depression, emotions, Motivation

Intelligence

It is not every day that I discover something new about my mental health. After many decades, I am shocked that something new is energizing me. But let’s start at the beginning.

I have been in a funk for a few years now. There were good days and bad days. Drunk days and sober days. Solitary days and day with friends and family. The first part of the story is not going to be anything new. My discovery started with a visit from an old friend. We met up at one of our usual hangouts with some other friends. We did not stay long, maybe two hours at most. Nothing extraordinary happened during this visit. The next day, however, I was in a better mood. My darkness had dimmed a little and I had more motivation.

Now, we all know that people with my disability have good days. I can have high motivation days or high positivity days. Waking up to this feeling was not completely out of the blue.

Fast forward a week. I had another visitor from out of town. We took the ferry over to San Francisco. We ate at the ferry building. I even tried the fish and chips (they were really good). We walked in the sun and stopped whenever I needed a rest. No judgement. No commentary. I would just say something along the lines of this spot is a great place to relax on a sunny day.My visitor also has chronic diseases and knew I was in pain and needed to rest, but did not show sympathy or make remarks about it. We just sat down and kept talking.

The next day I felt amazing. My brain was kicking into overdrive. My motivation spiked. My happiness levels increased. Even though the week between these two visits were full of pain, stumbling, visits to the doctor, and blood tests. I woke up the next day better. More powerful.

Two different visitors. Two different days. Two different experiences. The same result. What was going on? I spent that day pondering this. Were there any similarities to these two visits? They both required me to be outdoors and the weather was beautiful. But I know that being outdoors in the sunlight can help, even if my brain won’t allow me to do it.

That is when it hit me. During both visits, my brain was engaged in stimulating conversations. Not the standard conversations about a movie, a show, or what we did that day. This was not a conversation relaying how our day went. These were not the engaging conversations that I have at work. We talked about life. We talked about the world. We talked about health, disabilities, and emerging treatments. Our conversations included discussing things that required me to be fully present and attentive. I was not half distracted by my phone or the world around me. I was actively engaging in conversations. I was engaging with people that were living their lives and interacting fully. I was having intelligent conversations with people in person. I was living my life outside of work, home, and my health. That is what I discovered. What seemed like basic interactions was in fact medicine that I needed to fight back the depression, the mind fog, everything. That is an amazing discovery. Now let’s see what I can do with that.

depression, emotions

Pain365

Last week was rough for me physically. As I try to wrap my brain around the arthritis eating away at my body, I learn new things every single day. Last week, I found a new kind of pain.. When I would stand up, it would feel like someone hit me with a stun gun in the lower back. The pain would ricochet down one of my legs. Luckily, the pain did not travel up and rarely shot down both legs. Don’t you love discovering new things?

I spent pretty much every minute of every day relying on my cane to keep me upright. I often had to stop moving long enough for the pain to stop. But, you know me. I don’t like to let people know that I am struggling. I don’t want people to know that I am in pain. So I put a smile on my face and convince everyone that the sky is blue and the sun is shining down.

I joined a new work group last autumn. The wastewater engineering group needed more support and the company is trying to hold off on hiring people. Therefore, I was transferred over. As you know, engineers are not really known for being the most socially comfortable people. (I joke!). Last Wednesday, I had an in-person meeting with my work group. After the meeting, one of the engineers mentioned that I looked like I was in a lot of pain. (I mean, it could not have been more obvious, lol). I said I was and laughed. The engineer asked me how I was capable of smiling and acting happy when I am in such pain. And that is an answer that few will understand.

I have a lifetime of experience hiding pain. Whether the pain is mental or physical does not matter. I learned at an early age not to complain. I was taught that sharing your struggles and your pain puts other people in uncomfortable positions and causes them undue stress. So, I hide it as best I can. Unfortunately, I have periods like last week where I could not hide the actual signs of pain, but I could put on a smile and bring snacks for everyone to enjoy.

depression, emotions

Whispers

TRIGGER WARNING: Suicide

There is a whispering in my head tonight. It was a hard day. So many things went wrong. So much bad shit. My brain just wants to shut down and move one.

Don’t fall for that. DO NOT FALL FOR THAT.

Like the song said, I had a bad day. That is it. Nothing more. My brain is whispering otherwise. My brain is convincing me that this world is just not worth my time. I am too precious to be held down by the chaos of this country. This world.

After 40 plus years, I am getting better at realizing when the whispers are in my head. The bad voices. The Whispers. I was struggling today. I just wanted to give up and give up with finality. But you know what? My cat had other plans. She slapped me a few times and forced some cuddling. Not sure how that fits into the personal space thing, but she did. I did. We did. But the whispers are still there. The volume is lower, but the whispers are always there. It just takes one moment. One incident.

There is an old saying that criminals have to be lucky every day. Every time. But the authorities only need to be lucky once. The same thing can be said about the Whispers. I can successfully beat them every day, but it only takes one time for me to fail. Thankfully, I have support. But sometimes, that just isn’t’ enough.

Dear Reader. I am not trying to scare you or beg for attention. If you are reading this, I survived the most recent episode of The Whispering. You are also loved enough to know my inner crazy. You are a friend. A friend indeed.

Do not worry about me today. The Whispers have passed and I am back on Hallmark movies. But that was the most difficult encounter that I have had in awhile.

I love you. I don’t need a reason. I love you. Be good. Be happy. Be loud.