that I was off work. She asked if it was a breakdown, I answered yes and never quite went into any details. She never asked. She was simply there for me. It was enough for me to be around family. It was the first time in a long time I felt I wanted to be and was comfortable in doing so. I continued to work through what was required to get back to normality, whatever that was meant to be.

Eventually I was back at work, healthy and drug-free as well as more adaptable to being around groups of people. Not so much cured, but in more control than I had ever been. Without the compulsive lies and expensive life-style.

I meet my missus soon after. Have an 18 month baby daughter. I'm still a paranoid person, I'm fully aware of that fact. I guess its easier to tag it as having a nervous disposition. If I'm completely and utterly out of my comfort zone and beyond something I can't control I'm still prone to losing it with an additional panic attack cameo. I continue to be a difficult person to get close to, but that was always the case made worse by the difficulties I had. Everyone has some type of sh*t in life they need to overcome and my experiences make me neither unique or special. Just another number in the system.

So why the transparency? Always said I write for therapy and that I do so for myself and hope others will enjoy my sometimes raw, fractured and never perfect musings. During the times when I was locked up inside my own home not wishing to breathe the outside air, I sat sometimes in front of a computer and punched away at the keyboard. Another distraction, but one that helped me in the end. I've never quite presented myself with closure in terms of my online existence. One or two people that know me will read this and will find themselves in the know for the first time. I apologise that talking straight, face to face, is something that's not quite been a possibility as I've always struggled with words if they are not written down. I'm hardly the most articulate in spoken form. And it still remains a struggle, as cited many times, to open up when in person.

So gone are the credit cards, the loose women, the whores, the class a drugs, the hallucinations and insomnia, the crippling paranoia and the rest of the depressive crap. My life is my family and football is my escapism. Music and porn the safe way to escape further if required.

I opened up in the end to the right people that allowed me to fix myself, much like I'm opening up now via this blog. Could not give a f*** about the stigma of admittance in the public domain. I wanted to share this and that's what I've done and don't require patronising or a pat on the back. This is simply for the people who have dedicated as much time reading this blog as I have working on it. That epiphany I had out in the sun was to simply be true to myself and that's something I've almost lost my grip on very recently. Almost. Nothing ground breaking that epiphany, but in practice, it is.

If you've got this far, thank you. John Crace, thank you too.

Anyone who has skipped through it and then rants about the lack of football/transfers/pop-up adverts...the back button should be up in the top left hand corner of your browser.

 

Reader Comments (55)

In my experience everyone has messed up and is messed up at different times in their lives. One of the few definite things I have learned is to try to find the right balance in everything you do and that is not as easy as it might sound. Good luck to you. COYS !

Oct 1, 2011 at 9:38 PM | Unregistered Commentercoys

Wowsers Spooks. I can relate to more of that than you imagine, me too also now in the real unforgiving world. Spurs as usual, keep us real. Always a pleasure.

Oct 1, 2011 at 9:44 PM | Unregistered Commenter@White_HeartLane

amazing honesty - good luck to you - i dont know you but i know that your escapism (the bloggin) entertains me more than you know - good luck with everything you do...

Oct 1, 2011 at 9:45 PM | Unregistered CommenterCOLSEY

I read the entire post. Jesus didnt see that coming.I can empathise with you though spooky as i too have climbed out of the abyss, drugs, alcohol whores(the free variety) extreme violence (could never afford hotel rooms or the paying of whores). I appreciate your honesty. I enjoy your blogs immensely as do countless others and I am glad to know you have found happiness and overcome your demons. They dont go away ever but its being able to handle them that counts. I too have a wife now and beautiful daughter. Life is sweet. coys etc

Oct 1, 2011 at 9:56 PM | Unregistered Commenterjohnhalloween

Howdy Spooks, welcome back! Holiday went well then?

On the subject of book-writing that would be an interesting story to get down on paper? Has a very Hunter S. Thompson vibe about it.

It's interesting in that position (and everyone has been there to some degree at some point in their lives, no matter how poor/rich or privelidges/disenfranchised) the things that people cling to and not surprised that football was it for you. A testament (no matter how fucked up you were or thought you were) that there is a basic and primal sense of tribal connection to something as silly as '22 men kicking around a ball'.

Glad you came through it and continued to share your thoughts here with us (though some of your wilder flights of fantasy make a bit more sense now, was this before your 'Bunjevcevic killed me with a lightsabre' phase)?

Anyhoo only the small matter of 'Just another game in North London' to come now. you going?

Oct 1, 2011 at 9:57 PM | Unregistered CommenterMark

Good on ya Spooky, that took bottle!
Mal

Oct 1, 2011 at 10:14 PM | Unregistered CommenterMalSpur

Spooky, thank you for this blog, I always read with great interest to whatever you write on this blog some hilarious and some outragousely genius, don't take this as patronising I know it seems like it over the Internet and you are very welcome .now, Let's fuck ars*nal over.

Oct 1, 2011 at 10:18 PM | Unregistered CommenterJack

A manly pat on the back. Stay well.

Oct 1, 2011 at 10:18 PM | Unregistered CommenterOldSpur

always the quiet ones isn't it? still waters run deep and that's reflected in the writing. always the quiet ones.

Oct 1, 2011 at 10:33 PM | Unregistered Commentertrembly

Spooks, that was the best peice of writing you'e ever done. Only 4 peices of work you've ever done have made me comment. This was life afirming in the best way.

Oct 1, 2011 at 10:33 PM | Unregistered CommenterPauihasissues

respect
keep up the good work.
patronising and a pat on the back? sorry!, but meant sincerely.

good luck to you, always enjoy your writing, no matter the subject.

Oct 1, 2011 at 10:34 PM | Unregistered Commentergringospur

ps. you had me at Lanzarote

Oct 1, 2011 at 10:34 PM | Unregistered Commentertrembly

Your Ephipany: Thank you for that

I have myself gone through a very rough time over the last six months and the only thing that's kept my focus most of the time is the release that is THFC. You have been unwaveringly honest. You show everyone what it means to love your club through thick or thin and how much it has meant to you - thick or thin.

Good luck with the blog - I follow and enjoy - I know what a release it is also to write
And we need to DO them tomorrow don't we?
COYS

Oct 1, 2011 at 10:50 PM | Unregistered CommenterAngus

Wow... That's some deep shit right there, I bet it felt great to get it all written down and out there, stuff like that can really eat you up inside.

I never post, I just read, but I find your blog one of the most entertaining on the interweb... Hope this article gives you some sort of closure on that part of your life.

Keep on keeping on...

Oct 1, 2011 at 10:56 PM | Unregistered CommenterStrangegravy

You say you're not good in public, but having read your blog for a few years now, I think you'd be a great person to have a beer with, for what it's worth.

Oct 1, 2011 at 11:00 PM | Unregistered CommenterSpanish Spur

Panic attacks! Spook.....I took eveything on the chin, night terrors, voices, paranoia, ( I once flipped out in M&S due to a fcuking poster!! But panic attacks bent me all outta shape.......Fcuking hell that was a class read.

COYS

Oct 1, 2011 at 11:01 PM | Unregistered CommenterWisky Tom

Probably the best blog you have ever written. And that is saying a lot! You need to go on vacation more often. Thanks for sharing.

Oct 1, 2011 at 11:12 PM | Unregistered Commenteryangler

Your blog is essential reading for any Spurs fan, Spooky.

Dear Mr Levy and the Fighting Cock is great stuff, reflecting what it's like, and just what it means, to support Tottenham Hotspur . And you're right Spooky, Vertigo by John Crace is a fantastic book.
COYS.

Oct 1, 2011 at 11:15 PM | Unregistered Commenter.

As I read this i shed a tear as i am going through the roughest time of my life and i cant see a way out because as soon as i do something else slaps me in the face and sets me back. I understand the sleepless nights the paranoid aspect. I fear the post arriving or the door bell. Ringing in case of more bad newd. But the only time i ever get to forget about the horror is at spurs. At spurs everything is good then the final whistle and the dread comes back. I feel as if noone understands

Oct 1, 2011 at 11:20 PM | Unregistered Commentershadowthfc

Wow. Thanks for the honesty, Spooks. Takes some serious guts - and like most comments, sorry if this sounds patronising, but a pat on the back is the least you deserve.

On another note, it's amazingly reassuring to see so many people going through similar problems. Reassuring again that the problems are similar to my own, too.

COYS and best to all.

Oct 1, 2011 at 11:31 PM | Unregistered CommenterLiam

COLSEY said everything I would have said. Good luck in the future, we will all be watching you (as possible on Dear Mr Levy)

Oct 1, 2011 at 11:38 PM | Unregistered CommenterIcelandic spur

I know you said you dont want any pats on the back but man you most certainly deserve one good stuff out of you always read your blod havent commented in a long while though jesus felt compelled after reading that. Once upon a time I was fooked up on drugs ho's and booze but I turned it around and never looked back. In a world of bull shit and fakeness it is so refreshing to see honesty and thats real honesty in whatever shape it takes. So many people have gone through and come out the other end like you as the old saying goes you dont really know what goes on behind closed doors. Everyone goes through shit at some stage in their life Im happy that youve found the one thing that will keep you being yourself (apart from Spurs of course :-) ) your missus , daughter and family & friends these are things that count in life keep sight of that and you wont go far wrong. Fair play to you!!! hopefully other people going through something similar will read this blog and take heart from it and they should :-) Now lets stuff them gooners tomorrow and stuff them good! lol

COYS

Oct 2, 2011 at 1:06 AM | Unregistered CommenterTopyid

Thanks Spooky
Low self esteem haunted me and had me taking anything that would ease the torture. Found peace in AA.

Oct 2, 2011 at 2:02 AM | Unregistered Commentercookiebun

Thank you Spooky, total respect, keep up the great blogging.
P.s. Just bought Vertigo on kindle, looks like a great read

Oct 2, 2011 at 2:06 AM | Unregistered CommenterJersi

Spooky,

Respect!

Oct 2, 2011 at 7:28 AM | Unregistered CommenterScalytomato

Glad to see you back, Spooky!

Oct 2, 2011 at 7:29 AM | Unregistered CommenterNordicYid

Thanks for sharing Spooky! I'm sure many of the readers will use this piece as a part of their own therapy.

Oct 2, 2011 at 9:33 AM | Unregistered Commenterelwehbi

Great to see someone claw their way back. Now, go ahead and enjoy... day by day, one match at a time, plenty of good life left.

Oct 2, 2011 at 9:35 AM | Unregistered CommenterSam-I-Am

I don't often post but always look forward to the blog Spooky. You sir, are a grade A, first class Yiddo.

Glad you've come through it all and like others on here, I can certainly see parallels with my life.

Football took a backseat during my drugs period. So much so, that the 91 cup win went by hardly registered in my head. Silly really, but I remember the mid-eighties Spurs team better than that of the early nineties.

Luckily, I got through it all. Didn't end up in therapy, I just realised that I didn't ever want to stare down at a river at 8 in the morning, on no sleep, wondering if I should just do everyone a favour.

Likewise, nowadays my mrs, my step-daughters and Tottenham keep me sane.

Can't wait for this afternoon, couple of beers in the sun, then singing my heart out in the park lane and (hopefully) watching us smash the fuck out of Woolwich.

Yids! Yids! Yids!

Oct 2, 2011 at 9:57 AM | Unregistered Commenterfrontwheel

Good on ya for getting through it.

Oct 2, 2011 at 10:34 AM | Unregistered Commenterhenry

Not much to add that hasn't already been said. Amazing read Spooky, all the best to you and the family.

Oct 2, 2011 at 11:15 AM | Unregistered CommenterCase

Thank you for your openness Spooky. Your post will bring much relief to many, and hopefully encourage others to be open about the reality of their lives. For some, the pain/torment never leaves, only a spark of joy now 'n' then can bring relief, something to cling onto.
As others have said," Tottenham is the Anchor in our lives".

Oct 2, 2011 at 1:38 PM | Unregistered CommenterHigh on THfC

Fucking hell Spooks that was beautiful. What a amazing piece of writing. Feel for you on a lot of it. COYS

Oct 2, 2011 at 2:01 PM | Unregistered CommenterSnarf

@ shadowthfc

laurancefitzsimmons@live.co.uk

get in touch mate!

Oct 2, 2011 at 2:36 PM | Unregistered Commenterwisky tom

Brilliant Spooks. Not the easiest time for me right now, made better by this blog and a 2-1 fucking of Arsenal. Much love

Oct 2, 2011 at 6:37 PM | Unregistered CommenterBear

Thanks Spooky... Just thanks!

Oct 2, 2011 at 7:55 PM | Unregistered CommenterBenjoss

Thanks, Spooky. For everything. It's a bit ironic that this blog was your "therapy", and yet it's allowed so many others to heal... Like you, I have recently discovered a new high (my 13 month old daughter)- what a trip! COYS.

Oct 2, 2011 at 8:46 PM | Unregistered CommenterCASpur9

Bravo Spooky. I hope you continue to find yourself. It couldn't have been easy to open up and let the whole world into your private life.

Oct 2, 2011 at 10:44 PM | Unregistered CommenterIaG

meh.


;)

Oct 3, 2011 at 2:21 PM | Unregistered Commentertricky

A really interesting read, and I'm glad you let it all out. I come to this blog because this is not just mindless Spurs ranting (although that too is great) but references some of the rest of life, and from people who have real personalities. So thanks for a very honest and personal account of your past, it was extremely readable.

Oct 3, 2011 at 2:37 PM | Unregistered CommenterBen

respect spooky.

(now where's that "back button" you talking 'bout?)

Oct 3, 2011 at 4:57 PM | Unregistered Commentertonyblue

Been there in many ways.
Written something like this many times and deleted it.
Laying in my hallway crying my eyes out having been at work for almost a month, yes, actually sleeping & eating in the office was my nadir.
Respect.

Oct 3, 2011 at 6:35 PM | Unregistered CommenterSpursSimon

Much respect man, having been suffering from anxiety attacks and mental health problems that lasted 4 years, I can relate to much of that.

Oct 3, 2011 at 11:45 PM | Unregistered CommenterMadchef

Maybe not looking for a pat on the back etc but inspiring words spooky. I admire your honesty

Good luck with everything, something about children changes some, my boy is 7 soon and can honestly say he changed my life. Class a free for almost 8 years, not something I saw coming in my twenties.

Oct 4, 2011 at 12:02 AM | Unregistered CommenterDiaz

Been reading DML almost from the start and that was your best ever blog Spooky. What a way to put a positive on a negative. Keep going man. You've inspired me to write more and maybe pay a bit more attention to those hiding a tough time. Peace

Oct 4, 2011 at 1:08 AM | Unregistered CommenterMaddySpurs

We are all broken brother, in one way or another we are all broken.
Well done for lifting your head, admitting how and why you are busted, many in this world never do that. Keep taking it day by day and for you, your missus and your child, I wish you a safe and happy journey to wherever you may end.
Peace.

Oct 4, 2011 at 1:25 AM | Unregistered CommenterParkLanePhil

Not a pat on the back as you don't want, but for people that have dealt with depression (mine was much like yours, although a much quicker onset), it's good to know that we're not alone. I've been reading this blog for 3 years and never would've thunk that your were in that bad of a spot. Good to see you've turned it around. Cheers man.

Oct 4, 2011 at 2:46 AM | Unregistered CommenterLouisvilleSpur

good man. a better man now mate

cheers

Oct 4, 2011 at 8:29 AM | Unregistered Commenterstuckonthegrid

just want to say i agree with all the above , good luck and thank you for proividing me (and others) with the joy of your blog and especially for this article. It prob helps you in writing it but it also helps others that read it.

Oct 4, 2011 at 8:41 AM | Unregistered Commenterbelgian spur

Btw after reading the comments , seems we are one strange breed of people , the DML readers. I could relate to the article a lot , having had (and still have but to a lower extend) the same kind of periods in my life. But to see that i am by far not the only one takes the edge out of things.

Way better than those pesky self help groups where you need to get all emotional and cuddly. I prefer brutal honesty and realism , thats what you provided.
Not the hallmark way of moving forward but the real human way.

Loads of respect to you and others suffering from the same strain on their lifes.

This articel truly embodies AUDERE EST FACERE.

Oct 4, 2011 at 8:47 AM | Unregistered Commenterbelgian spur

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