Hello there.
Sorry for the hiatus. It’s been a bit of a time.
I want to talk about this depressionanxietyadhd thing --
specifically, something I’ve been thinking about a lot lately. Although I’ve
mentioned it before.
This disease? It lies.
“You are worthless.”
it says.
“I know.” I say.
“No one has ever loved
you. No one ever will. You know that, right?” It says.
“Yes.”
“You take up too much
space. Every inch of you is just too much. Hunch over, slump those shoulders.
You’re too tall. Be smaller. Be smaller. Avoid eye contact. Oh yes, ignore that
phone call. Pretend it never happened. Hyperventilate about that voicemail.
Good girl.” It says.
“Okay.” I say.
“You have wasted
thousands of dollars trying to get rid of me. But I’m your shadow. You can’t
get rid of your shadow. A shadow can only exist by the existence of something
physical. And that’s you, baby. That’s you. I’ll always match you, step for
step. And you will always be looking over your shoulder for me. I’ll be there.
Don’t worry.”
“I want you to go
away.”
“You know exactly how
to do that.”
“No.”
“Well, then.”
“I’m so, so tired. Why
doesn’t the medicine work? Why don’t I ever feel better? Am I ever going to
feel better?” I say.
“Darling, would you
even believe it if you did feel better?”
And I know. I know these things aren’t true. There is a
very, very small but clear voice in my heart that somehow manages to hold me
together, no matter what. I am thankful for that voice. Some days that voice is
all I have when the chemicals in my brain echo in my head: you’re worthless,
you’re nothing, you are a burden.
I have proof that these things aren’t true. I have friends,
family, a certain someone who never fails to make me laugh -- even through
tears. These are people who, on good days, I know love me. But on bad days …
well. It’s a lot harder when this shadowthing is determined to deafen me to a
kind word, a gentle touch, a friendly smile. This shadowthing darkens these
affectionate gestures with paranoia and terror and desperate sorrow.
I try to ignore the shadow. How I try.
Often, my genuine self-confidence and optimism and certainty bubbles to the surface and I have whole days and weeks where I think I’m okay. Maybe even better than okay! That I am doing a good job, making a difference, that I am kind and empathetic and worth the time of day.
Often, my genuine self-confidence and optimism and certainty bubbles to the surface and I have whole days and weeks where I think I’m okay. Maybe even better than okay! That I am doing a good job, making a difference, that I am kind and empathetic and worth the time of day.
It is for those days that I push and I push and I push
through the bad days . It’s just, you know, sometimes it is hard to push
through a shadow.
I’ve been a little less plucky in the face of the tough for
the past while.
But I’ll be okay. I will get through it. I always do.
