I Need To Take Care Of Me Right Now.

…is one of the phrases I’d often heard said, usually in the context of a TV series making some self-help-addicted woman look really selfish, and which suddenly made perfect sense during my last shrink appointment.

I need to take care of me right now.

Because self-sacrifice is all fine and dandy until you’re on your deathbed, regretting all the wasted opportunities you gave up on for someone else. Who probably didn’t even ask you to.

Because resentment is good for absolutely nobody.

Because just reading job offers – “Assistant – Master’s degree and at least 2 yrs exp minimum – 3 month part time contract.” is enough to make me want to curl up in the corner and rock myself gently until the day is over and I can go to sleep and forget.

Because the smallest setback – spilt milk – can trigger tears these days, and I’m having trouble functioning.

Because I have no fucking choice.

Not that you’d notice. We had a hallowe’en party last night, and I bet absolutely none of the guests guessed (LOL) that I was depressed (TRIPLE RHYME COMBO YEAH!!!). That’s because I was on a Revelation High since the shrink appointment on Wednesday. I still am. Because I’m extremely lucky, in that my partner (despite being a phone monkey and wanting desperately to quit his job) has enough income for both of us, and after discussing it post-Revelation, has agreed to allow me a few months in which to concentrate entirely on all my creative activities. Starting with NaNoWriMo.

So yes, for about forty-eight hours I didn’t feel depressed AT ALL. I went to the station to get our also-depressed friend M, who was in a pretty normal state, and we nattered cheerfully about our experiences in depression and watched TV until Honey came home and made us cocktails. We spent the evening playing instruments. The next day we did pre-hallowe’en shopping, cleaned the flat, prepared food, moved tables, and then three of our friends turned up to help decorate. I carved my first pumpkin (we never did that when I was young) and then the sweets came out, and we put on the special hallowe’en playlist I’d made, and another guest turned up, and we started eating and drinking and the party got gently underway.

More guests arrived around eight-ish. It was a pretty calm party, in that there was little dancing and we could hear each other talk, but it was by far lively enough to be enjoyable. Not everyone knew each other, but they all got along fine.

As it got towards eleven, I got tired. Alcohol does that. My antidepressants are mild and herbal enough that there are no counter-indications against drinking, but maybe that contributed. I changed into my pjs and spent another half hour listening to the talk and occasionally nodding off. I was about to go when I noticed our friend outside the window with his head on his knees. So I went out to see how he was.

“You ok?”

“I’m fine.”

I knelt down and hugged him, and he started sobbing quietly, so I kept hugging him until he stopped. It took about fifteen minutes. My bare feet got really cold. I was shivering. I knew this, but alcohol thickens the wall between me and my senses, which was an advantage right then, so I just stayed there feeling stoical and stroking his head.

At some point Honey came out to ask if we needed anything, went back in and brought me socks, then left us to it. And M began to speak.

He really had just gone out to get a breath of fresh air, and hadn’t expected the tears. He’d been surprised and embarrassed when they started. He honestly was over his ex (who was in the living room) and hoped she didn’t feel like it was her fault he was in this state, because it wasn’t, it was his own, he was really sick of being unable to control his emotions and reactions and it was weird because he was, like, the opposite of a control freak, he hated being given control because he was terrified of making mistakes, he preferred to let others make his choices for him; but that was paradoxical because he also hated not knowing what was going to happen next, and he hates being paradoxical like that, he knows he’s a good person and really wishes he could stop judging himself and build up his self-esteem again because it’s detroying his life…

I nodded along with it, because although those weren’t my problems, I knew what he meant. I occasionally mentioned something my shrink or Honey or someone else had once told me, that I thought might make sense to him, if not now then later. I told him he had to accept the feelings in order to let them pass. I told him it would get better.

Some time later, when he’d wound himself down and was just melodramatically repeating what he’d said earlier, I recognised that he’d had his say and now it was the drink talking. Honey chose that moment to conveniently turn up and say someone was asking for me, and took M back inside. I said my goodnights and went to bed.

The next day, I felt odd about what had happened. M hugged me a few times in the morning, and said thank you several times, I said “any time”, because that’s the right thing to do.

The problem is that the right thing to do doesn’t really correspond to my “Taking Care Of Me Right Now” thing. And that’s a problem, because although I don’t feel like it all the time, I am depressed, and a depressed person is probably not the best confidant another depressed person could have. I’m pretty sure that if M decides to confide in me all the time, I’m going to have to say “stop” very soon, because although I love him very much, I can’t handle it right now. And he can’t handle me breaking down while he’s breaking down either.

I think this is what people mean when they say you need a “network” to help you through depression. Honey is part of both of our networks, but he lives with me, so M can’t count on him too much, or we’ll drag him down with us. M doesn’t live with anyone, and has trouble confiding in his parents. He doesn’t want to worry anyone, and lives 50 miles away from us anyway.

I thought about this for a while, and came to the conclusion that the best thing I could do given the circumstances was to encourage M to confide in other close friends. To build up his own network of people to prevent him falling down that black hole. I felt satisfied with this solution until I realised that I wasn’t doing that either. So far I’ve been depending solely on Honey. I have few friends here, and I don’t feel close enough to them yet to confide in them about this kind of thing.

It doesn’t matter. I speak to my mother over Skype almost daily. Honey’s mother knows I’m on medication and called the other day to ask how I was doing. One of my best friends told me off the other day for not telling her I wasn’t doing too well, and insisted I talk to her when I’m upset, even if she doesn’t understand. Technology means I can create my own network, and if I don’t want to drag Honey down with me, I have to. Taking Care Of Me Right Now is not a selfish sitcom cliché. It’s an obligation, and I have to find people to help me do it.

Bad day

I like how the title defines the core subject of this article.

I have a headcold. It’s like a normal cold only with a headache. Actually it’s mostly headache – thankfully – because usually when I have a cold, I use up a tree’s worth of tissues. If I ever get round to becoming ecologically self-sufficient, finding a hygienic substitute to blow my nose with will probably be half the battle.

That, and I slept badly, because my partner made some kind of jerking movement in his sleep that my half-awake brain misinterpreted to mean he was having another epileptic fit, and it took me about an hour to calm down enough to get back to sleep. Which is a lot for me – I tend to sleep too much.

I got up early this morning out of pure stubbornness, and I’m already regretting it. One nasty – but not untrue – reply to a comment I made on another blog was enough to turn on the waterworks and make me feel like giving up, or would have been had I not still been in my stubborn mood. So instead I just said “NO.” And ignored it. Except that it’s not working, because there are a million other little things that are building up and I can feel the nerve ball in my solar plexus swelling like a water balloon full of tears, and it’s a good job I’m seeing the shrink this afternoon because a friend of ours is coming afterwards and he’s also depressed and if I start crying in front of him I’ll probably set him off and Honey will come home to us both wailing on the sofa and he’s having such a shit day at work and-

Maybe I should take that guy Conor’s advice and just sit with my depression for a while. I just hope the “friend” doesn’t stay with me past 2pm. I’m supposed to have a life after that.

The Importance of People

And by that I mean, it is important that you continue to see people even though you’re depressed.

Yesterday I got up, and it was one of those days where you just don’t want to get out of bed. But I was hungry, so I did. At the same time as my partner, for once. And I burst into tears at the table AGAIN. Second time in less than a week. There was no particular reason, other than the very childish “I don’t want you to go to work and leave me on my own”, which I managed to blurt out guiltily after five minutes of cuddling and cajoling.

Now I don’t exactly remember what he did to make me feel better, but it was something along the lines of going back to bed for ten minutes, to the detriment of his breakfast (and almost making him miss the train for work – don’t think he’d have been all that bothered, mind), and spooning me while talking in that “it’s going to be alright” voice about all the things I had to look forward to, including our hallowe’en party on Thursday. Because yes, on one of those days when I was feeling normal, I decided we’re having one. Cancelling would disappoint about fifteen people. No pressure.

But I’m actually quite confident that I can pull off the “I’m ok” costume, because the outcome of yesterday’s pre-breakfast tearfest was that Honey went to work, and I spent the day making fingerpuppets. I made four. I’m quite proud of them.

Then he came home all bunged up and this morning we went to see the doctor, and long story short, he has the day off. While we were there I asked for some happy pills as advised by my shrink (who is a psychologist, not a psychiatrist, and therefore cannot prescribe meds), and later, when my boyfriend was tucked back up in bed and it was 10 am so they had to be open by now, I went to get our prescription from the chemist’s.

All went well until it came time to pay, and I didn’t have enough. I was surprised because I thought our social security would take care of most of the cost, and the chemist snapped that it didn’t, looking at me like I was stupid. Under her impatient eye I tried to ring Honey to see if he could come and pay for them – I only had half the amount and it was only a five minute walk – but he didn’t answer, so I had to leave the meds in her care and go back home, wondering what was wrong with me and why I felt like crying every time something didn’t go my way.

I waited until I got in to burst into tears, but they’d been burning in my eyes the whole way back so I had to keep my head down. Honey came was once again adorable. He told me he was feeling better already and promised to go and get the meds that afternoon, and we spent an hour or so watching some superhero series in bed while I vengefully crocheted a hat, realised it looked more like a kippa than a panda’s head, and even more vengefully undid the whole thing.

By this time I was calm, but not sociable. I had my voluntary work scheduled that afternoon, and didn’t feel like going at all, in spite of the fact that the people there are really nice and friendly and not prying. But I decided to go anyway, because party organising means I won’t be able to on Thursday, and tomorrow I have an appointment with my shrink and there is no guarantee I’ll get out of that in one piece. So I went.

It was quiet. There were no other volunteers, just my “boss”, and few clients. She talked about the drama going down between her and her bosses and one of the volunteers, and I listened (I love a good story) and it distracted me from my own instability. I worked, and felt useful. I told her I wouldn’t be there on Thursday and she said it was fine, like she always does. She likes me because I turn up when I say I will and call to warn her if I can’t, which a surprising amount of volunteers don’t.

When I got out, I had a text from my sister saying she misses me. And another from Honey asking if I wanted picking up since it was raining. When he came, evidently feeling better, he told me he’d been to the chemist’s and this is more or less how it went down:

Chemist no. 1 – Who took care of your partner’s order? They seem to have put them away…

Chemist no. 2 – I did. After an hour or so I thought she wasn’t coming back.

Honey  – Can I just speak to this lady for a second? *He takes her to one side.* Madam, you do know what these particular tablets are prescribed for?

Chemist no. 2 – Of course, they’re mild antidepressants.

Honey – So you have an idea of the effect your words and tone had on the young lady who came here to get them this morning?

Chemist no. 2 – …

Chemist no. 1 – *Evesdropping in the background, looking smug*

Chemist no. 2 – *mortified*.

I laughed. But I don’t think I’ll be going back there for a while. In the meantime I finally have something to take while I’m waiting for my brain to sort itself out, mild enough that there should be no side effects. We’ll see.

The point is that the people in your life are important, and one person is not enough. Even if the people you see don’t know you’re depressed, just seeing them helps so much. And if it doesn’t, tell them. They might not understand, but they’ll want to help, and that will make you feel valued.

Depression, part 1

Depression, part 1

This is Allie’s blog, Hyperbole And A Half. She’s awesome. She also knows what depression is like and manages to talk about her experience in a way that is funny. I’m going to shamelessly copy her idea She inspires me to do the same so that more depressed people can understand that even though we’re depressed, we can still have a sense of humour, and the humour helps. Yeah.