Adventures in Depression

Some people have a legitimate reason to feel depressed, but not me. I just woke up one day feeling sad and helpless for absolutely no reason.


It's disappointing to feel sad for no reason. Sadness can be almost pleasantly indulgent when you have a way to justify it - you can listen to sad music and imagine yourself as the protagonist in a dramatic movie. You can gaze out the window while you're crying and think "This is so sad. I can't even believe how sad this whole situation is. I bet even a reenactment of my sadness could bring an entire theater audience to tears."

But my sadness didn't have a purpose.  Listening to sad music and imagining that my life was a movie just made me feel kind of weird because I couldn't really get behind the idea of a movie where the character is sad for no reason.


Essentially, I was being robbed of my right to feel self pity, which is the only redeeming part of sadness.

And for a little bit, that was a good enough reason to pity myself.


Standing around feeling sorry for myself was momentarily exhilarating, but I grew tired of it quickly. "That will do," I thought. "I've had my fun, let's move on to something else now." But the sadness didn't go away.

I tried to force myself to not be sad.


But trying to use willpower to overcome the apathetic sort of sadness that accompanies depression is like a person with no arms trying to punch themselves until their hands grow back.  A fundamental component of the plan is missing and it isn't going to work. 


When I couldn't will myself to not be sad, I became frustrated and angry. In a final, desperate attempt to regain power over myself, I turned to shame as a sort of motivational tool.

 

But, since I was depressed, this tactic was less inspirational and more just a way to oppress myself with hatred.


Which made me more sad. 


Which then made me more frustrated and abusive.


And that made me even more sad, and so on and so forth until the only way to adequately express my sadness was to crawl very slowly across the floor.


The self-loathing and shame had ceased to be even slightly productive, but it was too late to go back at that point, so I just kept going. I followed myself around like a bully, narrating my thoughts and actions with a constant stream of abuse.


I spent months shut in my house, surfing the internet on top of a pile of my own dirty laundry which I set on the couch for "just a second" because I experienced a sudden moment of apathy on my way to the washer and couldn't continue. And then, two weeks later, I still hadn't completed that journey. But who cares - it wasn't like I had been showering regularly and sitting on a pile of clothes isn't necessarily uncomfortable. But even if it was, I couldn't feel anything through the self hatred anyway, so it didn't matter. JUST LIKE EVERYTHING ELSE.


Slowly, my feelings started to shrivel up. The few that managed to survive the constant beatings staggered around like wounded baby deer, just biding their time until they could die and join all the other carcasses strewn across the wasteland of my soul.

I couldn't even muster up the enthusiasm to hate myself anymore.


I just drifted around, completely unsure of what I was feeling or whether I could actually feel anything at all.


If my life was a movie, the turning point of my depression would have been inspirational and meaningful. It would have involved wisdom-filled epiphanies about discovering my true self and I would conquer my demons and go on to live out the rest of my life in happiness.

Instead, my turning point mostly hinged upon the fact that I had rented some movies and then I didn't return them for too long.

The late fees had reached the point where the injustice of paying any more than I already owed outweighed my apathy. I considered just keeping the movies and never going to the video store again, but then I remembered that I still wanted to re-watch Jumanji.

I put on some clothes, put the movies in my backpack and biked to the video store. It was the slowest, most resentful bike ride ever.


And when I arrived, I found out that they didn't even have Jumanji in.

Just as I was debating whether I should settle on a movie that wasn't Jumanji or go home and stare in abject silence, I noticed a woman looking at me weirdly from a couple rows over.


She was probably looking at me that way because I looked really, really depressed and I was dressed like an eskimo vagrant.

Normally, I would have felt an instant, crushing sense of self-consciousness, but instead, I felt nothing.



I've always wanted to not give a fuck. While crying helplessly into my pillow for no good reason, I would often fantasize that maybe someday I could be one of those stoic badasses whose emotions are mostly comprised of rock music and not being afraid of things. And finally - finally - after a lifetime of feelings and anxiety and more feelings, I didn't have any feelings left. I had spent my last feeling being disappointed that I couldn't rent Jumanji.

I felt invincible.


And thus began a tiny rebellion.


Then I swooped out of there like the Batman and biked home in a blaze of defiant glory.


And that's how my depression got so horrible that it actually broke through to the other side and became a sort of fear-proof exoskeleton.

4,237 comments:

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Wolfie said...

You're back! My life is complete! Yay!

MleuxJ said...

Yes, that's the difference between feeling depressed and being depressed. Feeling depressed, you can kind of "indulge" in it, listening to sad music for example. Being depressed, on the other hand, is so powerful it completely takes over you, surrounds you with a grey curtain, sucks the energy out of you, and leaves you incredulous and completely helpless. Thank you for sharing. (Un)fortunately, you are not alone.

MleuxJ said...

Yes, that's the difference between feeling depressed and being depressed. Feeling depressed, you can kind of "indulge" in it, listening to sad music for example. Being depressed, on the other hand, is so powerful it completely takes over you, surrounds you with a grey curtain, sucks the energy out of you, and leaves you incredulous and completely helpless. Thank you for sharing. (Un)fortunately, you are not alone.

FrightRat said...

I love how, even when you're talking about depression, you manage to make your comics funny and enjoyable to read. :)

I hope you feel better now. You're awesome and I missed you.

Stephen A. Meigs said...

If I were you, I probably wouldn't worry about being sad. The main significance of sadness, I have decided, is that when males feel sad, it makes them more physically attractive for mating because (like holiness) it reduces genetic crossover in spermatogenesis. Females when mating are on average harmed by this crossover, because the crossover on average decreases harmonies that have been selected for, and the females won't have in descendants much genetic material near these male crossover points that can take advantage of any new harmonies (which advantage to males making crosses can accrue to a significant amount over many generations). Unlucky males, or males who especially love (in a holy way) a female under consideration, or just males who adopt a piety because they think they are great and want to attract many females, they probably via these emotions restrict genetic crossover to make themselves more attractive and pleasing to females, appropriately leaving the sacrifices involved in genetic mixing to future generations.

Probably sadness in a female is just a way of telling a male that he should have sympathy (sadness) for her. This is appropriate if the female has been unlucky. But it is also appropriate if the female is great or if she has a pious male. Perhaps you consider yourself too special to be appropriately otherwise than sad, e.g., because you are rather special.

Aristotle in the Nicomachean Ethics [1171b] recognized that sympathy is different in males and females.

Unless he [a male with a manly nature] is unusually immune to pain, he cannot endure pain coming to his friends and he does not allow others to share his mourning at all, since he is not prone to mourn himself either. Females, however, and effeminate men enjoy having people to wail with them; they love them as friends who share their distress. But in everything we clearly must imitate the better person. [Terence Irwin trans.]

A simpler reason a male may not want other males to mourn with him is that that would make the other males more attractive to females the male himself might prefer to be attracted to him. As for females, the more females that wail, the sadder the males around are likely to become, which is sexually beneficial to all the females.

Lucky people have exorbitant power, and that is probably why sadness is underrated.

Anonymous said...

From one person suffering from depression to another: Thanks for this. We can beat this thing.

I hope you feel better soon.

Anonymous said...

I liked the first picture where the sun is so happy to be up. Depression has no rhyme or reason - I often wonder how I can be so sad on such a beautiful day. Thank you once again for posting about something that so many people can relate to. Hope life continues to look up for you.

Anonymous said...

Thank you.

Thank you.

M'goign to go to my doctor monday, and discuss this comic with her. Cause it's exactly how I've felt for so long now.

Thank you for helping me realise what is going on.

Khrystine said...

Waiiitt... You rode your bike? I thought you were terrified of riding bikes... Haha. Well, congrats on that. :)
By the way, I love your blog. :D

Albert G said...

I love you Allie:D<3

Albert G said...

I love you Allie:D<3

Kaia Amber said...

I've missed laughing out loud to my computer screen so much!!

Ms N said...

Welcome back :)

Anonymous said...

You just made depression something that anyone can understand. I've suffered from it for nine years and here I am reading this going... uh, that is exactly how it feels.

I hope you continue on your up and up. We miss the hilarity of your words and though this was sad, it was also amazing that you took this and turned it into something expressive.

We're pulling for you!

Rose_Madder said...

Thank you for this. I'm so glad you're back and feeling better, hopefully. Kick that depression's ASS!

Anonymous said...

Hey Allie! I've been reading your blog since April and i've literally read every single one! I hope you feel better! We're all here for you ^^

~Lea

Anonymous said...

Hey Allie! I've been reading your blog since April and i've literally read every single one! I hope you feel better! We're all here for you ^^

~Lea

Lauren said...

:( Go to amazon.com and BUY Jumanji. Then if you ever feel like that again, you will be armed with a secret weapon: Robin Williams fighting giant animals (and spiders).

Lauren said...

ps I totally know what you went/ are going through and it sucks to feel like you are removed from the whole world. There are so many people who read your post and could relate so just know you aren't as alone as you feel! And it's ok to see a doctor if it doesn't pass, like so many of us have. You'll get through it!

Anonymous said...

Excellent post. I've been feeling like this for weeks now. Maybe I'll actually be inspired to do my laundry now.

leendadll said...

Clinical depression was both the worst & best thing to ever happen to me. 6 months of wanting to die (but not kill myself) was horrible. But coming out the other side, to the total FREEDOM of being true to myself and doing whatever the hell I want, when I want, without caring about judgment has been WONDERFUL.

Good luck!

Erin B said...

a) I have felt every single one of these feelings before
b) This was still hilarious while bein goignant and touching so awesome job there
c) thanks for being brave enough to post this
d) I think I am going to use the trying to beat yourself up without hands analogy with my patients when I talk to them about depression
YOU ARE THE BESTEST :D !!!!!

Fredalyn said...

We love you Allie! I've been there before, and unfortunately, sometimes still revisit that dark place. I'm still working on a way to stay in the 'breakthrough' part for more than a few days. I'm really glad you were able to relate this story for us. Stay invincible!

Melissa said...

I love you for this comic. It pretty much describes everything about depression for me.

I hope you are feeling okay now, and I hope you touched lots of spiders.

This post made me laugh so hard at my own depression.

Thank you.

Andiruth said...

THANK YOU! Allie, you rock. Thank you for telling your experience with depression in your own awesomely creative way. I hope only that you can feel better yet, at the pace you need. Do what you need to do to be you and be well.

Ichneumon said...

Allie, the next time you find yourself on that downward spiral -- or even before, so as to head it off at the pass -- PLEASE go to your doctor and talk to them about this (show them your post, it'd be a great "medical history" for them to see).

There are many, many medications which can work wonders on depression these days, and help keep you from wasting weeks/months/years of your life in a self-destructive cycle.

They're not "happy pills", they just put your own brain chemistry back into proper balance so that you can be yourself again, not SuperDepressedGirl who can't even do simple tasks anymore and hates herself.

I've had anxiety disorders (which along with OCD are actually in the same family of syndromes as depression), and medications saved my job and saved my life. Don't try to tough it out unaided next time, you may not make it through it again, and even if you do there's no reason to torture yourself like that.

Anonymous said...

I feel exactly like this, minus the 'I'm invincible exoskeleton (which I wish I had). Depression sucks.

Bon courage, Allie.

Clarica said...

TGIHBAAH. I was about to send you a guest blogging post about you being away writing your book, and I swear that this post is half of it. Well, technically you were hunched over a keyboard trying to pretend you were not writing a book while writing a book, but you convey it well without a keyboard. The other half is the idea that you are having a great time writing your book without us with lots of sunglasses and margaritas or something. Plus I can't draw so well, but I was going to try anyway. I am glad for you to be making new blog posts for me, so I don't have to do it for you. thank you!

Audra said...

I love everything about this post. I have been this person (in every aspect except I drove instead of biking), and this post makes me feel incredible.

For the love of all that is holy, please make a T-Shirt out of that last image.

Grace said...

At first I was like :|

Then I was like :(

Which became :C

But then that turned into :)

Which finally turned into XD

And that was how I went from feeling sad to giggling hysterically, all in the space of five minutes.

Anonymous said...

AHHHH! You're back! I'm so happy! :D Sorry you've been so sad. Where was boyfriend during all of this? He should have gone out and gotten you the skittles!

Grace said...

Also, for the record, I've been that depressed before. I was so low, at one point, that I was on the verge of doing something incredibly stupid. So I know what it's like to feel that way, and I want to give you a GREAT BIG FREAKING HUG.

I also second the notion to turn that last picture into a t-shirt :3

Aestarel said...

D'awww. Now I want to take the train down to... Ashland? Is that where you live? I think that's where. Either Ashland or Bend. Or maybe that's a different blogger. Anyway, I want to come find you now and hug you and do something to make you feel better. I don't yet know what that something is, but it will be epic once I think of it.
I'm a trained crisis line worker, so maybe it would work.

Leah said...

Hello, Allie. Apathy is the hardest part of depression, and being a robot's no fun. Your writing sounds a lot like my own on this one, especially that initial furious pity-rage against apathy, which never works because you're apathetic. Duh. Tell that to my brain...

I got out of it, eventually. Writing's what helped me the most. That, and pills to fix my suddenly crazy hormones that were partially causing the depression.

Good luck to you, though. You v. Depression. May the best girl win :)

Princess Cupcake said...

I've been super depressed lately too, and there are reasons, but I still tend to beat up on myself kinda like your little character's evil-voice-in-her head does.
Thanks for reminding me that I'm not the only depressed person on Planet Earth.
<3

Anonymous said...

Good one. Odd that the last comment was also from a stephanie C. just one that can be bothered to do the thing properly, I just chose anonymous.

fireswan said...

i am currently in this situation. i'm so glad you are still going with the site, and i still look forward to your book. just know you have made my day a bit better knowing someone else is in my situation too :-)

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Sidhechaos said...

44 1/2 years on this planet and I've been on that merry go round more than a few times.

I've had a few defining moments where I developed my life philosophies.

Hitting puberty and deciding I had had ENOUGH of the bullying I'd endured all my life and waiting for the worst bastard in school to start in on me one day and handing him his ass with a side of his own teeth on the floor next to him.

FINALLY getting it through to my parents that I'm not lazy, stupid, retarded, just going through a phase or being a teenager but YES, I really do have biochemical imbalances that affect my mood and behavior, and while it's termed "Mental illness" EVERYONE GOES THROUGH IT AT SOME POINT. For some reason my brain simply has a periodic repeat mode.

Kissing many many toads before I found a princess of a therapist who helped me glue my shit back together, and when I couldn't do it, helped me learn how to ride it out.

Surviving my ex husband, and I do mean SURVIVING.

My philosophies? Maybe they seem trite to a lot of people, but you know what?They are true. What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. (I learned I am actually DAMN GOOD at physically defending myself if attacked)

Don't let the bastards put you down. (I no longer take shit from anyone, I will stand in someone's space and calmly inform them that if they chose to think of themselves as a worthwhile person they WILL show me respect and courtesy, and I will do the same. They do NOT get those things automatically because they are a boss, the bosses secretary/blowjob specialist, a cop, someone from medicare or social security..the only people who get a pass are very small children and the mentally challenged.)

every night when I go to bed I look out the window and say screw you world, I survived another day, and you can kiss my ass again tomorrow.

I learned attitude with MYSELF? not to helpful, I was just repeating everything I heard from everyone else and none of it was remotely helpful. I am who I AM, a fish can't turn itself into a unicorn just because it wants to, I will never be all those things everyone told me I should strive for. (four inches taller, a size 6, good at sports, good at math WHATEVER.) Much of it factually IMPOSSIBLE. If person X can't handle who you are, screw them, they aren't worth rubbing two brain cells together anyway.

Learning to separate what I CAN go head to head with and win and letting those things I CAN'T do anything about at given time and simply asking $diety, or if you are atheist I guess you could say a change in the odds to handle it when it needs to be done, and finding other things to occupy your mind and time that probably isn't on that list that all the person X's thing I should be doing, but it's something I've always wanted to do, so I am.

Depression sucks, and it's sneaky, but you take all it's power when you stop giving a damn and believe in yourself.

signed by the purple hat wearing, cat owning, techno music playing while surrounded by rednecks, practicing sword combat forms in my back yard for the whole trailer park to see ME. Like it, or piss off.

Anonymous said...

Allie -- you're awesome. I want to type more compliments, but they would just sound goofy. Thanks for writing and sharing. You're awesome.

Tiina Raita said...

This would make me cry, if it weren't for those awesome anti-depressant drugs I use. Instead, it makes me want to cry because it's so relatable and funny and sad at the same time. Depression has been with me and within me for years. I've been to therapy, used all kinds of medicine, stopped using them and always had to start using them again even though I've felt healthier. Now I'm in a situation where I can go to work and live my life almost like a normal human being would, but I doubt I can ever live a happy life without anti-depressants. And it will take years for me to reach my full capacity to do laundry on time, to cook and to clean my home... I'm starting to think that this will be a long journey with ups and downs to grow out of depression. Or maybe I'll learn to live with it and to feel better about it. Who knows.

Sorry for the rambling. Thank you so much for this post.

Anonymous said...

New Post!!!!
Waheey!!!
Please don't go away again.

Anonymous said...

once again, you're my idol

Anonymous said...

You have no doubt spoken for a lot of people with this post, me included, and I love how eloquent your description of your experience with depression is. I find it so hard to talk about or explain, as I always feel like I make my depression sound like a self-pity fest; poor me, cruel world etc When in actual fact it is only about how utterly worthless I feel at times. I don't feel sorry for myself, I just cannot see the point of myself. Two very different things. And it is very brave of you to admit that personal hygiene goes out of the window, as that is one of the things I have the hardest time coming to terms with. You are ace!

Anonymous said...

You have no doubt spoken for a lot of people with this post, me included, and I love how eloquent your description of your experience with depression is. I find it so hard to talk about or explain, as I always feel like I make my depression sound like a self-pity fest; poor me, cruel world etc When in actual fact it is only about how utterly worthless I feel at times. I don't feel sorry for myself, I just cannot see the point of myself. Two very different things. And it is very brave of you to admit that personal hygiene goes out of the window, as that is one of the things I have the hardest time coming to terms with. You are ace!

Ren said...

I believe the fear proof exoskeletion is the other side of your bipolar kicking in. Just saying from experience; been there, done that (in shoots and reversible waves D:).

Anonymous said...

Difference between depression and bipolar: that last picture is what I'm afraid of more than the depression.

Hailey said...

Allie--
This is my first time commenting on one of your posts. But I wanted to let you know that you are loved and that I totally relate to you and this came at a time when I am battling my own depression. I'm also trying to help my friend understand what's inside my own head and this will help like nothing else can.
Thank you so much for posting again, and if it's any consolation, I'll do whatever I can for you. Just look at all the comments from people around the world who support you and love you.
Glad to have you back, kiddo.
<3

Libby Brown said...

Allie's back! I was honestly worrying about you a little bit. I discovered you this summer, and went through an archive binge of amazingness. I was kind of worried by the long block of writinglessness. You rock, and like everyone else I'm glad to see you are best. I went through a bout of depression when I was a teenager. I never got any therapy from it, even though I probably needed it. It was exactly like what you were describing there. You're amazing.

Anonymous said...

Having battled depression for 22 years and won, I can say that vitamin deficiency is often the cause of unexplained depression. Try vitamins B and D, and google "vitamins depression" for more information.

Anonymous said...

Oh how I've missed your posts! I'm so glad to see something new here! I'm happy you came through the other side of your depression. That is what we have to do. No, there is no going back, only forward... Whatever's on the other side.

Anonymous said...

AND THEN WHAT HAPPENED? 8O

Anonymous said...

You know you've been gone to long when, a few days after a new post, there's over 3000 comments waiting for you.
Hope that cheers you up some.

SARAH. said...

You're so amazing and your posts make my day. Kwachaka<3

Natti said...

Firstly, thank you for the new post. I'm sorry to hear you've been suffering with depression, and I'm so glad that you seem to have made it through to the other side.
I have to say, as someone suffering from depression myself, this was very relatable. Sadly, I haven't gotten to the point where I've broken through it yet. I suppose the only redeeming point is that I am getting some help for it. I would have tried asking for help sooner but another argument with my self-loathing side ensued, because I thought there was no legitimate reason that I should be depressed in the first place.
Anyway, I'd just like to say thanks for posting this. You sum it up perfectly. It's nice to know that I might eventually beat this depression, so thanks for giving me hope :) It means so much to me.

The Lady Satan DeSade said...

Reading your post I went from sad, to "uh huh, yep, oh hell yes been there" to cheering.

Thank you so much for sharing. It was the most honest, accurate (and funny!) description of depression I have ever seen.

I hope things are MUCH better for you now and that the "nothing can do anything to me" is the new you.

Mucho *HUGS* to you and THANK YOU for the continuing wonderfulness.

The Betwixt said...

I want to recommend to you "The War of Art". It makes things make sense for artists.

Also, I want to say, you deserve success. You are TOTALLY worthy of it.

And also, sometimes, Seattle sucks my soul. I've never in my life had such a difficult time making friends as I have here. But sometimes I think, hey, I can do this. I can be friendly, and nice, and it's okay. The friends will happen when I'm ready! :D

Anonymous said...

Get well soon! You're not alone, so hang in there.

All the best!

Sissi

Emily said...

Thank you for sharing your experience with depression. My grandmother committed suicide when my mom was a teenager, but no one ever talked about it to my mom or her siblings because depression was (and still often is) such a dirty word. When my mom and her siblings started suffering from depression as adults, finally my family started talking about it. Thank God, because otherwise I am not sure that I would have had the courage to go to therapy and take Prozac when I started suffering from depression right after college. I'm just really thankful to you, Allie, for speaking about this in a public forum and creating awareness about depression. It's hard to admit when you're sad for no reason, and it's even more difficult for people who have never suffered from depression to validate those feelings when there is no rational reason for feeling sad. I'm sure that your post will help many people get through dark times. And, I hope you're feeling better now, and, if you aren't, that you're taking steps to get better.

That being said, I'm really glad to see another post from you. We've all really missed you while you've been off writing your book (which I can't wait to read, by the way). You put a little extra humor and fun in my life with your blog.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for writing this. I am only 19 now but all throughout high school i would go into periods of depression when i wouldnt want to wake up in the mornings and would fall apart crying for no reason and i would not tell anyone because i was embarrassed i felt like that for no reason you are so funny and relatable i am happy that you are able to express your depression in a way that makes me jealous that I had not admitted it sooner please keep writing we all have missed you

Lindsey said...

Allie, this is my life, except I'm surrounded by people who just don't understand. I wish I had your exoskeleton. Be well, John Spartan (I felt the burning need to quote Demolition Man for you).

We were really worried about (The intarwebz) and we're glad to see you back. Take care of yourself, even when the world is crashing down around you, the internet shall set you free. We love you. Here, have a cookie.

Alexsandria said...

My favorite part:
"having a party, eh?"
"Nope."

High-larious.

Emily said...

Oh! Also, I second one of Anonymous's comment about the correlation between depression and vitamin levels. I found out 2 years ago that I have pernicious anemia, which means that my body doesn't absorb Vitamin B12 through my digestive tract. Now that I give myself monthly shots of Vitamin B12, I have a much easier time managing my depressive episodes. Not that vitamins are the answer to depression, but people should definitely be aware that sometimes depression can be a symptom of something else (e.g., vitamin absorption, or thyroid problems).

Emily said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
sunday said...

I'm really glad this story had a happy ending, I was gonna be really sad. Also nice to see you updating again! Yay :D

zoe!! said...

hey allie!! my name is zoe and i wanted to say I LOVVEE your blog my freind eliza turned me on and now we love to be the first to see a post so we can inform each other you make my day day after day


and just so you know we our both 12


andddddd finally i found this on pinintrest its funny but i dont know if your cool with people useing your art

http://pinterest.com/pin/449439524/





thanks for laughs,

zoe (prononced ZOH EE)

zoe!! said...

hey allie!! my name is zoe and i wanted to say I LOVVEE your blog my freind eliza turned me on and now we love to be the first to see a post so we can inform each other you make my day day after day


and just so you know we our both 12


andddddd finally i found this on pinintrest its funny but i dont know if your cool with people useing your art

http://pinterest.com/pin/449439524/





thanks for laughs,

zoe (prononced ZOH EE)

Anonymous said...

Hey Allie! Thanks for the post! I have been there all too recently and am currently working on feeling bad ass again. Some days (and weeks) are harder than others but it all works out in the end :D

Michelle said...

As a sufferer of depression and various forms of mania, I can totally relate to this. It's a great depiction of the process of depression. Thankyou for writing this, it definitely made my day a little better.

Anonymous said...

totally have been here. you are awesome.

Anonymous said...

Welcome back! So glad you're posting again. We know all about depression in this house. My husband and our housemate almost hospitalized me a few days ago for the same. Soooos... Welcome back! :D

JBean said...

I've so been there. My breakthrough wasn't a video store--it was The Weepie's song, "Not Your Year." The last line was kind of like depression kryptonite.

The Good Luck Duck said...

I want to hug Cartoon Allie, but she wouldn't like it, and might take out a Cartoon Restraining Order.

The Gabble Duck said...

I am SO excited to see another post :) :)

Been checking back reguarly - like just incase...

Not that i'm creepy or anything...

I promise...


But, on another note, that is not my creepyness...
Depression sucks. And I totally get you. But Win on your depression exoskellengton (I have never been able to spell that... ever...)

AM said...

I don't know what to make of all the people cheering that a new post is up. I'm sorry you're having so much trouble. Go running! Hope you get through to feeling vincible soon.

len132 said...

So, I'm studying for an immunology test, right? One of the hardest classes at my university... When a friend pulled up your blog and it had a new post on it, I threw down my text book and said "Fuck immunology! My life has meaning again!"

That's how much I love you.

Anonymous said...

Hey, you'll never read this because, you know there are 3900 comments. BUT, if you do, know that there are 3900 commentators here, most of whom, really care about you!

I've been at the place where you are/were. Its dangerous, and its not easy to get out of. You probably need some help.

Talking with someone will help. Running will help. Riding your bike will help.

Please Allie.

Caroline (I worship Allie) said...

AHHH! I thought you were dead. I totally worship you and I'm so so glad that you didn't die. So, yeah. Just wanted to tell you that you're excellent, and I have quite a few things in common with you. !. I'm a grammar freak, too which is sort of weird because I'm 11. 2.I'm A complete internet surfer as well. 3. I'm lazy too, no way! So, yes, I love you and worship you and I'm also really excited for you're new book!
-Caroline, age 11

KricketBug said...

I'M SO GLAD YOUR'E BACK! I MISSED YOU! This post is very relatable, unfortunately, but after several years, I'm better now. And it looks like you're on your way to getting better. I'm so glad. Chin up, beautiful.

TheWizard said...

I'd to say I love you. In a sister but not really way. Also, I understand the guilt that accompanies depression. I have an awesome family and magnificent friends, but I still havve moments of pure despair.

Inunah said...

I can relate so much, but the numbness never comes and the depression never goes. And there's nothing I can do about trying to relieve it since I don't have money or a car (you have to go to the next town over just to find a friggen walmart) or friends. :\

Nika said...

no more being sad!
people make alots and love them a lot:
http://www.craftster.org/forum/index.php?PHPSESSID=aihoto41mm18jvlm7dn2cacgl3&topic=345435.0

i just felt like i HAD to tell you o_o

HannahS. said...

Hey Allie,
I've been reading you blog for over a year, but never comment b/c I feel like it will be drowned out by all of your super enthusiastic readers. I thought you were working on your book all this time and was so sorry to hear about what you've been going through. Good News? Things change. This will pass like everything else. You will be happy again even if it doesn't feel possible right now. Try to find hope in that if nothing else. The road out of depression is harder than most people know.
Hannah

Anonymous said...

Allie, you're awesome.
wish I cloud helped.

Barth Gimble.

mlw said...

God I freaking love this.

Brooke said...

I can definitely sympathize almost all of this.XP

Brooke said...

I can definitely sympathize almost all of this.XP

Anonymous said...

This sounds a lot like bipolar disorder... I do hope you managed to find some adequate help regardless of your condition...

Razz said...

The cashier guy totally looks like Hella Jeff.

Andrew said...

Allie, I missed you
And I understand completely. I'm in a depressed state right now, and I definitely agree with the fearless exoskeleton sometimes.
Just keep being the most awesome person I know :) Please and thank you.

Anonymous said...

Tearing up because depression makes one feel totally alone and isolated and trapped. But your post and the comments are a fantastic reminder that it's not a solitary event; it affects so many and hopefully they come out stronger. And ready to combat spiders, of course.

Julie said...

I felt this way for about two years. I really suggest anti-depressants - they've helped a lot and make me capable of interacting with people again. Good luck.

Mintymarshmallow said...

Hugs. (:

Anonymous said...

You give me hope that one day I too will be able to leave the house.

Anonymous said...

Yup. That's pretty much it exactly.

I have a hard time answering people when they ask how I've been, because I've pretty much become a non-human. No feelings, no thinking, just food and internet.

This made me smile, though.

Anonymous said...

Having struggled through something similar this year, I have to say that this is the most accurate description of what depression is like that I have ever read.

Thank-you for giving voice to those feelings floating in my head. I hope that things continue to improve for you from here.

Anonymous said...

Dear Allie,
Please go get help. You don't deserve to feel like shit. I promise you will not regret it.
I suffered a major depressive episode when I was twenty. I was hospitalized for being on the verge of suicide when I could no longer stand the pain of being alive. I know there is no worse feeling in the world than the endless hopelessness of depression.
You can feel like a normal person again. Depression is not your fault, but you have the most powerful weapon against it imaginable: you have a choice. You can choose to let a professional help you to slowly change your life.
I have never told anyone besides my doctor this, and writing this made me cry: not because I am sad anymore but because I remember exactly how it feels. I hope this makes a difference for you or any other person suffering from depression.
Good luck.

Anonymous said...

I want more of your post. MOAR MOAR MOAR

Anonymous said...

"nothing can do anything to me" w/ the picture would make a very inspiring shirt/poster/mousepad, etc, for me, and for many of your fans, judging by the comments. thanks for expressing all of this so truly & making us all smile : )

Anonymous said...

"nothing can do anything to me" w/ the picture would make a very inspiring shirt/poster/mousepad, etc, for me, and for many of your fans, judging by the comments. thanks for expressing all of this so truly & making us all smile : )

Anonymous said...

Glad you are back! Way to kick Sad Monster's ass. If Charles Schultz and Earnest Hemingway could have a baby it would be you. But that would be gross because men don't have uteri...and they are men...and they're both dead. Oh crap-just called you a zombie baby.

Not what I meant. (:

Anonymous said...

And sometimes we all want to die. I know I do. #OccupyDepression

Anonymous said...

And another thing: I know one can't really run away from depression and hope is a bitch - but you could always come and be depressed on our sofa.

Anonymous said...

it's gonna be okay, there there. (pat)

Sophie said...

Thank you for posting this. I had depression for a year and a half, and the worst part of it was that I thought I was alone. The turning point for me was when I watched an episode of Doctor Who starring Vincent Van Gogh, who was also depressed. I looked at it and thought, 'Hey, someone else feeling the same way I do? Maybe I'm not alone after all.' By posting this maybe someone else will see that they're not the only one who feels this way, and won't feel so isolated any more. It's really brave of you, and I hope you feel better soon. I hope you keep blogging - having something to aim for really helps. For me, it was taking an exam after everyone had told me my education was over. I passed it, and I'm at college now. When I was depressed the thing that kept me down the most was the idea that I would never feel happy again. After feeling drained for so long, I'd forgotten what feeling happy felt like. I wish I'd had someone who'd been through what I was experiencing to tell me it was just a fear, and that when you've recovered, your life and emotions - especially the good ones - will come back again fully. Now I've recovered from my depression, I feel happy again.
I had a psychologist, but I think the thing that helped the most was that one day, I decided that I wasn't going to bloody well give up. I decided to wake up and say, 'Today I'm pissing well going to bloody fucking go to that cupboard and eat some chocolate. Screw you, calorie bastards, I'm going to eat the fuck out of you.' That helped me when I felt I could do nothing else - eating chocolate and watching all seven seasons of Buffy in about a month. But when I started to think, 'I'm going to bloody shitting lala get my life back now', just getting out of bed was the best thing I did. It wasn't easy, but if you keep trying, I promise you that it'll get better. Some days are shittier than others, but one day will feel just a little bit less shit than the day before it. I hope this helps a bit. You're not alone, and I think you're ridiculously brave for posting this. So you go eat those Smarties, man. Eat the shit out of them. You've sure as hell earned them <3

Unknown said...

This is amazing and funny and sad and painfully honest. Thank you and that last picture is my new inspiration damn it.

Anonymous said...

YES! Fear and spider proof exoskeleton! You could probably hold a whole tarantula now. Or command an army of them.

Anonymous said...

YES! Fear and spider proof exoskeleton! You could probably hold a whole tarantula now. Or command an army of them.

Mitch said...

Hi Allie.
I just wanted to say..
I love all of your posts, and they've always made me laugh, except for the last two, which just made me happy for you, and admire you, respectively.
I regularly feel the numbness you describe at the end of your post, as well as the random sadness. Both only last about an hour at most, usually, so I don't know if it's just moodswings or whatever..

But <3 You're fantastic. Thanks for always brightening my day with 'Ouch.. why?", after I'd read all your posts, and with all your posts before I'd read them all :)

Anonymous said...

thank you

jEnergy said...

3934 comments as I write this. Astounding yet unsurprising to anyone who has lived through this; we all want to print this out and hand it out to all who know us and to all we know suffer the same. The only more succinct and "nailed it" comment than the "punching yourself in the face when you have no arms" bit was I THINK said or written by Dick Cavett: Depression is knowing that the cure for it is sitting on a table just across the room from where you are lying, but you cannot make yourself get up and walk that far.

You must get tired of hearing this but I have to say it too: you have the gift--well, you have many but this is the most profound--of writing about a feeling or story that is unique to you and somehow turning it into something that makes your readers think, "Yes, that's exactly it! How the hell does she understand EVERYTHING and EVERYONE???

It makes me so happy that you are earning an ever-growing audience because of your beautiful gifts. Don't ever, ever think of your blog as a funny little thing with simple drawings. Speaking of gifts! You imbue funny little drawings with life and feeling. How the heck do you do that??

Anonymous said...

I may have reached that point where when I no longer have emotions (I kind of laugh in the face of everything. Haha! Comments!) Still, it was a minor depression-like thing, so I don't feel like a bad-ass, and am still paranoid about gravity taking revenge on me.

nz sarah said...

Keep being you :)

Mer Mcabre said...

Dear Allie,

I have very similar depression. Although I'm better now I used to often call in sick at work because I just could not get out of bed in the morning. I couldn't sleep but I didn't want to get back up. I'd cry and feel sorry for myself and walk extremely long distances until I was exhausted. I found your blog when I was in my down stage and I'm pretty sure it was the letter your microwave that had me in stitches for the first time in months. So I wanna say thank you for your work. It is amazing.
Lots of lovess
~Mer x

Anonymous said...

I'm still waiting for the exo-skeleton. I don't think I will be around long enough for it to form. But thank you for this post - maybe forwarding it to people will help them understand?

Unknown said...

that was a great read and has made me a reflect on my own feelings thanks for opening the window and showing me that the sky is blue on the other side

Becca said...

I missed you. Welcome back :)

bwii said...

Totally love your story!
Rock on. Rocker!

Ben Squiggs said...

This actually made me cry.
I see so much of myself in this comic, and it actually made me feel I could do something about it.

It is also beautiful to see you posting again <3
Keep strong and keep happy!!!

Anonymous said...

This was funny, sad, funny again, triumphant. I laughed out loud and my kids asked why. But most of all, this is creative and full of energy. And that is amazing, given that depression is an energy sucker. Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful.

Anonymous said...

This was amazing. I laughed, I winced, I've been there.

Vince said...

I'm sleeping with a tv on my bed...and piles of stuff everywhere from moving. I've been seriously depressed and haven't shared it with anyone. Reading this a second time this morning, I've decided I'm at that last stage now. Thank you for that, Allie. It's so comforting to me to know there's a smart, beautiful and funny person like you who goes through the same things I do with ADD and depression. We love you.

Michael said...

I've only recently begun reading your blog, but it's clear that you are an amazing person. I'm really happy that you've begun posting again, and I hope that you get to feel as happy as you deserve to be (which is, by the way, really really happy and smug in the knowledge of how awesome you are). I hope that you post again soon, and remember that there are thousands of people that only hope the best for you!

Val said...

You captured it so well, Allie. :)

BriDav said...

As someone who struggles with depression I love how candid you are in this post. I really appreciate that you took the time to write all of this out. You present it in a way that can not be brushed off. I can't count how many times people have said to me "Just be happy, the only person who can make you unhappy is yourself." This post explains depression in a way that can not be explained away. Thank you. You are wonderful.

Tess said...

Yes. They need to post this on the wall in every psychologist/psychiatrist/counselor's office in every corner of the world.

critterfixr said...

Hi Allie--
When one is depressed it's so hard to muster the energy to capture all that you did, and convey it in a way that reaches out and speaks to soo many people. Kudos to you for making that happen in yourself, and hugs to your hurting soul. If you find yourself sliding don't be afraid to ask for help. Depression of the type you're describing CAN be treated successfully. I struggled with depression most of my life, so getting to the other side (at age 46) was a HUGE relief. Don't let that much of your life go by in pain. I love how you express yourself and you have many more funny blogs to write! :) You rock!

ariel said...

yaaaaaaaaay!!
yeah, eff feelings!
DUH NUH NUH NUH NUH NUH

Anonymous said...

YOU'RE BACK YOU'RE BACK YOU'RE BAAAAAAAACK!!!!!!
my life is not longer in turmoil.
ps im not afraid of anything either. lets go provoke some bears.

Anonymous said...

WE LOVE YOU!!!!!

Molly said...

Hi,
I'm terribly sorry you are going through this. I have been suffering anxiety chronically and intermittent episodes of depression since I was thirteen, all starting suddenly for no reason, all lasting several months, and then slowly but surely vanishing for another couple of years. Antidepressants made me crazy and seemed to only speed up the time between episodes. Turns out, I'm bipolar. Getting on the right medication has changed my life. I am almost fully functioning now, more stable than I was even during non-depressed times. They're not zombie pills or happy pills or part of a secret government plot to keep me from seeing the truth of everything's shittiness. They just help me feel like a normal human being who doesn't go on binges of self-hatred every few minutes. So please, if you're still feeling this way, consider talking to a doctor. I know there's stigma, but it can make a world of difference. It might not even be depression-depression--it might have to do with your thyroid.

I'm really glad to see you're posting again, though. Bringing joy to other people and all. I couldn't help but crack up and your illustrations--only you could turn depression adorable, lol. My friends who also read your blog and I have been concerned, like, "WHERE IS ALLIEEEE, WHY HAS SHE FORSAAAKEEENNN USSSS?" Depression's a legit reason, don't let anyone tell you it's not. Some people have diabetes, some people have seizures, and some people have depression. Chemicals, man. They'll fuck you up.

I like the person who said they're printing this out and taking it to their therapist. I'm tempted to do the same. You captured depression really well with your lumpy self portraits and little frowny faces. Even in the midst of crippling apathy and self-doubt, you are wonderfully creative <3

Long-ass message over,
Love all up in this bitch,
If you don't like it, eat a dick, beeyotch,
Molly

Molly said...

Okay, that last comment was filled with disgusting typos and grammatical stabby stabby knives, but it's only because I am SO EMOTIONAL OVER YOUR RETURN TO US. <3

MollieRMS said...

As most of your commentators, I can completely relate. I think it's important for all of us to know we're not alone and depression is not something to be ashamed of. Great post. I hope we see more of you soon.

kablarkin said...

I'm really glad that you are feeling better, but I must say that I think that you should get counseling. As someone who has studied psychology, I know that a lot of people feel worse before they feel better. You already know that, obviously. However, what most people don't know is that when you start to feel better, this is when you may feel more vulnerable. I think that counseling would be a really good idea right now.

Anonymous said...

It's odd, not only how completely I can relate to your post, but how instead of evoking some deep, profound emotional response, causing me to brood for an hour or two, I've found the post really funny. I think it's because at the moment I have flavored tea and got the best table at this crowded cafe (and everyone else is totally jealous that they don't have this spot, and I win at being at a cafe). And also because your MS paint awesomeness makes me smile. :)

...I don't really know where I was going with this, or if I have anything to add to the thousands of other comments, other than saying thank you for giving my feelings validation by voicing your thoughts so well. (Which sound a lot like my thoughts, apparently.)

Alex Risley said...

Where was Boyfriend in this mess?

Anonymous said...

Hey, you! Yes, you! You've got almost 4000 comments, most of which are supportive and telling you to feel better! Ignore those assholes who aren't.

Seriously though man, talk to a doctor. I put off getting on meds for my depression for years because I assumed they gave you a false sense of happiness. They don't--they take away the false sense of depression. I still laugh, I still cry, I still get angry...the only difference is that now my emotions are actually about something, and they are real emotions, and I don't feel numb or apathetic or nearly catatonic anymore. I can't stress enough how much I want you to go see a doctor.

You are a beautiful and wonderfully creative person. Your posts are the funniest things I've seen on the internet--really, the one about the fish made me cry from laughter. I wondered before whether you might have depression when I read the "CLEAN ALL THE THINGS" post...just because I could relate so strongly to the "INTERNET FOREVER" bit.

Now you are among the elite, tortured artists! See, there's always an up side.

We all love you. Please don't be afraid to get help.

Anonymous said...

This was fantastic! I cannot count how many times I felt the same way, and reading your lively prose helped me realize how infinitely dumb I looked while being so.

Thank you, as I needed that laugh today :-)

- Ian

berättaren said...

I'm so glad you are back, I've missed you. And I'm sad that you are sad. I hope you feeel better soon. *Lots of hugs*

Anonymous said...

Today I woke up and felt funny. After reading this blog, I have realised that I feel like picture 14. I don't know why really and so I am trying to ignore myself and tomorrow will probably be better. Really craving cinema bag of skittles now :) Get well soon

Anonymous said...

I can't read through almost 4000 comments, so I'm sure someone else probably already suggested it, but I think you have bipolar disorder. I have it myself, so am quite familiar with it.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for describing depression perfectly. That is exactly what it feels like, and it sucks, but you're not alone, and I'm not alone, and all the other people suffering from seemingly random and meaningless depression are not alone. Thanks for explaining to everyone else what it feels like - that's better than I ever could have done.

Jasmine said...

I was feeling sad myself---until I read this.

Lauralot said...

You have described my life for the past several months, verbatim. Thank you so much for sharing this. I'm glad to see you back, and I will be keeping you in my thoughts.

Anonymous said...

Allie = champion

Smakkie said...

I've been depressed for about three years now and you've moved me to tears. The apathy, the self-loathing, the numbness...
I've had these 'video store uplifts' but they were very temporary, I'd just wake up feeling dead inside again.
All I can say is: take the pills, don't be ashamed. Anti-depressants make life bearable again.
Ask a family member to take you to the doctor and get those pills!

Mary Jane said...

"Break on through to the other side, break on through to the other side... Break on through..." Now if thinking about Sweaty Jim doesn't make you feel a little better, or at least different, I don't know what will...

Oh sorry... Wrong generation...

Anonymous said...

I'm going to show this to my husband and say this is what it felt like.

Also I'm so glad you're back!

Jacob Peoples said...

Wow, that pretty much sums up how I felt for the last couple years. Then it just kinda went away.... Cool post though.

Cathy said...

Loved it when you decided not to give a f**k about what anyone thought anymore. I really needed to hear that this weekend. Thanks :)

me said...

You almost dropped the ego, but I think you still have it. I think, now, you try to have others like you by not caring what others think about you. Cool, though.

Anonymous said...

Thank you so much! This is so exactly what I feel like and it is the most frustrating thing in the world. I have been trying to explain what I'm feeling to my boyfriend and this does a much better job than I'll ever be able to.

Mellesque said...

"Maybe I'll touch a spider later" is way better than "Carpe diem," so it's totally my new life motto.

Anonymous said...

I've never commented before, but I feel that I should now. You inspired so many laughs when I was struggling through my first year of grad school- and I've always been so thankful for that. Because sometimes it was the only time I would laugh. There are thousands of people out here in internet-land that I'm sure feel the same.

More importantly, I want you to know that you're not alone. AND you do not need to face these feelings alone. You may feel invincible at times and not care what other people think. But don't you want other people to care? Isn't that what inspired you in all your posts before? There are people out there who care, and there are people who can help you to care again too. Don't give into feeling invincible and isolated- find someone. And soon.

Old 454 said...

Wow. I love the self-loathing, internal violently critical voice. Haven't formed any exoskeletons, but I do reach critical mass moments (a la video rental fees) that motivate action. Good stuff (so to speak)

holdingmybreath said...

So many comment that you'll never read this, but in case you ever do - the onset of this type of depression is usually a fear of obligation > disappointing others > procrastination > self loathing spiral. The moment you "have to" do something is the moment that will kick you into the spiral. If I'm good I'll force myself to deal with whatever it is at the start of the day - much like diving into the deep end and holding your breath for that horrible few seconds of freezing cold panic. Once I get it done the anxiety seems to wash away. If I avoid it though I get into that spiral and I'm so fucked. It could go months! I didn't open mail for like 6 months one time :/

Anonymous said...

Yay you're back! Hope you're feeling ok soon

Anonymous said...

I wake up like that, and I think when I tell people they think I'm crazy. Thanks for your post, really. It not only vindicated a ton of people's shitty feelings, but so many people were excited about a new post because you're fantastic and hilarious. You rock, Allie. I hope you are figuring that out. :)

Anonymous said...

i don't know anyone who is utterly brilliant who hasn't struggled with depression.

Unknown said...

Sometimes there's nothing you can do but eat 10 bags of skittles and go kick some ass. I personally prefer gummi bears followed by loud music and dancing (followed, of course, by the ass-kicking). As you can see from the 3,983 comments, we all think you're pretty freakin fantastic. <3

Blot said...

YAY! You're back.
Although not yay at your overwhelming depression. You can do anything! Like writing a book. I think I'm on my second or third potato...?

Anonymous said...

The last panel looks like the scene in 'City of Angels' where Meg Ryan realizes the meaning of her life or some shit riiiight before she gets struck by a bus :I

knock on wood that that DOESN'T happen...

Anonymous said...

I'm so glad you're back! *hugs*

Unknown said...

I'm glad you're back even though this post made me so sad. Sorry you were feeling shitty. I hope you're doing much better now.

Unknown said...

I'm glad you're back even though this post made me so sad. Sorry you were feeling shitty. I hope you're doing much better now.

Unknown said...

I'm glad you're back even though this post made me so sad. Sorry you were feeling shitty. I hope you're doing much better now.

Anonymous said...

I love this so much. I've missed you, as have all the people at my workplace (I shared your blog shortly before you wrote the post about publishing a book)! It's nice to hear from you again!

Anonymous said...

That was a scary good description of depression, and I am so happy you broke on through to the other side.

Strangely enough, I am finding that single parenthood is an excellent anti-depressant. (Technically, I am a single foster parent.) The clothes still pile up when I could fold them or wash them (sometimes the two piles mix), my car is a cesspit, and I may sometimes piss in a water glass at night and forget about it until it stinks... but I have a super-legitimate excuse. I'm a single parent of a child with behavioral issues and I feel "overwhelmed" -- boo yah!

And if I were to lounge about on the couch too long, I am sure that my kid would pull me off on it and cause me physical pain until I did something Amusing or Parental. Actually, why am I speaking hypothetically? Just earlier today, I held still for just a moment and she began to pretend she was a robot that was pre-programmed to walk where I happened to be. (And this is an 8-year-old, mind, wearing boots.)

I only got really depressed once when I was with my kid, and it was really hard. I had to muscle my way through it, playing tag outside, while the horizon seemed permanently gray and tilted. But after a few days it lifted (lucky me, don't know why) and it's now only allowed to return briefly before ovulation and menstruation.

So my theory is that prolonged, forced exposure to children will kill some depressions. Not the Sylvia Plath kind, because she had kids and killed herself anyway, but maybe other kinds, like my wimpy self-abusive kind.

And there's also the coffee and the nicotine gum, which I recommend as a mood lifter. You get all the benefits of nicotine (sense of fearlessness, silence of the inner abusive voice...) but the gum is all about self-care, because you're Not Smoking. So then that little act of self-abuse turned to self-care feels like a personal revolution.

So anyway, thanks so much for the post. How were the skittles?

Shannon said...

I'm so glad to see you back and that you're doing better! :D :D :D As you can see from the comments, you were missed terribly. :)

Anonymous said...

You just put words and images into how I felt a few weeks back! I love feeling invincible and not giving a damn to how people judge me anymore. This post is comforting because it tell me that I'm not alone in the feelings roller coaster. Thank you :) Don't let go of those feeling of invincible!

JenkinsK said...

You put into words what I've never been able to. *hugs*

Anonymous said...

Welcome back. I like to blame my sad feelings on PMS.

Anonymous said...

This pretty much sums up my summer. Thanks so much for sharing and finding humour in depression.

Anonymous said...

Next installment to include vicious spiral back towards state of self loathing transpiring from eating all the skittles, feeling fat, and repeating the cycle, bon apetit!

Anonymous said...

I'd just like to observe that it's ironic how someone describing their feelings of apathy and emotionlessness (if that's a word) can produce engaging, emotionally lucent and incredibly popular cartoons, garnering admiration and support from hundreds of people.

Most normal people aren't that successful. Most of us depressed people less so. You're lucky that somehow the formula of your personality results in that kind of inspiration and the motivation to express it.

Personally, I just leave confusing comments on blogs, but nobody replies to them. Possibly they're too confusing.

eLGee said...

FOUR THOUSAND!!!

Anonymous said...

The other ironic thing (it's me again) is that if you had just said, "god I'm depressed," and had not supplemented it with an amusing cartoon anecdote, or been a useful robot with a brain the size of a planet, people wouldn't have taken much notice.

You'd say: "Today I felt really depressed, slouched around feeling crappy with my inner voice abusing me all day, then decided I didn't care anymore." There'd be a handful of comments saying "chin up" or "why do you post this crap?"

People like your posts because they provide something attractive to identify with. That's a hook, and can lead to caring, once people get to know you. But without that hook, one is left wondering how to attract anyone who might care. Again, you're very lucky to have that.

Anonymous said...

Did anyone else imagine her falling off the bike after?

Maggie Moon said...

Like all of your other posts, this one is currently being NONSTOP quoted in my household. I even told some poor confused countergirl today that I wanted to buy "all of these Skittles." She started ringing it up...then I had to be all awkward "No, I'm joking...and you don't think I'm funny...damn it."

I likewise hope you are feeling way better, and want you to know how incredibly amazing (and insanely relatable) your stories are.

Tessa said...

Dude, all is forgiven for not posting. You are awesome ^_^.

lilRED said...

I hate that. Just an unprovoked urge to break out crying... but no energy or ambition to actually do it. It's terrible. And I feel like that every day. No reasons.
The worst is when someone asks, "What's wrong?"
I don't know. If I knew, I'd try to fix it. But I don't so I'm dead inside...

foojablurge said...

Hey - have you tried meditation in the morning? I found that it helped getting out of this seemingly causeless depression. In fact, I went the whole way and became a Buddhist. But meditation done properly can help you master your mind.

Yi Ning said...

Yeah, that's how I feel too, sometimes. I just feel down for no reason (I don't do it that often anymore, now) and my roommates say I'm being "emo" and then it gets worse. I go on to become made at them for judging me and not letting me be what I wanted to be, then I just can't get un-sunk from that depression.

Libby Tuesday said...

Having just watched the film 'V for Vendetta', I kinda feel like you're Evey Hammond in that little cell, and I wish I could slip you a letter telling you my story and saying that, even though I've never met you, I love you...


BUT you're not, and I can't, so take this emoticon instead -> ^_^

GirlwithSwordandBow said...

I'm so happy you're back!!!!! WE missed you! I'm sorry that you were depressed and I hope you recover your feelings. Keep on being awesome!

Glennis said...

skittles. want some.

Cable said...

Depression -> Invincibility. I relate! After such internal pain, what will you fear?

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filipina heart said...

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Linkums said...

I have experienced this. Except without much of the self-loathing or the semi-happy ending. I just go back and forth between not caring at all and being super depressed. Got a five year streak going. And it sucks cotton candy flavored lollypops (I hate those).

Anonymous said...

so... did you touch a spider later?

if so, you are a badass

Chris Matthews said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Chris Matthews said...

Really lovely blog post. It's like a whole meal of a post. Thought I should do my part, having never commented before as well.

Open invitation to London, if you desire it!

Navhelowife said...

This is wonderful. I think you are an amazing writer and you tell your story so beautifully, with such humor and such TRUTH.

Anonymous said...

I dismissed this article half-way through the first time I read it, sort of disgusted with the implication that it is impossible to overcome depression, being bipolar, but forging through life, anyway, and even without medication.
But, I came back and read it again, and having reached its conclusion. I dig it.
See, in truth, I don't think I ever will "defeat" the sadness, as far as eradicating it, but for a long time, I've learned to keep it tethered while I go about my business. A lot of introspection and meditation have helped me see it objectively, denying it control of my behavior.
Upon reading the end of the article, I came to a conclusion. I have managed to cage the sadness, because I have overcome the self-loathing! The self-hatred, YES, I HAVE defeated!
This, of course, is a product of that same meditation and introspection. I once believed pretty well that I was useless, despicable, ugly...and I am not. More importantly, I believed I was lazy and stupid, because, in truth, depression had me behaving lazily and stupidly. But in reality, I am neither lazy nor stupid. Not at all. In fact, I'm really quite bright and industrious. And I had to see that. I am not a badass with emotions made of rock music, and I still fear stuff, sure, but I overcome my fears, and more importantly, I overcome depression, not by fighting it, but by looking at it from a distance, objectively. I allow it to exist, to float by like a cloud reflecting on still waters. But I do not wallow in it, and I do not let it control me, and, above all, I do not allow it to make me hate myself, because, despite whatever faults I may have, including emotional instability, I'm really pretty darned cool, and I like me. The laundry still piles up from time to time, but not for as long. Practicality wins out. My disgust with the mess (but not with myself) overcomes my lethargy, and often momentum then carries me past the depression.

Sae said...

I hope that everything is good now. When I went through depression, it was all uphill struggle. But I'm glad that you've gained +50 happiness. I wish good things your way.

Anonymous said...

Hey dude, I love your work. Been suffering from the big D for quite some time now, and I can honestly say that your cartoons have been the one bright spot in my life. I saw you had disappeared for a bit, and I understand the need to withdraw for awhile. When I saw this post, I cried. I saw myself in your drawings, heard those words as though they came from my own mouth. The continual brain chattering that makes you feel like crap, right? Anyway, thank you for being so real, so awesome. Sending you big hugs!

Anonymous said...

Missed you. I'm working on my own exoskeleton. It's hard to describe to people sometimes that sitting around and belittling yourself is the only thing you're capable of, but that's how I spend most days off lately. Glad you pulled out of it.

Unknown said...

You're a wonderful person Allie. Reading your post, it was like you spoke my mind in that blog. I had to find out who this person was and came across this surprising interview video one of the other commenters had linked here. Surprising cos you seem too amazing to have gone through what i am going through. Thank you for this post. From what i do know, you're an amazing person and certainly destined for great things. I wish you the best Allie :)

Anonymous said...

So that was your first fall in the pacific northwest...wait till winter hits.
::blankstare::
Thanks for posting again. I thought you had given it up.

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