FOCUS ON A BROKEN SYSTEM
Albuquerque JournalMay 11, 2018
Writing has always been a way of healing for
That includes when the Santa Fe-based performer struggled with her own mental health and, especially, the country’s system of care for those with mental health problems.
From the early ’90s until about 2012, during which time she lived in
During that time, she wrote short shows or one-act performances as an outlet for her frustrations with the mental health care system.
“One of the things I saw was things getting worse and not better,” she said. “Because they were having less and less resources.”
And after doing some research, she said she’s realized the quality of mental health facilities for people like her — without much money and no insurance — hasn’t improved much since then.
Now, Scott has written her first full-length play, a “truish” story based on her experiences.
“Flight Plan,” a dark comedy about four people who have been admitted to the Sunnyland Sanctuary Mental Ward for low-income patients, is making its premiere at the
“From the get-go … you are just, ‘Oh, this is not a good place,’” said
“It’s not a place of care or healing or anything positive. It’s just an adult day care with medication.”
Over-prescribing of psychiatric medication was something Scott says she experienced during her time in and out of mental health facilities, and it is a problem she wants to bring to light with the show. Her play also puts focus on a lack of compassion among some doctors and nurses, who can often be overwhelmed and overworked, as well as stigmas about mental health.
“I don’t want to say that everyone in the mental health system is bad,” said Scott. “I truly don’t believe that. I believe the mental health system is broken.”
What saved her, Scott said, was a transition to alternative, non-medication-dependent therapies. She also cites Santa Fe’s affordable
Arianna is based on Scott’s personal journey, she said. The other characters are all based on people she met during treatment, including Celia, a woman who is diagnosed with borderline personality disorder; Bernard, who is suffering from grief-induced dementia after the death of his wife; and James, a young man who has a slew of issues, including obsessive compulsive disorder and an eating disorder.
The Sunnyland staff — Nurse Hammer and Dr. Fraued, an intentional combination of fraud and Freud — are described by Scott as exaggerated versions of problematic mental health professionals. They are meant to show the big-picture flaws that exist within the system, according to
Adding comedic elements to the show, according to Scott, was a way for her to tell her story and still make it watchable for an audience. What also helped was letting go of her “shame.”
“I don’t feel like it’s something I need to hide anymore,” she said.
With its twists and turns, Scott describes “Flight Plan” as leaving the audience with a glimmer of hope. She wants people to leave the show with more compassion for the mentally ill and thinking about the need for the
“And I definitely think this is a play that can start a conversation,” said Irving. “And people are going to go home and discuss ‘Does that really happen? I don’t know.’ And they’ll look it up and see that it does. And that can’t be bad.”
IF YOU GO
WHAT: “Flight Plan”
WHERE:
WHEN: Thursday-Sunday until
TICKETS: