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Schizophrenia Bulletin logoLink to Schizophrenia Bulletin
. 2016 Jan 12;44(3):468. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbv222

The Hammer: Something to Ignore

Jason Jepson
PMCID: PMC5890470  PMID: 26757753

I try to walk every day. Occasionally I clean up the trash on the side of the road. You never know what you are going to find. Today I didn’t take a bag to put the trash in, because I felt the sidewalk would be clean from the last time I picked up the trash. However, while walking along today, I found a hammer.

I picked up the hammer and held onto it for a moment thinking: There are a few school bus stops on this road. There is a high school a couple of blocks away. I kept walking with the hammer thinking that I didn’t want one of the kids to get hurt by the hammer.

Sometimes I feel like Boo Radley, the character in Too Kill a Mocking Bird, who was a recluse. I don’t like feeling this way, so I try to be friendly to my neighbors saying, hi to them and smiling.

I continued walking with the hammer in my hand to the intersection and back like I usually do. Only usually I’m not carrying a hammer.

Usually when something different occurs in my life, it triggers my mind to start wandering. I wouldn’t call it a hallucination, but just an image in my brain. In this case I saw a police car stop in front of me. A policeman tells me to drop the hammer and get on my knees. He also tells me to put my hands on my head. I thought all of this could be occurring while my neighbors were watching me.

When images or thoughts like these show up, I ignore them but that doesn’t stop them from happening. Maybe it is the product of being a quiet dreamer.

I finally arrived on the hill where my apartment is and waved over the maintenance crew, who drive golf carts.

I told them I found the hammer on the street, and I didn’t want kids to hurt themselves. They took the hammer, and drove away. I did this while still thinking that I might get arrested. However, the police never came. I also has the thought that maybe someone has stolen my hammer which was in my tool bag in my apartment. When I got back to my apartment, I checked my tool bag thinking surely the hammer would be gone, but my hammer was still there.

These thoughts do not mean that my medication is not working. I understand that my meds may not take care of everything, all the time, and sometimes it doesn’t take care of all paranoia. But I can ask myself questions to determine if this is reality or my “unreality.”

Schizophrenia is like a heavyweight fight, but it will not knock me out. It might cause me to have things to ignore or beat down inside me, but I will not react to a delusion unless I have real evidence that it is true.


Articles from Schizophrenia Bulletin are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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