D is for Depressive

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A disproportionate level of irrational anger. That is what I feel right now. I can feel my blood pressure rising. I’m having difficulty focusing. Why? Because my boss dumped a new project in my lap that I believe to be a pointless waste of time, and the work required is tedious and mind-numbing. And I just can’t bring myself to do it. Every time I try to take the first step, I have a nearly irresistible urge to just run outside and scream. But this project is not the issue. My anger is. Why can’t I just get over it like a normal person and get down to work? Maybe because I am not a “normal” person. I have a mental illness, Borderline Personality Disorder, of which one of the hallmarks is “inappropriate displays of intense anger or rage, and difficulties controlling anger.”

But the anger won’t last. It will first turn inward then mutate into hate – self-hate. What is wrong with me? Why am I so pathetic? Why can’t I just be normal? Why am I so lazy, selfish, childish, ill-humored, ugly, etc.? Why am I so worthless?

just alive

And there’s the heart of my depression for you. I feel like I bother people just by being alive. I feel like a burden to those I love.

I was first diagnosed with Major Depressive Disorder while still in college, though in truth I think it developed in middle school and has roots going back to just 4-years-old. My father died when I was 4, the age my son is now. My mother just died in May, and so I am getting to witness first-hand a 4-year-old’s understanding – or lack thereof – of death. I know that if I died now, my son wouldn’t really understand. All he’d know is that mommy was always there for me, and now she’s gone away and won’t come back, and doesn’t she love me anymore? And so even though my dad died and that was certainly not his choice, I think my 4-year-old brain processed it as abandonment. In fact, I even remember thinking during my elementary school years that, if he had loved me enough, my dad could have beaten the cancer and stayed with me.  But I just wasn’t enough for him.

Or my mother. She checked out when he did. She neglected me and began a pattern that repeated several times in my life – the main woman in my life leaving me for a man. First, my mom neglected me and let my stepfather abuse me. Then my sister, who had become my primary caretaker, left me for her boyfriend (later husband). In college, two different female lovers left me for men. And though my wife assures me constantly that she has no intentions of leaving me for anyone of any gender at anytime, there is a part of me that waits for the day she comes home and tells me she’s leaving me for some Tom, Dick, or Harry.

And so at 4 my intense fear of abandonment (a primary BPD symptom) and my feelings of worthlessness/never being good enough (a primary MDD symptom) began. But it wasn’t until the depression paralyzed me and made me non-functional in college that I was diagnosed. I had struggled with my emotions before, but this was my first debilitating episode. I’m not sure what triggered it. It was my last semester, and I think I may have just gotten overwhelmed by the huge change that was about to take place upon graduation. Suddenly, I couldn’t eat. That amplified my motion sickness, and I was taking two different classes that required travelling to museums, theaters, concert halls, etc. I found myself too sick – or too afraid of being sick – to go. I was sure I was going to fail. I couldn’t handle seeing my friends or even talking to them. I had a single that semester, and I would lock myself in my room and unplug my phone because I couldn’t even handle hearing the messages on my answering machine. I’d sleep fitfully. Then I’d become too antsy at the thought that they could just drop by and knock on the door, so I’d leave and pace alongside the railroad tracks away from campus and the lights of the town. I knew my behavior wasn’t normal, but I couldn’t stop it. Well, I could think of only one way to.

I had my sister come pick me up and take me back to her house in my hometown, hoping it would help. It didn’t. So I called the suicide hotline in the front of the phone book. That led to my first meeting with a psychiatrist, my diagnosis, a prescription for antidepressants, and a commitment to a short term residential unit, which I ended up leaving against medical advice. I opted to return to school with my meds and just see a counselor instead. I stabilized enough to finish up the semester, graduate, and continue living my life, but I’ve never really been the same since.

It’s hard to explain what depression really feels like to someone who doesn’t have it – it’s not just feeling sad or having the blues. Those are normal feelings, normal reactions to the loss of a loved one, relationship problems, or even stress at work. And they are temporary. My depression never really goes away. I have better days and worse days, but it’s always there, lurking.

depression-is-like-cancer

For me, depression is worse than cancer. I was diagnosed with cancer (endometrial adenocarcinoma) in 2006, and I assure you that the emotional fallout of that was far worse than what I had to go through physically to eradicate the cancer from my body. Even after I was pronounced “cancer free,” the depression remained. And the cancer made me question everything – the very meaning of life itself. I was an English teacher, and before the cancer, it felt like what I did was of the utmost importance. You see, I saw myself as not just a teacher of English but a teacher of life. I began to feel like a fraud. And I began to “phone it in.” I began doing a shitty job, and it was noticed. It took two years of declining job performance, but I was finally called to the principal’s office, and I freaked out. I knew I had to change or I would be fired, and I knew I couldn’t change. My wife was on the other side of the country for work. I couldn’t bear her disappointment in me. I didn’t know what to do. I decided to make our garage airtight, sit in the car, and turn it on. I also planned to take the entirety of my recently refilled Ambien prescription just to be safe. But I called my sister. And she called my wife who was on the next plane home. This was followed by a trip to the ER, placement in a 30-day program, and a prescription for far better antidepressants at the maximum possible dose.

And I’m better than I was before. I quit teaching and am in some ways happier working my silly 9-5 office job. I make decent money. I have reliable car and a nice house. I have my devoted sister. I have my beautiful warrior wife and my awesome son. On a normal day, I’m actually pretty happy . . . but happiness and depression are not mutually exclusive.

When I’m in a down phase, I forget what happy feels like. All I know is it – the depression. Sometimes it’s like a separate entity from me. Sometimes I just see it as blackness. Sometimes I see it as Pitch from Rise of the Guardians . . .

pitch

. . . turning all my glittery, golden dreams into nightmares. Other times I see it as The Nothing from The Neverending Story . . .

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. . . always waiting to pounce, driving out all light, happiness, and joy and replacing it not with bad things but with something far worse: nothing. Emptiness. Meaninglessness. Pointlessness. Hopelessness.

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Luckily my son remains a shining light on my darkest days. But I fear there will come a day when I can’t see even his dazzling light. What will become of me then?

 

C is for Cancer

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As I mentioned in my Bitch post, the crab that symbolizes Cancer could not be more fitting for me. I have this hard exterior that is difficult to penetrate and claws that hopefully frighten away any potential threats, but these are all defense mechanisms — “the world is a scary place to Cancer planets—they’re emotionally vulnerable, sensitive, and easily hurt.” I’m just trying to keep people from getting to my tender, delicate insides which can be so easily ripped apart and devoured.

Cancer is a water sign, and “Water Signs are emotional, empathetic, receptive and feel things deeply.” Water signs are also susceptible to mood swings, and  I don’t know how much of it is my Cancerian nature and how much is my depression, but I am quite moody both in the sense that I am given to gloomy or sullen moods and in the sense that my moods can vary quickly and sharply. I tend to be very happy or very sad and can go from one extreme to the other in a heartbeat. And despite the fact that I try to practice an “attitude of gratitude” and really don’t have much to complain about, I am also prone to bouts of self-pity that quickly morph into bouts of self-hatred.

But my emotional and empathetic nature is also a big part of what makes me a good friend, sister, wife, and mother. I believe all of my friends and family would call me a good listener. In fact, my friend Dave one time said of me that when I’m talking with someone, I make him or her feel like the only person in the world.  I can count my true friends – you know, the ones you’d rush over at 3am to help or comfort – on one hand, and I like it that way. I need it to be that way. I devote myself so fully to my friendships that a few intense friendships are all I can handle. Because my friendships are intimate and intense, there is almost nothing they could do that I couldn’t forgive and forget. My dearest friend from college (and my birthday twin!) and I went years without speaking, but when we finally met up again this spring it was as if not a day had passed.

Speaking of my birthday, my 39th was on June 27. While most people seem to want to go out for their birthdays, I happily spent most of the day in my own home with my sister and wife & son.  But then “Cancer . . .  is all about home.” Home is my favorite place to be and the only place I can be completely comfortable. Home is, of course, not a particular house, but wherever my heart — my wife and son — resides. My wife and I have been together 16 years, and I truly believe we will be together until the day one of us dies. Though I know they say no one expects to get divorced, I would be truly shocked if my wife and I ever split. Few things could shock me more.

Now I know that to some, hearing a female talk about having a wife screams “non-traditional,” but, except for having matching genitals, we are about as traditional a couple and a family as you can get. Though we both work outside the home, she is the primary breadwinner. She also takes care of the house and vehicles and lawn. She’s also the one to take our son fishing, play catch in the yard, and teach him the fundamentals of hockey. I, again true to my Cancerian nature, am the one to nurture his emotional needs, soothe him when sick or injured, and get him off to sleep at night. I am fiercely protective of him . . . and of her . . . and of my sister and my friends too. Though I often have a hard time standing up for myself and, like most Cancers, tend to avoid confrontation, come after my family or friends, and I will go all mama bear on your ass. But “Maternal instincts are typical of the Cancer.”

It is somewhat ironic for me that “The sun enters Cancer on or around June 21, at the summer solstice” because my favorite time of year is Halloween through Easter both because I hate the heat of summer and because I love all the traditions surrounding the holidays. One of my favorite phrases is every year as in every year I get one of those personalized Christmas ornaments from one of those little kiosks in the mall and every year we go to Halloween at the Y. Many of my favorite childhood memories come from such yearly traditions too – like the way my mom would allow us to open one present before midnight mass (which would always be a new dress to wear to mass) and then Santa would come while we were at church and we’d stay up until dawn opening presents and playing with our new toys, conveniently falling asleep just about the time my mom needed to get up to prepare Christmas dinner.

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Traditional, home-loving, and emotional – that is the Cancer, and that is me.

 

These Are My Breasts

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brittalexisc's avatarbrittalexisc

This is my hair. Sometimes, my husband is behind me, passionately pulling it. Sometimes, my sleepy baby’s fingers are entwined in it. Most of the time, it’s pulled back, out of my face – so I can do yoga, cook or clean without it bothering me.

This is my mouth. Sometimes, it’s used on miscellaneous parts of my husband’s body. Sometimes, it’s kissing my son on the forehead while he sleeps. Most of the time, it’s simply used as my most basic form of communication.

These are my hands. Sometimes, they are touching my husband or myself in a sexual way. Sometimes, they are holding a tiny toddler hand with love and protection. Most of the time, they’re doing dishes, folding laundry, changing poopy diapers, or even writing a blog to get my feelings out.

These are my breasts. Sometimes, they are in my husband’s hands; it feels good when…

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