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No easy answers on Brandon Marshall

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Brandon Marshall is falling down.

It’s a late-summer practice on a predictably steamy afternoon in Bourbonnais, and thousands of Bears fans line the field to catch a glimpse of the player wearing No. 15.

Never before has the crowd seen a Bears receiver quite like this.

In his blue practice jersey that features Nike’s swoosh logo on both shoulders, Marshall is easy to track as he sprints toward the end zone. The first thing one notices is his impressive size – 6-foot-4, 230 pounds – that dwarfs opposing cornerback Tim Jennings by 8 inches and 45 pounds. The second thing one notices is his never-ending arms, packed with muscles and covered in dark tattoos.

Bears quarterback Jay Cutler certainly notices.

As Marshall approaches the right corner of the end zone, Cutler spirals a pass toward where he expects his receiver to be moments later. But as Marshall turns toward the ball, he loses his footing and falls backward toward the grass.

Somehow, it doesn’t matter.

Somehow, Marshall extends those arms and reels in Cutler’s pass high above his head a split-second before falling on his backside. In bounds. For a touchdown.

It’s a practice touchdown, but still.

“He makes it pretty easy,” Cutler says. “I think you could probably throw to him.”

These are the happy moments.

But what about when plays go awry? What about when games are lost?

Because Marshall, who joined the team in March in a trade with the Miami Dolphins, is not only one of the most accomplished wide receivers to wear a Bears uniform. He also is one of more than 50 million Americans who have a mental illness.

Marshall, 28, has borderline personality disorder, or BPD.

It’s a life-changing diagnosis that cannot be condensed to a couple of paragraphs. But it means that Marshall exhibits at least five of nine symptoms that indicate a pervasive pattern of instability in personal relationships, self-image and emotions.

It means that a misstep is possible, even though Marshall receives treatment.

“If he is diagnosed properly, he’s got quite an uphill battle to be on a team in a high-stress situation,” says Dr. Timothy Hayes, a licensed clinical psychologist at C&H Counseling Solutions in Crystal Lake. “The more pressure we’re under, the more it pulls us to the extreme of our coping mechanism.

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