It's been a long dry
spell between blog posts. The reason I give is that I've been
totally immersed in the world of ukulele building; that's partly
true. The other part that I haven't wanted to admit is that I've been
struggling. Don't panic, I'm fine as in doing pretty well now – not
like Ruth Zardo Louise Penny's old the old poet who means, “Fucked-up,
Insecure, Neurotic, and Egotistical” when
she says it. I'm
back on an even keel and life is chugging along. Another
reason for the lack of posts is I've
been avoiding this
subject
and it refuses to get out of the way and let me write anything else.
I
can really identify with Eeyore. When Pooh asks him if he's finally
happy he responds, “No but I really like this new tail.” I am
happy a lot of the time but occasionally I crash. When that happens
it's as if I'm looking at the world through glasses that let in only
one colour of light and it ain't rose! I don't make it a secret that
I've struggled with depression pretty much all my life but I don't
advertise it either. I can't speak for the experience of others; I
can only try to explain how the world looks to me when I go down the
black hole. It's not rational, it's not logical and it's annoying as
hell but there it is. When I crash, which I do much less frequently
that I did before I obtained medication 20 years ago, everything gets
distorted. Every piece of information that comes into my brain gets
translated as, “You're useless!” Intellectually I KNOW how
ridiculous that is and I feel even more useless because it is so
ridiculous. When well-meaning people remind me of what I've
accomplished my brain translates that as, “You're useless, you
can't even get people to understand;” or “All you do is worry
other people.” When
people urge me to just look at the reds and yellow's, that's all very
well but I can't see those colours because I have blue glasses in front of my eyes. Yes,
I believe/know red
and yellow
exist and try as I might, until the glasses are off, I can't see
them. Yes, I WANT
to see them
and if I could will myself to see them I would.
The
wonderful thing about having a medication that works is that I know I
will again be able to see red
and yellow
so I fold into myself, withdraw from the world and wait. Eventually
the glasses go
away
and I get
on with it.
The awful thing about having medication that works is that my doctor
questions whether or not I need it. She is a caring
person, a
good doctor,
and she wants to do what is best for my health. We've had this
conversation a
number of
times over the last 20 years and each time I've tried to wean myself
off the meds in
the way she suggests.
I try this
when
I'm in a really good headspace and I feel as though nothing can
possibly go wrong. After
a while
little things start to go wrong then everything goes wrong, then I
realize the blue glasses are back; I resume
to my regular dose of meds and eventually
the glasses depart.
The last time we did this dance I wrote
her
a letter putting on record the specifics of how my life changes when
I try to go off the medication. I debated about sending
it
because
I didn't want to be a whiner. I did send it because I wanted an accurate record of the lived-through experience for the next conversation on the subject. Now instead of asking if I think I still need the meds she asks,
“Steady as she goes?” It may seem like a small thing but it makes
a great deal of difference to me.
It's
taken 20 years for me to have the confidence to say 'this is how it
is for me' and that confidence can be shaken very easily. Recently
I've read news reports that say SSRI's, the kind of medication I
take, don't work that
well and
that counselling has a better success rate. There's danger here for
me to turn this into another 'useless' message. Meds
work for me! I don't care if it's the placebo effect: I don't care if
counselling and examining
my family history
would work. I don't care if, down the road, my life is shorter
because of some to-date-unknown complications of the medication. I
don't even care if I never know the root cause of why my brain acts
the way it does. I care that my life has been so much better in the
last 20 years than it ever was before the
two capsules a day.
I
care that Richard sticks with me through all the crazy ups and downs
and tells me that he knows when I'm struggling and loves me anyway.
It can't be easy living with someone like me and the fact that we
travel this road together is one of the great joys of my life.
At
the moment I
don't know where the glasses are and I find it hard to believe they
even exist.
Chances
are they'll show up again and I won't be able to figure
out why. They'll
go away; I'll emerge and get back to enjoying the hundreds of small things in my life that are cause for celebration.
Now it's time to pick up the ukulele and do some more sanding. The
possibilities for this little instrument grow more exciting by the
day and I hope, now that this post is out of the way, I can get back to writing about the journey into lutherie.
If
you're still reading, thanks!
One
more thing: I particularly like this quotation I first ran across in
the dedication to Chaim Potok's novel The
Chosen.
"When
a trout rising to a fly gets hooked on a line and finds himself
unable to swim about freely, he begins with a fight which results in
struggles and splashes and sometimes an escape. Often, of course, the
situation is too tough for him. In the same way the human being
struggles with his environment and with the hooks that catch him.
Sometimes he masters his difficulties; sometimes they are too much
for him. His struggles are all that the world sees and it naturally
misunderstands them. It is hard for a free fish to understand what is
happening to a hooked one." - Karl A. Menninger
3 comments:
Atta girl. I love your writing style on this piece, its unsentimental and gut wrenching. I would say when we're together we can make our blue glasses purple. Its not rose but its better.
I have read this through a couple of times now, thinking it more than deserved a comment but not sure what to say.
I really really admire the way you share yourself in this blog. I am not one of the fish caught on this particular hook. However, I have dear friends and close family who are. And questions of mental health touch most of us in our lives I believe. Your elequent words about what helps from others and what does not are now in my reference notes!
I love Eyore! He is my all time favourite AA Milne character! And Chaim Potok ! I love his books and have been rereading them since I was 16!
Thanks again!
Thanks so much Lesley! I haven't been back to this blog for a while so I just saw your comment. It means a lot.
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