When the Signals Break: Grief, Schizophrenia, and Learning to Love Anyway

Love departure

A personal essay on mental illness, relationships, and the slow work of becoming.


There is a particular kind of loneliness that does not announce itself loudly. It does not arrive with sirens. It arrives as a quiet phone screen. No messages. Just targeted advertisements pretending to know you. Just the hum of a life that feels like it is happening to other people.

This is not a story about being dramatic. It is a story about what happens when a mind is wired differently, when a heart loves genuinely, and when the world — which was never really built for people like this — does not know what to do with either of those things.


The Alarm With No Fire

Schizophrenia is poorly understood, even by people who think they understand it. The public image is loud and cinematic — voices, violence, chaos. The reality is quieter and, in some ways, more disorienting.

One of the things schizophrenia can do is break threat perception. The brain fires a danger signal — physiologically convincing, felt in the chest, real as anything — but the source is not dangerous. The person standing closest to you, the one who has never hurt you, gets processed by a misfiring system as hostile. As a bully. As someone running a game.

It is like a fire alarm going off in an empty room. The alarm is real. The fire is not.

For someone living with untreated schizophrenia — especially in a context where mental health is stigmatised, where resources are hard to reach, and where people around you do not understand what is happening — this is not a minor inconvenience. It reshapes how you see every relationship. It makes safety feel suspicious. It makes calm feel like the quiet before something goes wrong.

And because the illness is invisible, because it does not look like what people expect illness to look like, the response from others is rarely compassion. It is usually blame.

They're crazy. They're unstable. They're making excuses.

There is a particular cruelty in being publicly labelled and gossiped about for symptoms of an illness you never chose and, at that point, had not yet been given the tools to manage. It is blaming someone for bleeding from a wound that nobody helped them treat.

What those people called weakness was actually an untreated medical condition. What they called manipulation was a brain sending false signals to someone who had no framework yet to question them. What they called attention-seeking was a person quietly drowning who had not yet learnt to ask for a lifebuoy in language others could hear.


The World Was Built for Someone Else

The social model of disability makes a simple but radical claim: the problem is not the disabled person. The problem is a world designed around a narrow idea of normal — neurotypical, able-bodied, financially stable, socially fluent — that pathologises everyone who falls outside it.

This is not a comfortable idea for people who benefit from that design. But it is honest.

Wanting love, family, identity, and belonging is not a disabled person wanting too much. Those are human wants. The fact that they feel perpetually out of reach for people with mental illness, neurodivergence, or chronic conditions says more about the architecture of society than it does about the people reaching for them.

The people who seem to have it together are mostly hiding their mess more effectively. Everyone is struggling with something — trauma, doubt, sin, fear, loneliness. The difference is largely visibility. Disability makes the struggle visible. That visibility gets punished in a world that rewards the performance of wellness.

And yet — the social model does not mean nothing is your responsibility. The barriers are real and external, and you still have to navigate them as best you can. Both things are true at once. The world failed you, and you still have to find a way to move through it.


Compatibility Is Built, Not Found

There is a popular idea about romantic relationships — that somewhere out there is a person perfectly compatible with you, and the work is simply to find them. Compatibility as destination. Love as a matching exercise.

This idea is probably responsible for a great deal of unnecessary heartbreak.

A more honest framing: compatibility is built. Not found. Two imperfect people, choosing each other sincerely, and voluntarily changing for good — together. Not testing each other like products on a shelf, but committing to the slow, unglamorous work of becoming better alongside someone.

This reframing matters most when you consider that even the most admired figures in human history had partnerships that were complicated, that involved betrayal, inconsistency, and failure. If perfection could not protect those relationships, then the search for a perfect match is probably not the right project.

What matters more is shared intention. Are both people facing the same direction? Are both people willing to try — genuinely, not performatively?

Treating a relationship as amanah — a trust, a responsibility — changes what you are actually doing. It is no longer about what you extract from another person. It is about how faithfully you carry your responsibility toward them. That is a harder standard than compatibility-testing. But it is closer to what lasting relationships actually require.


What BPD Looks Like From the Outside

The relationship this essay draws from, obliquely, involved someone with Borderline Personality Disorder. BPD is another condition that is widely misunderstood and disproportionately blamed on the person who has it.

People with BPD often struggle with identity consistency, emotional intensity, and a profound fear of abandonment. They can experience faith, love, and commitment deeply and sincerely — and then lose access to that feeling entirely, not because they were lying, but because the disorder disrupts the continuity of self that most people take for granted.

Watching someone you love cycle through that is painful and confusing. It is easy to feel like the closeness was never real. It is easy to feel gaslit — not because the person intended to deceive you, but because their internal experience genuinely shifted in ways they could not always control or explain.

Extending compassion to that, seeing the genuine intention underneath the inconsistency, is not the same as excusing harm. It is recognising that a person struggling with a disorder is not purely or simply their disorder. Deep inside the cycles and the shutdowns, there is usually someone who genuinely wanted something real.

Intentions matter. In Islamic tradition, the Hadith is clear: actions are by intentions, and every person will have what they intended. Whatever was genuine in that relationship — the shared hope, the agreement to walk toward God together — that intention was real. The disorder that disrupted its expression did not erase it.


The Day After the Breakup

There is a detail worth sitting with.

The day after — or close to it — after the relationship ended, the person this essay quietly describes walked into a GP clinic for the first time. Accompanied by a younger sister. Reached out for mental health support for the first time in their life.

That is not a small thing.

The relationship ending broke something open that needed to be broken open. The grief cracked a door that had been closed for years. And instead of retreating, instead of collapsing entirely, something moved — toward help, toward honesty, toward accountability.

Out of that appointment came a referral. Out of that referral came a psychiatrist. Out of that psychiatrist came, eventually, a diagnosis. Schizophrenia. Finally named. Finally something to work with instead of something formless and confusing that everyone around you kept calling a character flaw.

This is not a redemption story with a clean ending. Diagnosis is not cure. Awareness does not immediately fix what the illness disrupted. But naming something is the beginning of being able to work with it rather than being worked over by it.

The relationship went wrong. It also, indirectly, started something important.

Both things are true.


On Grief and Antidepressants

Grief is not the same as depression, though they can coexist.

When numbness lifts — when medication starts to recalibrate the brain's chemistry enough that emotions can actually move through you again — grief can feel like it is getting worse. Suddenly you can cry. Suddenly the loss is felt rather than just registered. Suddenly missing someone is not an abstract fact but a physical sensation.

That is not the antidepressants failing. That is the emotional system coming back online. The pain feels more acute because you are finally feeling it rather than being blocked from it.

Crying about something that mattered is healthy. It means the thing was real. It means you are not permanently disconnected from your own experience. It means the medication is doing something, even if what it is doing, in the short term, is allowing the grief to actually grieve.

Let it.


What Remains

Here is what does not disappear just because a relationship ends, or because someone says you are no longer part of their life:

The sincerity with which you loved. The compassion with which you tried to understand someone whose condition made her hard to understand. The honesty with which you named your own beliefs and boundaries, even when that naming had a cost. The courage it took to walk into a clinic, heartbroken, and ask for help for the first time.

None of that is cancelled by an ending.

You do not need to be remembered by the person you loved in order for what you did to have mattered. Memory and meaning are not the same thing. She does not have to acknowledge it for it to have been real. Your experience does not require her validation to be true.

The mistakes were real too. The patterns learnt from a world that taught you love was a game — those patterns caused damage. Acknowledging that is not self-punishment. It is clarity. And clarity, paired with genuine repentance and the intention to do differently, is what growth actually looks like. Not perfection. Not the absence of failure. Just the honest reckoning with it, and the slow turn toward something better.


A Note on Mental Health Stigma

Mental illness is not a moral failing. It is not something a person deserves to suffer from, to be mocked for, to be gossiped about, or to be excluded over. The structural failures that make treatment hard to access — the stigma that surrounds diagnosis, the healthcare gaps, the communities that respond to difference with cruelty — these are the things worth being angry about.

The person with untreated schizophrenia who acted strangely before they had any framework for understanding their own mind was not a bad person. They were an unwell person in a world that did not help them and then blamed them for the symptoms of the help they were not given.

That framing matters. Not as an excuse for everything. But as a more accurate account of what actually happened.


Still Here

A flat life after an intense one does not mean a finished life. It means a life in transition. The middle of something always feels like the whole thing. It is not.

The capacity to love genuinely, to extend compassion to someone whose disorder made her difficult to love consistently, to walk toward God quietly and sincerely without coercion or performance — that capacity does not disappear. It waits.

It waits for the grief to finish its work. It waits for the signals to recalibrate. It waits for the right conditions, the right person, the right moment when the door opens again.

Two imperfect people. Choosing each other. Sincerely. Voluntarily changing for good.

That is still possible.

It is still worth wanting.


Written from lived experience. Some details are deliberately generalised to protect privacy.


Kalvin Carefour Johnny