When You Live With Depression Behind Closed Doors
Four years ago I was diagnosed with depression.
I believe I had it long before I was diagnosed, but just believed I was weak or
abnormal because I couldn’t cope with things other people didn’t even seem
particularly bothered about. So I put on an act. My friends and family saw a
happy go lucky professional who loved to party and socialize.
Behind
closed doors it was another matter. I would regularly go days or weeks without bathing,
I would eat to comfort myself and then feel awful about how I looked because of
what I was eating. My teeth have suffered too from my diet and ('lack of')
personal hygiene.
I
would be unable to motivate myself to do the simplest things, like getting
dressed, and would be stuck on the sofa or in bed all day. My back would ache
but I couldn’t move to alleviate it.
I
would sit in my self created isolation and believe my thoughts when they told
me I didn’t deserve my friends and family, that I was a loser, destined to die
alone and unhappy. And so I would wish for death to come, sooner rather than
later. I would think of ways to die, but wouldn’t have the energy to follow
through with it. Resulting in my feeling of failure again, and so the cycle
repeated itself.
At
work I would live on caffeine to keep me awake and concentrating, and
after work I would collapse in my room from exhaustion. Imagine having to act a
part that was completely not you from the moment you wake, to the moment you go
to sleep, day in, day out. Imagine how tiring that is ? That is why I have been
tired for the last 18 years. I have been putting on an act for so long, even I
don’t know the real me.
I am now awaiting an assessment to determine what type of
depression I have. My doctor and I suspect I may have a type of bipolar
depression.
The
diagnosis itself doesn’t make me anxious, but the stigma attached to whatever
the final diagnosis is, and the treatment required those factors terrify me.
What if I can’t handle it ? What if I can handle it just enough to be able to go
back to work ?
I
find myself reliant on help, and feel bad about that. We live in a society
where professional success and complete independence is encouraged and
congratulated, but the small successes I manage are seen as nothing, seen as
something everyone can do, so why should anyone be proud of me for doing it ?
But
small things are major accomplishments for me, and I for one am proud of myself
if I can appear to be "normal" every once in a while.
Depression
is not who I am, but it is a part of me I must live with. And I must learn to
accept that, and so must others around me.
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