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Have you ever been to a psych ward/mental hospital?

  • Yes

    Votes: 20 69.0%
  • No

    Votes: 9 31.0%

  • Total voters
    29
Halfhourdays

Halfhourdays

Arcanist
Mar 14, 2025
487
If so, please tell us how you got there (voluntary, involuntary, related details) and any interesting stories from your stay.
 
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Lo$t95

Lo$t95

Hello Darkness my old Friend
Jul 16, 2024
224
Was there a few times same place months at a time between the ages of 15 (failed attempt) and as recent as last year. Always the same blur of medication and queuing for meals waiting on seeing the team of doctors "experts" and specialists.

Other people in there were very hit and miss. They talk about themselves constantly and exhausted me for the most part feeling like they were just venting their problems at me. Some of them were unique or interesting in some way or just cool/deep people to talk with and have real conversations with.

There were some serious conditions in there as well which was unnerving. Dissasociative Identity Disorder / Multiple Personality Disorder. Paranoid schizophrenia and some I suspect were sociopathic but too young to be sent to a prison etc

Having a torch shone on you every hour while trying to sleep and being locked on the ward made me really claustrophobic and I overall I hated the place and always left in a worse position than when I came in.

Never again.
 
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Crow_88

Crow_88

Student
Dec 30, 2024
182
They were both involuntary and the food was surprisingly good. Honestly, I didn't even realize I was in a psych ward either time. Slow brained. The first one we could wear our clothes. The second one we had to wear a hospital gown. In the second ward there was a guy there with massive cuts on his legs he'd done and he bled all over. That was pretty intense.
 
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W

whywere

Illuminated
Jun 26, 2020
3,156
I had my local police show up, my mental health provider thought that something was amiss, he was right, I was starting a suicide attempt, and the police were HORRIBLE! One of the cops looked at the other ones and said something to the fact: "well at least we do not have to clean this one up" and ALL of them had a HUGE smile on their faces, just so heartwarming! NOT!

Then when they dropped me off at the hospital, the psychiatrist on duty barked at me to do this and that, no smile, no hello, just a VERY stern attitude and I was supposed to do whatever she said with no questions. Well, I had questions, and she turned around and left.

Now the next day a deputy sheriff showed up at my room and dropped a HUGE pile of paper on my bed and walked off. When I picked up the head page it said that the state was taking me to court and wanted at least a year long commitment at a state-run mental health facility. I was informed by some of the other patients that since I did not just roll over yesterday when I got there for the psychiatrist, she wanted me to put away, how nice of her!

I had to go to court, walk through the lobby of the hospital with a deputy on each side of me and having the whole lobby of people staring at me and be taken to court. In the court room I had to go toe to toe with legal folks and I won in a way. I did not have to go to a state-run place, BUT I had to do an IOP 14-week stint and 6 months of a weekly meeting with a mental health provider. Thank heavens that since it was court ordered; the state had to pay for everything.

I HATED the psych ward so much, bad food, bad nurses and I hope to never have to have that experience again ever.

Walter
 
headphones

headphones

Member
Feb 10, 2025
35
Involuntary.

Interesting things? Not really, unless you can be more specific.

They're horrible, horrible places. Loud, cold, and complete chaos. Who is in control? Apparently no one, and yet the doors are locked and the key holders make all the decisions.
 
Lo$t95

Lo$t95

Hello Darkness my old Friend
Jul 16, 2024
224
I had my local police show up, my mental health provider thought that something was amiss, he was right, I was starting a suicide attempt, and the police were HORRIBLE! One of the cops looked at the other ones and said something to the fact: "well at least we do not have to clean this one up" and ALL of them had a HUGE smile on their faces, just so heartwarming! NOT!

Then when they dropped me off at the hospital, the psychiatrist on duty barked at me to do this and that, no smile, no hello, just a VERY stern attitude and I was supposed to do whatever she said with no questions. Well, I had questions, and she turned around and left.

Now the next day a deputy sheriff showed up at my room and dropped a HUGE pile of paper on my bed and walked off. When I picked up the head page it said that the state was taking me to court and wanted at least a year long commitment at a state-run mental health facility. I was informed by some of the other patients that since I did not just roll over yesterday when I got there for the psychiatrist, she wanted me to put away, how nice of her!

I had to go to court, walk through the lobby of the hospital with a deputy on each side of me and having the whole lobby of people staring at me and be taken to court. In the court room I had to go toe to toe with legal folks and I won in a way. I did not have to go to a state-run place, BUT I had to do an IOP 14-week stint and 6 months of a weekly meeting with a mental health provider. Thank heavens that since it was court ordered; the state had to pay for everything.

I HATED the psych ward so much, bad food, bad nurses and I hope to never have to have that experience again ever.

Walter
I relate to the shitty nurses so much. Like some of them get off doing that job - it's a power and control thing for them. They lack compassion and treat you in a way that basically humiliates you.

"Open your mouth so we know you swallowed your medication"
"You can't have your razor blades you need to give to us and request when you need them"
"We noticed you were awake all last night and haven't eaten so the doctors said you have to stay on ward until he's back from holidays and changes your meds"

I wanted to stab myself in front of her in the cafeteria out of spite.
 
grapevoid

grapevoid

Arcanist
Jan 30, 2025
483
I've been twice.
I once voluntarily went to an "access" center when I knew my SI had become very real, and not just a thought as it had always been.
The second time was somewhat recent, in early December when I attempted with a gas set up and somehow jacked it up after passing out. I don't know a lot about what happened/how I got the hospital etc as I had just gassed myself so it was spotty, but after I was "stabilized" I was transferred to UNI which is the neuropsychiatric institute where I live. I stayed for l think it was like 5 days then was released into a 12 week extensive outpatient program that I completed not long ago.
 
Alo the obvi alien

Alo the obvi alien

Planner
Jun 20, 2023
457
Yes, I have but ultimately I don't want to go again. My mind is fading but i remember the first time was involuntary and I wasn't actually planning on CTB. But the didn't believe me (though I had a backpack full of clothes).

And i don't remember if it was the last one time or two, but they were voluntarily and I don't know if I could say I was believed or helped. But by the time I got there, i didnt. They thought the switch up was weird and I couldn't explain why i didn't go through with it. So they took it as crying for attention. And I get it. I fucking do nothing right.
 
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Apokryphiel

Apokryphiel

Forevermore
Mar 23, 2025
69
I've been there so many times throughout my life, it's almost comical. Aside from mental evaluations and a few close calls, though, I haven't been since turning 18.

As for the reasons, it was never really anything special - just self-harm and other things which were a result of my parents' abuse, along with the fact that they would have just thrown me out on the streets if they could, which surprisingly led to me landing a few stays due to my parents manipulating the story just to get rid of me.

I never stayed long, as it seemed that even if you were showing suicidal ideation, you just had to act like you were normal for a few weeks, and they'd let you go. The system is a joke; you're nothing but a paycheck to them.

A part of me wants to give it another shot voluntarily just for the fun of it, despite not believing in the mental health system at all. But there are unfortunately a few things I just can't go without that they wouldn't let you have in there.
 
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Rymrgand

Rymrgand

From now on, there will be no more darkness
Jan 5, 2025
230
Once, voluntarily. My psychiatrist asked me if I wanted and I accepted.

It was pretty terrible. The place itself was nice, tbh. Clean, warm, with boardgames and books and decent food. Better than my house lol. The problem was the workers. A lot of them were insensitive assholes and had no idea about their job. I felt completely powerless, like I had no rights. The doctors were okay, but I barely saw them.

About the patients, some of them were nice. Some of them were old, some were really ill, but I met some young people with similar problems to me. I even had my first kiss with someone there.
 

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