Autobiography · Mental Health

Slow

"Lights" © Sjoerd van Oosten, 2012. CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.
Lights” © Sjoerd van Oosten, 2012. CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.
When I leave the apartment I find the sidewalks covered in sheets of ice. My cowboy boots offer no traction as I slide from one side to another. I walk slow, but still careen out of control. Keep your weight on your heels. Isn’t that what he told me? Or was it toes? I can’t think straight and my throat is tight. Tears stinging up from behind my eyes, the complex desire to punch through a plate glass window and sob into my shirt sleeves all at once. It has nothing to do with ice.

I try to slow my breathing. Try to calm down my racing brain. You can tell it’s January. Tell by the mountains of white bread and chocolate I hide myself under. A cocoon of empty calories and refined carbohydrates pump energy into my exhausted frame. You can tell it’s January because I turn off the alarm clock, but stay in bed. I submerge myself in quilts and comforters with the blinds shut tight. I don’t shower. I don’t dress. I just wait for spring.

In therapy Mark asks me if I believe in self-fulfilling prophecies. Asks me if I believe the things I think because I believe them or because I think them so often. Like I pounded my worthlessness into my head myself just by repeating it back. An echo chamber of negative self-talk seeping into my brain waves, cementing itself in my subconscious before I ever had time to remember none of it was true.

I made all this up, didn’t I? Made up the story about how I lack the strength, the grit, the determination to make it out of this. The story about how I don’t have what it takes to exist in the world. The belief that I am fundamentally broken in some way that no one is ever going to be able to name or repair. It’s all just made up. One story repeated over and over. Passed down through rewiring of the brain. Told so many times I forget that it isn’t real. Forget it is just a story.

Mark pulls his lips into his mouth, closes his eyes, and nods gently. Our mutual heartbreak hangs in the room between us like a deflating helium balloon. I want to spit and curse and throw the pillow through the window. Scream, “Who told me these stories about myself? Who told them to me?!” But I know it doesn’t matter where I picked them up from, just that I did. Walking across a riverbed with stones in my pockets will never prompt the question, “Where did these rocks originate from?” The fact that they’re still there, that’s what matters.

“Can I learn to tell myself different stories?” I ask him, feeling like a small child kneeling down in front of him.

“Yes. You just do it.” He laughs at his own dry sarcasm because he has to. Because he doesn’t have a different way to tell me that I just have to dig my hands in, pull out the lining, and float back to the surface.

Autobiography · Personal Development · Writing

Collective

big-loft-room-great-photo-640px
© Collective Agency, 2015.

I noticed it when I started glaring at my walls. Sighing heavy when I moved into my office to start writing for the day. When I couldn’t make myself get up and go running in the morning because what does it matter anyway?

The bounce slipped out of my walk and heavy feet trailed around the apartment. Thick socks dragging dirt from wood floors to carpet and back again. I sat on the couch and played Mario Kart instead of writing. Started watching Jane the Virgin on Netflix. Crocheted my first scarf. Anything to keep my mind, my hands, my eyes busy so I wouldn’t have to write.

Losing momentum. Maybe that’s the best way to describe it. Momentum lost. I love our new apartment and the fact we both have separate offices to work out of. But having a commute that consisted of walking from one room to the next made me feel like I was always and never at work. And not being around other humans during the day really started to take its toll on my emotional well-being.

So last week I joined a coworking space in Portland. I gave myself a thirty minute train ride every morning. A desk surrounded by other desks. People to go to lunch with. A big, warm room filled with folks like me.

And as soon as I got there, I started writing again. Words spilled from my fingertips onto the screen. I careened through blank space, filling it with letters that mattered to me. I took deep breaths and could feel the vibrancy returning to my being.

It’s often the simple things, isn’t it? We have so many monumental battles we’re fighting on any given day that it’s easy for us to forget the small ones. Forget the leaving the house ones. The talking to a friend ones. The making a phone call or reading a book or taking a walk ones. The little battles that make the big ones seem like maybe they’ll be okay.

Autobiography · Mental Health · Personal Development

Nurture

"pink wooly love" © Dorky Mum, 2010. CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.
pink wooly love” © Dorky Mum, 2010. CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.

In November of 2013 I was happy. I like to hold onto that month in my memory as proof that it’s possible. Evidence I can shake this ache from my bones and stand up strong. I carry that idea around with me like a seed, try to supply it with what it needs to grow. But it’s mostly guesses as to how this all works. How to properly nurture it.

I know I was getting up at the same time every day and exercising at least forty minutes. Mason and I were doing a Whole30, so we were eating well and I was cooking most of our meals. I was also participating in NaNoWriMo. But that’s all I can remember about that month. Those things and the fact that I was happy.

Could happiness be so simple? Something that wraps itself into our daily activities like brushing our teeth or checking the mail. Perhaps it slinks in and out of our lives attached to simple habits we didn’t think made much of a difference at the time. Maybe it’s not all just the whim of brain chemicals and hormones. Maybe it’s the day-to-day things.

It both needs to be simple and couldn’t possibly. Could I get that feeling back just by working out, cooking, and writing a book? If I think it’s that easy, why I can’t I get myself to do those things? The strong hand of depression closes around me so tight I can’t seem to make the movements I need to free myself.

All of it sounds so easy in theory. Get up in the morning, go run, go to work, write, cook dinner. But each one feels so monumental when you’re wrapped up in it. When you’re in the midst of depression, nothing seems like it would make a difference. The things you know help don’t matter, because you can’t make yourself believe any of the things you know. But maybe I could start.

Maybe I could get myself to remember it’s the little things that make a difference. Maybe I could get myself to remember it’s simple steps in the right direction that get you to where you’re going. I don’t need an entire garden, just a little bit of soil.