Personal Issues / Agony Aunt Thread

Question: I would describe myself as the living embodiment of two well-known fictional heroes/antiheroes, both called Walter. The first being the world-famous fantasist Walter Mitty and the other the wannabe villain Walter White from the drama Breaking Bad .

I have always lived in my head and as a child I often daydreamed of being a soldier, a superhero or an Olympian. I know that this is relatively normal for children, but, as life progressed, the amount of time I spent fantasising has increased greatly. I am now in my late thirties and, unlike my alter egos, I see myself as relatively successful in my real day-to-day life.

I completed both graduate and postgraduate degrees, without much effort, and have progressed really well in the career of my choice, have a beautiful wife that I love and two amazing children. I have also had a number of sporting achievements with local clubs.

Nonetheless, I spend hours every day, mostly during my two-hour commute to work, in different worlds that I have created in my mind. Though it is not just when I am driving that this happens – when I go for a run or spend any time on my own, I drift off. Over the course of time the content of my fantasies have changed, I no longer daydream about curing rare diseases or saving people from harm, it is much darker. I often conjure up thoughts of being a producer of adult pornography or an international drug dealer.

For the first time ever, I have started to find myself acting out on these fantasies . I work in the financial sector and had put mechanisms in place to commit fraud . I stopped myself just before it was too late, but I am now scared that in the future I will go too far.
I do not know how to stop these thoughts.

Answer: You describe very well the trajectory your fantasies have taken, and you have a very good awareness of the potential danger you now face in terms of acting out these creations. Fantasy serves a huge purpose for human beings and it allows us to play around with different identities and roles in our minds.

The hero fantasy may feed into our desire for greatness and help us to see a need in the world that needs attention and we may stretch ourselves to serve something big or noble – but that is usually a very different experience to childhood fantasies. It is interesting to see what adult fantasies are arising in you. Could it possibly be a need to rebel, to challenge the norms of society or to break out of the structure you have set for yourself? If you are getting to the point of exposure, these needs are becoming very pressing and demanding and require some real attention.

Of course, you will not be alone in dealing with the consequences of any acting out of your fantasies and perhaps this is what has stopped you so far – love is indeed very powerful in terms of calling us to protect others. But your desire is demanding your attention and if you do not face this you will, in all likelihood, end up with a situation where you could do something very damaging. It is urgent that you seek out psychological help so that you can untangle the threads of this lifelong pattern and gain some understanding of what lies behind this compulsion. It is entirely possible to have fantasies, and for them to be enjoyable without the threat of them destroying your life. It is the putting them into reality that is the cause of serious concern.

People’s sexual fantasies span a whole range of possibilities and in fact, these days, shame is more likely to be associated with having “vanilla” fantasies rather than the more edgy options. We are able to understand these and even have ways of acting them out in contained, safe ways (think the TV series Bonding) but we also know that acting out our sexual fantasies in unconstrained ways can be damaging for ourselves and others. If you want to curtail the possible pitfalls in your acting out, you first need to understand your fantasies, to have open conversations where all the pieces are investigated and accepted.

It is probable that your partner needs to be part of this dialogue so that she can be compassionate and supportive in helping you get to grips on this issue. This might be very difficult for you and perhaps some one-to-one psychotherapy can assist you in figuring out how you might find a way of telling the story in a way that makes sense to you and include her as you work things out going forward. At the very least, this exploration with a therapist will help you discover your unconscious drives and desires and make you more intelligible to yourself and this should offer you more self-awareness and choice in any actions you might take.

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There’s something oddly familiar yet contrarian in his letter. Two kids, financial sector, sporting achievements, thirties etc. Then the 2 hour commute knocked theory 1. Experienced TFK sleuth @Smark will have to spend an hour or two eliminating suspects.

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You’re ruling him out?

Hmm… a lad who fantasises about super heroes …local sporting achievement…talks of producing porn …If he’s here we’re looking for a guy who posts about Superhero films , proactive in a thread dedicated to photos of women , lives a two hour commute form Dublin and is involved in local sports …can you think of anyone pal?

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Nope.

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@cluaindiuic ?

:open_mouth:

@cluaindiuic has a 1.5hrs commute to Dublin so we’ll have to tentatively rule him out.

I’d appreciate some advice, surely somebody here in the know.

I have a neighbour that I’m very concerned about, middle aged woman with previous mental health/psychiatric issues, mother has passed away in the past few months and she is now living with her brother who has DS.
She has been acting very very strangely recently, I won’t go into specifics on the worst of it, but she has completely cut herself off from all the neighbours, as if she’s really cross with us all, when she walks she ignores your salute and will completely turn her head, same when she’s in the car.
She has two other siblings who don’t seem to have much to do with her, I think she has driven them off now. It is my guess that she’s on meds that she’s not taking.
Myself and my wife just grabbed the bull by the horns and called down (we would previously have had a good relationship, my wife is extremely social), we called to the door with a gift of a plant and biscuits,
The door was ajar so we knocked and called her name, she fucked us out of it, told us to go away and slammed an internal door.
We’re both quite worried, what can we do in this situation, we don’t want her locked up, but nobody seems to be looking out for her,
Who do we contact, it’s a terrible situation.

Thanks, genuine replies only please, it’s not a funny situation
Myself

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I’d ring a professional and without giving specifics give them the story… They’ll ask far more pertinent questions and give you the lowdown for other red flags that you won’t get here.

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ask a professional is the short answer

even call the Samaritans who will point you in the right direction

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surely one for mental health SWD

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Is there a local mental/psychiatric nurse you could contact or a friendly GP

Maybe try a day centre who might guide you - edit I see this is North Cork so not sure if you need different number

The trend is not to lock up but to treat in community - they’d be used to dealing with “reluctant patients “

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You seem to have tried your best here pal on your own so I only see a few options left.

1.Do nothing further and hope things work out ok. I dont think that option will appeal to you.

  1. Contact the other siblings and outline your concerns.

  2. Contact a professional, District Health Nurse or local GP maybe and alert them to the situation.

It’s a fairly dangerous situation imo from the little I know about it and it’s obviously not ideal to have someone with serious mental health issues looking after someone with DS.

I’d be inclined to do something anyway rather than possibly regret it later (not that you haven’t tried your best as it is).

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Or try here:

They deal with that type of patient ongoing and should be able to point you in the right direction.

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Not so simple it seems.
We’ve been active in the past couple of hours, HSE website and advice from a human rights solicitor that we know is to contact community mental health services, we contacted the Roxboro branch and they’ve told us that we need to get her to a GP, this won’t be an option, she won’t even look at us, we have contacted the GP office where we think she is registered but they closed at 1pm today (FFS)
I suspect that we will have to ‘rat her out’ as in give her name and details to social services and hope they do the right thing, but i suspect they’ll do very little and take their time doing it.

I thought that TFK might have somebody with experience in this field. We’re a bit stumped now.

Local Garda or even a priest maybe might know. They’ll have seen this before.

All you need to do is find somebody who knows the “way into the system”

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Call the Gardai if you’re worried about harm

Was going to say, do the Garda do welfare checks here?

I dunno bud. I’m sure they’d swing by if self harm or harm to others was mentioned