4.8
September 7, 2010

It’s not Easy being Blue. ~ Elaine Logan

Depression doesn’t have to rule my life—but I don’t have to pretend it isn’t there, either.

Eeyore doesn’t mess about.

You know Eeyore, he’s the donkey in the Winnie the Pooh stories. When there’s a birthday party, Eeyore is sure it won’t be for him. When someone moves his house of sticks, he understands it was foolish of him to think he could have a house in the first place.

Eeyore has a frankness about his mental affliction. He’s depressed and he lets you know it.

For many people who struggle with depression and other mental afflictions, it’s not that easy; it’s hard to reach out to others. You white-knuckle it. Everyone else seems to be doing OK and you want to say, “I’m doing OK too. It’s not so bad.” You want to be a good sport, because superficial contact leaves your pride intact.

But you know it’s not okay. You deal with it every day and on a bad day, you’re not dealing with it at all.

Inertia

Chinese medicine believes depression is when the chi is stagnant. Nothing moves. In my case laundry doesn’t move and dirty dishes don’t move—not even that short distance to the washer and the dishwasher. Here’s how it goes: I look at the dirty dishes. I look at the full dishwasher that needs emptied. I shrug and prepare a slice of toast.

It begins with analysis paralysis and ends with total collapse of motivation. You just ignore things, which gets easier with practice. A whole weekend can slip by with only two John Grisham novels and five episodes of Law and Order to show for it. What a waste. We all participate in the human condition and when one person opts out of life, it dims the brightness for the whole lot of us—us humans, us mugs.

Resilience

Resilience is key. Resilience is when I clean the bathroom and it’s no big deal. Resilience is when I go to social events where I see friends and acquaintances. I don’t even think about it, I just do it. When resilience isn’t there, I don’t even try to decide what to do. I just curl up on the couch with a book, and if I don’t have a good book, I go to bed.

Medication

Medication can and does help. Medication can increase resilience. Buddhist meditation master, Thrangu Rinpoche, said about taking antidepressants,

“Yes. They should take it if it helps. They have suffered enough.”

And yet, medication is no magic bullet. Family members of depressed people only see certain medications improve their loved one’s mood. It takes respect to understand the challenge. It’s hard to find medication that won’t create a side effect worse than the original condition. My friend’s father notices she is happier on her new meds. He doesn’t realize she hasn’t slept for three days or perhaps she is sleeping all day.

For some people, life is a constant search for a better medication, because medications that once worked no longer do. For others, their body chemistry won’t tolerate the side effects of medication and they need to work hard at a personal program of self care.

Isolation, Fantasy and Reactivity

It’s easy to feel all or nothing about friends. When you have friends who are disapproving or judgmental, it’s easy to think, “Well we don’t have a great time together, it’s true. But hey, it’s better than no friends, right? And, after all, who else will spend time with me?” That’s the depression talking, and it’s all part of the downward spiral.

Like Eeyore, depressed people can find it hard to roll with ups and downs and difficult-to-maintain healthy boundaries with others. In work, friendship or even at the grocery store checkout, it becomes an easy option to push people away. When there is only frustration and no resilience, everything becomes fuel for beating ourselves up.

Another easy option can be to look for a fantasy solution: taking your romantic crushes too seriously, dreaming about winning the lottery or that fortune cookie favorite—You will inherit a small plot of land. Of course there’s always that great book you will write or, as Bob Dylan put it, when you paint your masterpiece.

A depressed person can miss the point of the simplest human interaction. They can miss the opportunity to smile and say hello.

I’ve been there and missed that moment many times.

Meditation

A discipline of meditation and yoga can make a huge difference. At the same time you need a certain level of resilience to keep that discipline. In cases of extreme depression, meditation and yoga can become sticks to beat yourself up with, another thing you need to make yourself do.

I meditated for 30 years and I hoped meditation was enough. It was wonderful, but it wasn’t enough to cure depression by itself.

Struggle and Resistance

I struggled with depression for most of my life. I remember how I sat on the stairs at parties and cried when I was sixteen. I drank cans of Carlsberg and listened to well-intentioned friends tell me I just needed a good kick in the pants.

For many years I struggled with the decision to medicate or not medicate. I felt I should be able to do better. I felt it was my fault I have these difficulties. I wanted to beat it myself. An alcoholic will say, “I wish I could drink like other people. I wish I could have a normal relationship with alcohol.” I wish I could live without medication, like other people. My history proves I don’t do well without medication.

When I take a medication that works, I feel more like myself. It’s like going to the optometrist and getting glasses. Oh yes, now I can see things.

In a recent conversation, my doctor confirmed I had symptoms of chronic depression for 20 years and tried various medications for about 15 years. She compared it to a patient with heart disease.

“It’s not your fault,” she said, bringing tears to my eyes. “It runs in families. Looking at your family history, your father was an alcoholic. Likely he was self-treating himself for depression. Fifty, sixty years ago they had different names for it: high-strung, bad tempered, lazy. It’s all the same illness. It’s all depression.”

So, I take the medication. I want to act well and leave a good footprint in the world. Another of my doctors told me my current medication can shorten my life. I recently attended a Tibetan Buddhist long life empowerment ceremony presented by Yangsi Rinpoche. Rinpoche put my feelings into words when he said, “Oh, by the way, no point living an extra two to three hundred years feeling angry and resentful, right?”

Suicide and Suicidal Thinking

It breaks my heart when I hear a dear friend has taken their life. I’ve heard it many times now. It helps me to believe they did their best to cope with a tragic affliction and I’m glad that they prevailed as long as they did. One friend told me, “When I feel ‘suicidal,’ there is nothing I or anybody can do except not kill myself in that moment and the next. Sometimes if I can just get through the minute, hour or day, things can shift.”

I tried to take my own life at age 19. I took a bus to a cliff outside Aberdeen, Scotland. I cut the veins on my wrists and not the arteries. This gave me a second chance. When I walked back from that stormy cliff, I got help from a local farming family. The distress on their faces told me how my life can affect others, and I never forgot that.

So when the depression talks to me about my worthlessness and what’s the point of me, anyhow, I pick up the phone. One time, when a wrong medication took me to the dark side, I called my doctor. She sent two policemen out to my house.

Meanwhile I found a Steve Martin/Queen Latifah movie on TV. Laughter brought me out of it enough to tell the cops I knew I was okay.

The Good Stuff – What works

There are no guarantees. I paint a dark picture here. I don’t want to pull my punches, because it’s tough. I believe it’s important to understand when a good person fails to prevail in the face of depressions and other mental afflictions, they gave it all they had to give.

At the same time, things can work. This isn’t a Cosmopolitan article where I give you “10 Ways to Improve your Love Life”. But sometimes, for some people, some things can and do help.

Here’s what works for me:

Recognize the Voice of Depression

When my doctor says, “That’s the depression talking. That’s your illness,” it helps me remember the depression is not who I am. I love to hear that clarity.

I am not my illness, I am not the depression. It helps me recognize the voice of depression and realize I can’t control it. It doesn’t have to rule my life, but I don’t have to pretend it isn’t there either. What I can do is make a concerted effort to override it, which is hard to do on your own. It helps me to reach out to others. If I’m stuck inside my house and inside my head with only that voice, only those demons, I’m in trouble.

That’s when I need to make a call. That’s when I need to remember who I really am.

Reach out

It’s hard for depressed people to reach out. I’ve realized, however, that it’s part of my responsibility to make this effort and to take care of myself in this way. So, I have help and I get help with this. I talk to my doctor, friends, my daughter, my mother, an old meditation teacher, people in my Buddhist church. When finances and health insurance permit, I see a counselor.

Walk the Walk

None of the tools work for me by themselves, but I use everything I can get. I take the highest level of medication that my body can tolerate. I work a program of meditation and yoga and go to the gym. I reach out to friends—not the critics, but the people I have a really great time with. I walk Tillie, my wonderful dog who loves and puts up with me. I find ways to put up with this life. I try to remember life can be fun and that people like me.

When I know a social event is coming up, I schedule it and plan ahead that I will attend. I find it helps to talk to a friend on the phone and make a commitment to do tasks of self care: “This week I will walk Tilly three times.” “I will go to the next Saturday morning yoga class.” “I will call three people I like and suggest coffee.”

Keep a Routine

Keeping a routine makes a huge difference.

I schedule dog walks, social events, trips to the gym and days at my coworking space. It’s all part of fighting back and fighting for my life instead of letting it slip through my fingers. It’s a discipline, because if I let the structure slide my life will start to slip though my fingers again. When that happens, all I can do is pray and try to get back on track.

Pray

Never underestimate the power of prayer. In my darkest moments, it helps me to pray. “Please help me through this. Please help.”

Get Busy Living

Maybe it seems like these are a lot of solutions and a lot of hard work, but it’s taken me years to realize the value in them and I know I need to work the solutions. I do it for myself, my family, my friends, my wonder dog and even the lady at the grocery checkout. I need to “Get busy living or get busy dying,” as Morgan Freeman’s character, Red, says in the movie The Shawshank Redemption.

I’m at a turning point in my life now. I’m learning to accept myself and my struggles. I’m willing to allow the space to let life come to me without flinching. A day when I can do one thing that makes me happy is a good day; I know I can do it. I can’t help having a broken heart, but I can have an open heart.

I reach out not for a winning lottery number or a happy ending. I just reach out for another great day of being alive.

Buddha bless us all!

Elaine Logan writes the manuals that make the whole world sing. She has been a Technical Writer for 15 years, and a student of Tibetan Buddhist for 30 years. She met H.H. Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche in Lanarkshire, Scotland in 1981 when he gave her the biggest smile and chased her blues away. Rinpoche also gave Elaine the Buddhist Refuge Name of Glorious Long Life. That still inspires her today.

Read 70 Comments and Reply
X

Read 70 comments and reply

Reply to Marc cancel

Top Contributors Latest

Elephant Journal  |  Contribution: 1,510,385