An offhand comment from my ‘new’ – and-therefore-complete-stranger-of-a-doctor
last week has been making me wonder.
Along with her deeply insensitive recommendations to ensure a speediness
of recovery (including such chestnuts as “hang in there”, “time’s a great
healer” and “some traumas take longer to recover from than others”) was the
hope that I was ‘journaling or whatever else your counsellor has suggested’. I
think journaling is an American word
and I assume she meant taking notes, keeping a diary etc… and even though this
remark made me feel even more estranged from her concern, I did think perhaps I
could try doing this. It may be of
benefit. Although quite how it benefits
my ‘followers’ remains to be seen. *waves pathetically hoping some of you at
least hang in here and see the light begin to emerge at the end of this stupid
Groundhog tunnel*.
I felt a small semblance of stirrings this morning as I
pondered my return to work – and here I get palpitations whereas before I
suffered only flutterings but then that’s an altogether different cat in a bag.
This ponderance was more to do with the ‘what do I say – when I’m back – as to
why I’ve been away?’ and the brave piece of soul I still have somewhere in my
body said, all magnificently, ‘tell them you have a: “Mental Health Condition”
whereas what I’ll really say is probably stick to the “tennis elbow” because THAT’s
all other people can cope with.
This is generally my reaction to a Monday morning
anyway. Colleagues breeze in or slink in
or drag themselves in and say ‘good weekend?’ whether they’re interested or
not, and I usually get through the truthful reply of “not really, I spent most
of it curled up in bed crying and avoiding any form of human contact whatsoever”
with an equally cheery ‘yes thanks!’.
End of conversation. In fact,
once most people have gotten past the initial ‘good weekend?’ query, all they
want to do is talk about themselves anyway, so really the query is irrelevant –
it’s just a convenient if not altogether insincere segue into the more
important subject which is MeMeMeMeMe.
So the braver part of me is wondering if I could overlook
the sweaty palms and the racing heartbeat and actually say “Depression” or “Stress”
or even “Post-Trauamtic-Stress-Disorder” which is actually what keeps me from
functioning properly in the outside world right now. And no, nothing’s ‘happened’ to turn me into
this wet mess that appears (thankfully invisibly) before you right now – this has
been the essential ME for the past 18 months or so, it’s just that certain
chemical substances and a stubborn refusal to let it beat down me has been
holding my head above the temptingly deep and yielding waters until now. I’m usually okay if those waters are calm and
I can see clearly about me. But it only
takes a ripple or two and a slight fluctuation in depth and temperature and I
start to panic that I might drown.
It doesn’t help that those who surround me daily, even
though they don’t know they help to keep me afloat just by being there, start
to destabilise my balance and ripple by ripple undermine everything I’m trying
so hard to keep ‘normal’. Whatever
normal is.
3 comments:
Debs, I'm so sorry that you are struggling at the moment. I always find that writing (a diary/stream of consciousness) helps me when I am stressed or anxious or down, but when I was *really* anxious/depressed, I don't think I managed to do it very often. That doesn't help, really, does it? Just wanted to say 'you're not alone'. And do email me if you want to chat any time. xx
I only just read this, Debs, and I just wanted to say that I'm sorry this hasn't gone away or at least got better. I probably mentioned it before in a post somewhere but I did the Artists way and one thing that has stuck with me is the morning pages. To me it was less like 'journalling' and more like 'downloading my brain' and it really helped.
As Sarah says, you're not alone, I went through terrible post traumatic stress twice in my life and it's terrlibe. The good news is that it will get better - but if someone would have told me that when I had it I wouldn't have believed it.
Take care and you know where I am if you ever want to chat x
Thanks Sarah and Jacqui. I'm still beating myself up about it and weeping stupidly and can't focus on anything... but your words are very kind. Thank you both xxx
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