For
8 years I've struggled with Depression. Most days it's hard to get out of
bed. I've attempted suicide, I've developed multiple eating disorders. At times the thought of being out in the world felt so overwhelming
that a mundane task like walking to the mailbox is all
together unbearable.
Sometimes
I wake up and cry. I cry until I can't remember why I started. Sometimes its
starts in the afternoon. My body feels like lead as if I've left my body and
only a shell is left behind. At this point, I'm on auto pilot. I watch my life
happen, almost from a third party perspective. I become a different person
completely, someone I don't like, someone I don't know. I try to 'think happy
thoughts', 'count my blessings', 'think of my daughter's laugh', nothing eases
this feeling of weight. This lead feeling. This dark cloud I can't escape.
Eventually
this feeling became the norm and not the exception. I went to the doctor who
immediately pumped me up with anti-depressants and with a synthetic crutch slowly I got better. The medication made me stable. If I took it regularly,
life was good. Without it I couldn't function. I couldn't stand and have a regular
conversation without medication. The thought of needing pills in order to
maintain my sanity wasn't something I was comfortable with. Slowly I weaned myself off of them. Sporadic
crying and uncontrolled extreme mood swings became part of a regular afternoon.
For two months I was a complete wreck. I honestly never ever thought I would
make it. At a point I felt like life
wasn't worth living.
This
is what depression does. It carries you so deep inside yourself you can't get
out. You can't see reality, you can't see light. You are literally not
yourself. What makes it worse is that it's hard to talk about. You express to
someone you're struggling with depression and they tell you 'don't stress, go
for a walk, think happy thoughts, take a nap and you'll feel better'. The fact
is, it's so much deeper than that. It's not going to ever get better until we
all start talking about it. It's far too taboo for black (I say black people
because this is what I personally face in my own community) people to
talk about depression when so many of us suffer from it. So many of us go
through this alone, hiding, pretending, coping.
We
need to openly start and continue the mental illness discussion. Maybe if more
people were educated about it, others would feel more comfortable discussing they're own battles. Maybe we need less synthetic chemical cocktails and more
support from our communities. Fuck it, we DO need more support from our
communities, mental illness needs to be taken way more seriously.
Although
I've managed to evade taking medication (a long process that requires weekly improvement) everyday is a constant battle. For a long time I couldn't talk about
it, and was frankly effing embarrassed. Keita if you're reading, this is my public thank you. I would not be here if it wasn't for you. I never would have found the courage to accept this part of myself it it wasn't for you (and you Four Five I couldn't forget you).
If one single person reads this and feels
just a tiny bit better about what they're going through then I've
succeeded. Fuck the hiding, fuck the shame. I give zero fucks about people that aren't about progression. There isn't a damn thing to be ashamed about except hiding what makes you who you are. Depression is shitty. It really is. Lets talk about it and make it less-shitty.
Faaack. Talk about release.
love
-p
Yes P we do NOT need to suffer in silence. This is why I am so passionate about our communities having access to appropriate mental health services. As many of us will agree we were raised to keep our secrets in the family and the last thing any of us considered was to lay on a therapists couch airing our dirty laundry. Particularly in the black community, we have become accustomed to coping with severe trauma and then continuing with our lives as if nothing has happened. Then we wonder why we can't concentrate at work or school etc. We must take better care of one another. I think that by sticking with treatment/keep trying, we'll learn how to cope and live with our illnesses. Maybe then we can truly understand that we wouldn't have to give up our dreams and desires and wants and find a way to live with our illnesses and not let it define them.
ReplyDeleteThanks P for speaking out about this. You don't wear a badge of shame, you wear one of honor. Love you xoxo
I didn't think anyone was really going to read this. lol. Thank you so, so much for your response. 'We really must take better care of each other' I couldn't agree more. We're all so prideful sometimes. The spirit of community is lost to us. Buttttt it doesn't matter because we're building it. Slowly. We're building it by having this discussion. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
ReplyDeletelove you queenie.xox.