Archive for the ‘Depression’ Category

rock bottom.

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

I thought I hit rock bottom a few months ago. Perhaps last summer, while in the midst of the post-partum blues that by GOD I knew I did NOT have because they don’t exist, right? It really did feel like rock bottom and I imagined there was no way to feel any worse about myself or life in general. However, I was wrong. Today, officially, is rock bottom.

I have been saying for MONTHS and MONTHS that I need help. But the only time he’s really listened was the week he took all the knives with him to work. After he told me, I almost felt peaceful. Safe. But they came trotting back home. I still can’t find where he put the scissors but I think the lure of sharp things is currently not an obsession.

But I’m still struggling. Every single day. And I’m sick of “things are going to get better” and “maybe we can talk about it this weekend.” Somehow the weekend rushes by (mostly because we eat pizza and watch Frasier to much and the inevitable snobbery we begin faking is somehow terribly funny and I forget that I’m falling apart inside) and it’s Monday morning again. And he’s off to work. And it starts all over again.

One of our Drama’s is that there is very little food in the house. He heads to the grocery store each time I need it but I’ve GOT to lose some weight so I keep thinking I need a PLAN. He offers to go pick some things up but I know that whatever he brings back will not help. Not that it’s chocolate and pies (oh, God I wish) but there isn’t anything that makes me Interested in Cooking by Any Means. So I’ve been working on an Excel spreadsheet. I love Excel. And I keep attempting to plan meals in it, adding up WW points in each column, and priding myself on the amount of blueberries and lean meats that I’ve so suavely incorporated.

Only to have him casually say (over another Boring Lunch today), “do you think maybe you should take some cooking classes or something?” AUGH!

I am not my Grandmother, or my Mother, or HIS MOTHER. I can do crock-pot things, bake, and such…but what he was really saying is that he is tired of each meal being a dramatic presentation of What On Earth Are We Going To Eat? I don’t have anything prepared when he gets home (at lunch or dinner) and I’m often in a puddle of tears.

It isn’t that I can’t cook or can’t plan – um, the Excel Spreadsheet, Presentation A. I am WORKING ON A PLAN. And I’ve made a kick-ass roast several times while living here, so that should earn me about a thousand points. At least.

So, I asked him if he thought I wasn’t a good wife and he said, “that’s not a fair question!” Yes, that was an answer whether he meant it or not. It’s pretty obvious that marriage isn’t what he thought it was going to be. I could say the same thing.

I have said this many times but I will say it once more: Our meal drama (and other drama’s) is just a symptom of a deeper problem. I NEED HELP. I am so tired of the positive platitudes that he keeps telling me. I’m an emotional mess. I cry pretty much all day long, every single day. I hate my life. That is my mantra. I say it probably FIFTY times each day.

I wish I could wake up tomorrow and we could just leave this place. I’m tired of the prying eyes, the phone calls suggesting that maybe I need to return to God since my eyes seem so sad (AUGH!), the questions of when am I going to get Drew’s hair cut because goodness – he’s going to look like a girl, and the overwhelming amount of boxes I still haven’t unpacked because I have no energy or drive to get anything done. I hate that I have no life anymore.

And I hate that the one person who is keeping me sane is the one person who is DRIVING ME CRAZY RIGHT NOW. I know that he’ll walk through the door around six o’clock and we’ll stumble through dinner drama and shout and fuss and then I’ll end up in bed, sobbing. And he’ll wrap his arms around me and I’ll calm right down and fall asleep. I want there to be more resolve than that! But it isn’t happening. Yet.

At least maybe in writing I can find some release enough to keep my tears at bay while I try to figure out what on EARTH to make for supper.

i’ve had to walk the rocks.

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Not many people are aware of this, mostly because I have preferred it to be that way and I like to wear a mask even around people I consider friends, but I have fought a deep depression on and off for over two years now.

Some of you will wryly smile as you remember my college days in which I fought so hard for nouthetic counseling to the point of suggesting that most of depression just means that you are not “right with God.” I’m still no expert on depression but I’m humbled now. I do think God’s word has the answers for all of life. But depression can come from many different things and I’m beginning to understand it’s OKAY to say that I’ve been depressed.

The pieces of my story are cumbersome. I can’t give you an equation to explain my depression. I’m sure it’s been many different things. Leaving the career world to stay at home was a really big deal for me. Becoming a mom has been one of the very best things that has ever happened to me but I know that the swarming hormones have more than likely added to the problem at times, too. We all have baggage in our lives and at some point you have to come face to face with it. I think the past two years have been, in a sense, also my coming to grips with the baggage I’ve carried around. Horrible demons from the past, memories that shake my soul, a lot of hurt people, ruined friendships, and misguided thoughts about God.

My sweet husband has had to put up with this emotional roller-coaster and it hasn’t been pretty. This funk has overwhelmed me to the breaking point on more than one occasion. Some days there were broken dishes lying around. And it was no accident. Some times it looked as though the closet had exploded. And a few times, he’s worried that he’d come home to find me lying on the floor. But through it all, he’s been my rock. He’s held my hand, prayed over me, played the guitar in bed many nights, and still loved me very much.

I tried counseling through a program with my previous employer, only to hear unbiblical advice. I tried biblical counseling, only to be sent away with shallow advice. I tried sharing with a few close people, and after one particular cold response, I decided I’d share no more. And sadly, I began wearing a mask.

But with a mask, you still can’t hide from God. And so my struggle for the past two years has been God wanting to pull of my mask and my being sure that He didn’t need to see my unclean hands. After all, unless I’m pursuing holiness in every second of my day, He won’t bless my life, much less hold me close. Right?

As I’ve learned, that’s wrong. Very wrong. With a breath of fresh air, I’ve recently began to be reacquainted with the amazing, wonderful, grace of Almighty God. So we are taking each day at a time, fighting through this thick mess, and learning more about God. I’m giving my mask up, I’m opening my heart (which is why I’m writing HERE about it, too), and reaching out for God’s strength.

But even in this recent reacquaintance, there have still been some hard times. Uncomfortable times. And Daniel and I have joked that we just want God to just write in the sky – and assure us that we are on the right path. Because letting go of what people think and only caring about what GOD thinks is so…scary. It shouldn’t be that way, I know.

No actual sky-writing has taken place, but the Lord has whispered to us so much in the past few days and encouraged our souls.

This past Sunday, we went to worship in a new place and were humbled by the entire service. Humbled, and overwhelmed at the grace of God.

The offertory was Lead of Love by Caedmon’s Call and I felt my legs almost give way (you can listen to the song on their website).

Looking back at the road so far
The journey’s left its share of scars
Mostly from leaving the narrow and straight

Looking back it is clear to me
That a man is more than the sum of his deeds
And how You’ve made good of this mess I’ve made
Is a profound mystery

Looking back You know You had to bring me through
All that I was so afraid of
Though I questioned the sky, now I see why
Had to walk the rocks to see the mountain view
Looking back I see the lead of love

Looking back I can finally see (I’d rather have wisdom)
How failures bring humility (than be)
Brings me to my knees (a comfortable fool)
Helps me see my need for Thee

That is where I am. Seeing that He is making good of this mess I’ve made. And it IS a profound mystery – no one else can understand it, much less me.

The message struck a chord in my soul. And I’m realizing that growing up, somewhere along the way, I began to see the Bible as a book of moral rules and principles. Stories, and examples of people I should emulate. We’ve all heard “the Bible is the guidebook for life.” We’ve looked at this book for what mothers do – provide comfort, nurture and security. The security of rule-based living, pleasing other people – we find security in that. Especially if we measure up. Because despite the seeming comfort of keeping rules – the truth is we are slaves to guilt and shame and lack of assurance and slaves to pride when we think we DO measure up. That has been my life. And I need to break that pattern and see the Bible as one story from start to finish. God promises to love and accept us, not based on what we do for Him, but based on what He has done for us in Jesus. A God who does not give up on us, but a God who keeps initiating. Whether we measure up or not.