How Depression Makes Your #Body_Feel
Source: bustle.com |
The image that we often get of a sad
girl with tears on her face sitting in a dark corner is hardly the full story ofdepression. It is this very image that many people have that may limit their
understanding of what it truly means to have depression.
Do I cry more than I used to ? Sure.
Do I hide in a dark corner ? I’d like to, or at least curl back into my bed.
Am i sad ? Not really, hopeless and desperate, but not sad.
Do I cry more than I used to ? Sure.
Do I hide in a dark corner ? I’d like to, or at least curl back into my bed.
Am i sad ? Not really, hopeless and desperate, but not sad.
To those who have not experienced depression, the question of "how
depression makes your body feel" might be a strange one. What does a mental
illness have to do with your body, anyway ? Sure, some chemicals may be a bit
out of whack, but that’s in the brain, right ?
Depression
can steal your physical, emotional and mental energy. Fatigue
is actually one of the diagnostic criteria for major depressive disorder. When
I get up in the morning, I wake up exhausted, even if I manage to get eight or
nine hours of sleep. My body feels weak and my brain feels foggy. My brain
tells me I’m too tired and it’s not worth the effort anyway. Getting out of bed
is a monumental feat. I force myself up after pressing snooze a few times and
get on with my day. By lunch, I feel like I’ve been up a full day already
Depression
can hurt. Research suggests depression can
actually cause the brain to feel pain more intensely. Furthermore, depression as an illness frequently shows up with aches and pains. For
me, a combination of stress and depression contribute to chronic pain in my
neck, shoulders and upper back. When I don’t get at least eight hours of sleep,
my localized pain becomes generalized pain
My whole body hurts, and I just
want to curl into a ball. Cold weather and drafts make it worse. Depression
plus the common cold can be a nasty combination.
Depression
can feel physically heavy. It can feel like
someone is constantly pushing your head down and your body towards the ground.
Holding your head up and smiling can feel impossible. Sometimes, it feels like
gravity is just working twice as hard on you. And, more often than not, anxiety diagnosed or undiagnosed can come with the depression. I feel a sensation of pressure
weighing on my chest
I feel like I can’t breathe well or I’m not getting
enough oxygen. It becomes very hard to focus on anything, because relieving
that pressure becomes the only thing I can think about.
I’ve found depression can hold sleep captive and return it at the most
inconvenient times. It can cause you to overeat, and it can cause you to have
no appetite. Even though you’d like to do more, exercise more, eat better,
these things can become the hardest things to do.
When someone confides that
they have depression, they are not revealing a weakness. Rather, they are
demonstrating their strength despite a difficult, often chronic illness.
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