- Joined
- Mar 11, 2017
Well, yeah, that's the catch with prescription medication. You have to take them as prescribed. Someone as manic, delusional, and autistic as Pixy cannot be trusted to take them responsibly of her volition. She's incredibly unstable right now.
Pixy would probably do best in a group home where she can be supervised to take care of herself, where someone can teach and assist her how to develop skills or concepts such as nutrition, cooking, and even teach her about proper hygiene care and how that affects your health when ignored. Clearly she was failed there by both her mother and the education system. At least this way, there would be someone who would properly supervise her and make sure she's getting the care she needs because their paycheck/job depends on it. This all might sound over the top for her needs, but honestly, I don't think so. She's so out of touch with reality to the extent that she possesses a severely childlike personality and perception of the world for someone at the age of 39. I'm curious to know how much of her time is spent just daydreaming.
Even an inpatient or outpatient program where Pixy's entire day, entire weeks were blocked out and scheduled by the hour with different activities similar to school, that structure and routine would probably really help her reach a nice rhythm of stability and predictability in her day-to-day life. It's really not just autistic or neurodivergent people who benefit from routine, either. I've worked jobs where my schedule was all over the place and it can make life a lot harder to handle, especially when you're living on your own.
I think it could be beneficial. But she'd have to stop crying about how everyone and everything is harming her.
As for the daydreaming, I think she envisions herself as her skinwalks a lot. Even when she's not in cosplay she still wears the lenses. She really needs someone to peel her away from her dependency on cosplay. It's not a hobby. It's an obsession.