Living with Depression on the “Inside”

 

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There are a lot of memes and jokes going around in these isolating times that beg the question, “what day is it?” For me more specifically however, I find myself wondering “what minute is it?”

This emotional roller coaster that is this time in our lives is taking me on an experiential ride that is literally morphing moment to moment. In one breathe, I’m so exhausted that I am crying over the dishes that are sitting crusted and begging for a wash. In the next, I’m pondering the ominous pile of laundry that I’ve walked past for days without any will to address. There are times I’m laughing like a child about an old memory that I’d love to time warp into, and then suddenly I’m moved by the beauty of my own child and his innocence in all of this. And there is this moment I am in right as I write this, where I’m tearing up recalling all of the moments in my life that are both beautiful and tragic – stirring up both old, stuck trauma and elation and joy at the same time.

What I’m beginning to understand, is that this emoting is fluid, like the tides changing effortlessly with water temperatures that seem to always be too hot or too cold – never that bath water I long to melt in for hours. No, these waters are uncomfortable and painful, and if I bathe in them for too long, I feel like I might die.

I have what has been diagnosed as a consistently low level of serotonin in my brain. Serotonin controls the “happiness” and “uplifting” feelings. The reason I use the water analogy so frequently when discussing emotion is that often brain chemicals have been described to me as such. My therapist once said the brain is like a bathtub with a drain, filled with water. Imagine the water in the bathtub is serotonin (happy/peace). Depression occurs when the drain the in the bathtub is not operating at full function, leaking tiny bits of water all of time. It also occurs when the faucet that refills the tub though exercise, vitamin D, or anything else your body does to create serotonin, is not free-flowing. I have a leaky drain and a faucet that cannot keep up…thus my bathtub is never full. Likely, it never has been. I’ve probably been operating with low-levels of serotonin my whole life (depression) and it wasn’t until the birth of my son that I actually received this “diagnosis.” What a relief – I’m not just a miserable bitch!

Clearly, as with any personal essay, I can only speak to and hold space for the way depression has played a role in my life, and how it feels to me. If you have been diagnosed or think you may have clinical depression, I stand with you in solidarity and compassion. I know that not all experiences with mental illness can be paralleled with others. But I’d like to think that even though each experience with mental illness is as unique as the individual, we are not alone in our struggles.

So back to my own journey… I was diagnosed with clinical postpartum depression following the birth of my son. One night I was alone with him when he was only a few months old. My husband was working late and I had a day that I actually have no recollection of. I just remember putting Marcus down in the other room and sitting on the edge of my bed – some Bravo reality show on mute on the TV in front of me, my mind racing to what action I could take to hurt myself. I needed an action that would cause a lot of pain, but not kill me. I thought about the knife rack in the kitchen, and how I could cut myself in a way that wouldn’t be too bloody because I was too tired to clean that up. I was exhausted. My brain started going through the scenarios, then out of nowhere a voice in my head simply said “stop.” I awoke slowly from my hazy planning and I texted my therapist. He called me immediately and started asking me a series of questions to evaluate if I was suicidal or in any harm of hurting my baby. I passed the test, which is to say he stayed on the phone with me until my husband came home. I went to his office the following day, and we came up with a treatment plan. I was prescribed a serotonin inhibiter to fill my bathtub back up in hopes that I might begin to live a life less burdened by the “heavy.”

To be clear, I was always functioning – but the operations of life were very difficult for me. Little tasks felt insurmountable, I was endlessly tired (compounded by the exhaustion of new motherhood), and I was just surviving. With a lot of support, medication, and yoga, I found a way out from under the heaviness that seemed to be embracing me for as long as I could remember. About a year after I started my meds, I weaned off of them with the close monitoring of my therapist, armed with fresh tools and a new internal healing I had worked tirelessly for.

Today I am trapped under the “heavy “once again. What I have learned since being isolated in my home for several weeks, is that I am an extrovert. I know that’s a big “duh” for those who know me well. I’m not huge on labels, and I have never identified with much that defines my “personality.” That’s not to say I am not connected to myself. I have a deep knowing of me, and I suppose I am now getting a crash course in leveling up that understanding. So, yes – I am an extrovert and I get a lot of my energy through the exchanges I have with other humans throughout my days. I love the “how are you” with cashiers, the “what a beautiful day, right?” to the random passerby. I live for the trips I take to be with my friends and family where we laugh and exchange stories of our current lives and bask in the warmth of our sacred memories. These human connections lift me up and get me going. Since being home, I am not getting that energy. I am sad.

I do have a husband and child I live with. We aren’t really “shooting the shit” over daily musings (one of my favorite things to do). Rather, we’re having transactions about sustaining and operating our lives on the inside. My husband is an angel, but he works harder than anyone I know, and he can’t give me a deep level of connection right now. A note to you married people – be mindful of your energetic needs and how your partner’s needs may vary with lower bandwidths right now. It’s so hard to be everything to everyone…ever. I have so much compassion for how my partner has to manage is own life and work all at the same time. I also have to accept that he is an introvert!

So…I am lonely. I am sitting alone, moment to moment, feeling “all the feels”, and my work is to ride the waves and not let the emotions marinate in my own fibers – or worse, drown me. Emotions are seasons, not micro-climates. They are meant to enter into our bodies to awaken us to different aspects of our lives and beings. Then ideally, we release them and have gratitude for their teachings.

Right now, I am having a hard time moving the emotions in, around, and out of me. They are lingering, sitting heavy on my heart and in my brain, and making me tired. My drain is leaking, my faucet is not running, and my bathtub is only half-full of ice-cold water.

I am in FaceTime therapy every week; my therapist and I talk about what I am going through and she helps me to stay present and remain kind to myself. She urges me to stay present in my sadness even when it’s painful, breathe through it, and thank if for waking up that part of me. She reminds me to honor the feeling – cry, rest, stomp my feet, rest, take warm baths, rest, hug my son. She lets me know that I am not alone and that my self-dialogue must remain in a voice of kindness and compassion so as to not judge my experience. Rather, simply let it be so that they can do their service and move on. “Take care of yourself first, Tira.” I need that reminder.

I love to help and be of service to the people I love, but sometimes the scales tip too far away from me and I find myself depleted and unsupported. Supporting myself is my biggest lesson when managing my depression…especially during these times.

I am currently seeking guidance to go back on medication. I am no hero and I have no ego regarding taking help. The thing that’s tricky for me is asking for help. So, if you take anything from this, it’s to ask for the help and support you need. Is it a hug? Do you need help putting the kids to bed?  An open ear, or maybe just a space to be vulnerable and authentic with the people you love and trust most? Whatever you need, ask for it. And please, from me to you, take care of yourself.

Whats self love got to do with it?

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Unconditional love is a concept highly sought after by humans. The idea that we could find someone to love no matter what. The trick to the idea of “unconditional” is that “no matter what” includes loving under any circumstance: being badly hurt/mistreated, distance in time and space, unmet or ignored needs, betrayal, judgement… When I really began to examine love in unconditional terms, well, it’s a tall order. Experience has taught me that conditional love is more comfortable. I’ve had many friendships/relationships end because together, we weren’t meeting one another’s expectations and so it was easier to move on than to fight for the love.

What I’ve recently learned, is that to purely love another being or thy self, no matter what, is where true connection lies. I’m beginning to awaken to the possibility that to learn how to love to myself will set me free and create beautiful, meaningful relationships in the process.

Let’s back it up though, this wisdom and pondering of love was actually born out of a truly ridiculous circumstance. I write this today, squinting a bit, because I can’t quite see clearly out of my right eye. My eyelid is taking a temporary reprieve from its normal duties to rest under the unintentional (leaking), toxic, penalization of its acting muscles. You read it right, my eyelid is actually paralyzed, because of toxins, that I intentionally injected into my face, because I was hoping that shooting said toxins into my face, would somehow make me more beautiful.

Here I have two very interesting sets of circumstances; the need for something to make me feel more beautiful, lovable really, and the hope of cultivating true unconditional self-love. And while I thought I had the ladder figured out, I’m beginning to question whether or not this ‘self-love” rhetoric that’s moving through social media and touted by the likes of Oprah and Gwyneth, has come without certain limitations or caveats, for me anyway.

I remember being a little girl who lived for getting dressed up. I wore a dress every day and when the weather was too cold in the Colorado climate in which I was raised, I struck a deal with my Dad that I would anchor pants under any said dress. No matter what, I insisted on wearing a dress, preferably in a hue of purple. I’m not sure where this idea came from? I know that some of my earliest memories of being in public with my Mom where filled with strangers stopping us and saying “what a beautiful little girl!” “Look at her in that dress!” What came first; the compliments or my keen sense of feminine styling? All I know is, that from an early age I began to correlate that looking “good” would allot me a certain level of positive feedback and what I perceived to be love.

I can recall my Mom brushing my hair for hours…I learned how to blow out my own hair by the age of six. That’s right “blow out,” because my natural curls where for some reason in need of un doing; their natural ability to flow needed to be controlled and set into a certain place, to perform a certain way. Yes, that’s a metaphor …the ritual I was performing on my hair laid the foundation for how I started be.

Throughout my life I have presented my body, clothes, personality, interests in a way that I’ve felt (through years of feedback and domestication) would garner me love and acceptance. I assumed, that love was contingent on my meeting certain needs for others/myself and expectations from society. Thus, I have made it a full time job to maintain my beauty, weight, fun personality and now, youth, in order to remain loved.

I have recently been reminded by my spiritual teacher this truth, “I have value simply because I exist. My value as an individual is immeasurable.” This truth applies to EVERYONE.

I have been working on loving and accepting myself for years, but this reminder was really needed recently after the whole eyelid incident. So, if we are put on this earth to simply be and contribute to the world through our uniqueness and individually miraculous contributions, why is it that so many of us learn at an early age to not honor that individuality? I can’t believe it’s as simple as media projections and societal expectations… I’m sure these elements of influence have been around in some form since caveman, but if our truest purpose is to just exist, why are we bending over backwards to in-authenticate our experiences?

The answer for me goes back to those early years in the lavender dresses and the perfect blowouts. It seems simple, but I can trace the feedback that led me down a belief system that love is conditional and acceptance is earned through beauty and a sense of ease (especially for woman). I started receiving messages about my personality, appearance and likability from the time I’ve had awareness about my social place in the world. Up until very recently, I decided to match that feedback with the careful curation of my appearance. And up until 8 weeks ago, when I paralyzed my face to the point of temporary blindness, I started to white knuckle my physical youth.

Let’s be clear, I don’t think the importance of physical appearance (health, style, cleanliness) is without merit. If you know me, you know I love clothes, because it’s my form of artistic expressions. The value of this discussion is in encouraging my fellow humans to step back and ask ourselves how all of our choices are making us feel? Do our choices feel good because they enrich our experiences or are they feeling necessary in order gain acceptance or an outcome? Am I paralyzing my face because I truly feel that a wrinkle-free face is aiding my peace and happiness or because I want to post a “perfect” picture on social media for validation?

I’ve also been taught that suffering is derived from needing “things” to be different than they intrinsically are. So why do we feel so comfortable identifying with suffering and always striving for this “better?” What if what is (within ourselves/who we are) is just enough? I’m sorry for all of the rhetorical questions, but I am truly curious!

Not being able to physically see has given me the clearest vision I’ve ever had about myself and my need for unconditional self love. My currency in this world has little if nothing to do with the lines on my forehead or the pounds around my waste. It is true that we live in a society where being thin and beautiful is associated with success, love, adoration, attention and ultimately power. But if we can go back to this truth; we are valuable and powerful simply because we exist, and we choose to truly believe in this truth, what magic could come of that?

What if we spent less time in the mirror and more time within ourselves cultivating ultimate acceptance and true love that is absolute? What if we rewarded little kids with feedback about their acts of kindness and contributions instead of their appearances and outfit choices? We would all probably find, at least a little peace and create thoughts that center more around love and less around fear.

If I am always loving; myself, you, everyone (on some level), aren’t I creating all of the beauty that the world really needs? I tend to lean towards, yes.