Depression Part Two

I remember being endlessly entertained by the adventures of my toys. Some days they died repeated, violent deaths, other days they traveled to space or discussed my swim lessons and how I absolutely should be allowed in the deep end of the pool, especially since I was such a talented doggy-paddler.


I didn't understand why it was fun for me, it just was.


But as I grew older, it became harder and harder to access that expansive imaginary space that made my toys fun. I remember looking at them and feeling sort of frustrated and confused that things weren't the same.


I played out all the same story lines that had been fun before, but the meaning had disappeared. Horse's Big Space Adventure transformed into holding a plastic horse in the air, hoping it would somehow be enjoyable for me. Prehistoric Crazy-Bus Death Ride was just smashing a toy bus full of dinosaurs into the wall while feeling sort of bored and unfulfilled.  I could no longer connect to my toys in a way that allowed me to participate in the experience.


Depression feels almost exactly like that, except about everything.

At first, though, the invulnerability that accompanied the detachment was exhilarating. At least as exhilarating as something can be without involving real emotions.


The beginning of my depression had been nothing but feelings, so the emotional deadening that followed was a welcome relief.  I had always wanted to not give a fuck about anything. I viewed feelings as a weakness — annoying obstacles on my quest for total power over myself. And I finally didn't have to feel them anymore.

But my experiences slowly flattened and blended together until it became obvious that there's a huge difference between not giving a fuck and not being able to give a fuck. Cognitively, you might know that different things are happening to you, but they don't feel very different.


Which leads to horrible, soul-decaying boredom.



I tried to get out more, but most fun activities just left me existentially confused or frustrated with my inability to enjoy them.


Months oozed by, and I gradually came to accept that maybe enjoyment was not a thing I got to feel anymore. I didn't want anyone to know, though. I was still sort of uncomfortable about how bored and detached I felt around other people, and I was still holding out hope that the whole thing would spontaneously work itself out. As long as I could manage to not alienate anyone, everything might be okay!

However, I could no longer rely on genuine emotion to generate facial expressions, and when you have to spend every social interaction consciously manipulating your face into shapes that are only approximately the right ones, alienating people is inevitable.


Everyone noticed.


It's weird for people who still have feelings to be around depressed people. They try to help you have feelings again so things can go back to normal, and it's frustrating for them when that doesn't happen. From their perspective, it seems like there has got to be some untapped source of happiness within you that you've simply lost track of, and if you could just see how beautiful things are...


At first, I'd try to explain that it's not really negativity or sadness anymore, it's more just this detached, meaningless fog where you can't feel anything about anything — even the things you love, even fun things — and you're horribly bored and lonely, but since you've lost your ability to connect with any of the things that would normally make you feel less bored and lonely, you're stuck in the boring, lonely, meaningless void without anything to distract you from how boring, lonely, and meaningless it is.


But people want to help. So they try harder to make you feel hopeful and positive about the situation. You explain it again, hoping they'll try a less hope-centric approach, but re-explaining your total inability to experience joy inevitably sounds kind of negative; like maybe you WANT to be depressed. The positivity starts coming out in a spray — a giant, desperate happiness sprinkler pointed directly at your face. And it keeps going like that until you're having this weird argument where you're trying to convince the person that you are far too hopeless for hope just so they'll give up on their optimism crusade and let you go back to feeling bored and lonely by yourself.


And that's the most frustrating thing about depression. It isn't always something you can fight back against with hope. It isn't even something — it's nothing. And you can't combat nothing. You can't fill it up. You can't cover it. It's just there, pulling the meaning out of everything. That being the case, all the hopeful, proactive solutions start to sound completely insane in contrast to the scope of the problem.

It would be like having a bunch of dead fish, but no one around you will acknowledge that the fish are dead. Instead, they offer to help you look for the fish or try to help you figure out why they disappeared.


The problem might not even have a solution. But you aren't necessarily looking for solutions. You're maybe just looking for someone to say "sorry about how dead your fish are" or "wow, those are super dead. I still like you, though."


I started spending more time alone.


Perhaps it was because I lacked the emotional depth necessary to panic, or maybe my predicament didn't feel dramatic enough to make me suspicious, but I somehow managed to convince myself that everything was still under my control right up until I noticed myself wishing that nothing loved me so I wouldn't feel obligated to keep existing.


It's a strange moment when you realize that you don't want to be alive anymore. If I had feelings, I'm sure I would have felt surprised. I have spent the vast majority of my life actively attempting to survive. Ever since my most distant single-celled ancestor squiggled into existence, there has been an unbroken chain of things that wanted to stick around.


Yet there I was, casually wishing that I could stop existing in the same way you'd want to leave an empty room or mute an unbearably repetitive noise.


That wasn't the worst part, though. The worst part was deciding to keep going.


When I say that deciding to not kill myself was the worst part, I should clarify that I don't mean it in a retrospective sense. From where I am now, it seems like a solid enough decision. But at the time, it felt like I had been dragging myself through the most miserable, endless wasteland, and — far in the distance — I had seen the promising glimmer of a slightly less miserable wasteland. And for just a moment, I thought maybe I'd be able to stop and rest. But as soon as I arrived at the border of the less miserable wasteland, I found out that I'd have to turn around and walk back the other way.


Soon afterward, I discovered that there's no tactful or comfortable way to inform other people that you might be suicidal. And there's definitely no way to ask for help casually.


I didn't want it to be a big deal. However, it's an alarming subject. Trying to be nonchalant about it just makes it weird for everyone.


I was also extremely ill-prepared for the position of comforting people. The things that seemed reassuring at the time weren't necessarily comforting for others.


I had so very few feelings, and everyone else had so many, and it felt like they were having all of them in front of me at once. I didn't really know what to do, so I agreed to see a doctor so that everyone would stop having all of their feelings at me.


The next few weeks were a haze of talking to relentlessly hopeful people about my feelings that didn't exist so I could be prescribed medication that might help me have them again.


And every direction was bullshit for a really long time, especially up. The absurdity of working so hard to continue doing something you don't like can be overwhelming. And the longer it takes to feel different, the more it starts to seem like everything might actually be hopeless bullshit.


My feelings did start to return eventually. But not all of them came back, and they didn't arrive symmetrically.

I had not been able to care for a very long time, and when I finally started being able to care about things again, I HATED them. But hatred is technically a feeling, and my brain latched onto it like a child learning a new word.


Hating everything made all the positivity and hope feel even more unpalatable. The syrupy, over-simplified optimism started to feel almost offensive.


Thankfully, I rediscovered crying just before I got sick of hating things.  I call this emotion "crying" and not "sadness" because that's all it really was. Just crying for the sake of crying. My brain had partially learned how to be sad again, but it took the feeling out for a joy ride before it had learned how to use the brakes or steer.


At some point during this phase, I was crying on the kitchen floor for no reason. As was common practice during bouts of floor-crying, I was staring straight ahead at nothing in particular and feeling sort of weird about myself. Then, through the film of tears and nothingness, I spotted a tiny, shriveled piece of corn under the refrigerator.


I don't claim to know why this happened, but when I saw the piece of corn, something snapped. And then that thing twisted through a few permutations of logic that I don't understand, and produced the most confusing bout of uncontrollable, debilitating laughter that I have ever experienced.


I had absolutely no idea what was going on.


My brain had apparently been storing every unfelt scrap of happiness from the last nineteen months, and it had impulsively decided to unleash all of it at once in what would appear to be an act of vengeance.


That piece of corn is the funniest thing I have ever seen, and I cannot explain to anyone why it's funny. I don't even know why. If someone ever asks me "what was the exact moment where things started to feel slightly less shitty?" instead of telling a nice, heartwarming story about the support of the people who loved and believed in me, I'm going to have to tell them about the piece of corn. And then I'm going to have to try to explain that no, really, it was funny. Because, see, the way the corn was sitting on the floor... it was so alone... and it was just sitting there! And no matter how I explain it, I'll get the same, confused look. So maybe I'll try to show them the piece of corn - to see if they get it. They won't. Things will get even weirder.


Anyway, I wanted to end this on a hopeful, positive note, but, seeing as how my sense of hope and positivity is still shrouded in a thick layer of feeling like hope and positivity are bullshit, I'll just say this: Nobody can guarantee that it's going to be okay, but — and I don't know if this will be comforting to anyone else — the possibility exists that there's a piece of corn on a floor somewhere that will make you just as confused about why you are laughing as you have ever been about why you are depressed. And even if everything still seems like hopeless bullshit, maybe it's just pointless bullshit or weird bullshit or possibly not even bullshit.


I don't know. 

But when you're concerned that the miserable, boring wasteland in front of you might stretch all the way into forever, not knowing feels strangely hope-like. 






4,972 comments:

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Anonymous said...

I think that's the first time your post has made me cry because of feels and not because of laughter. I really identified with a lot of what you were saying, and seeing your journey is so helpful and eye-opening. I know it's hard work, but keep thinking about that corn ;)

Rachel R. said...

this is a glorious day! so glad you've returned! hail tiny shriveled corn kernel!

Arc said...

Acutally I've been there, and often have since I was a kid, but I usually just tried to ignore it and went on. I did the crying thing and sometimes I felt better enough after.


Idk, it works. It's not like I was sad but I felt nothing but negative and pointless, and then I'd wait for night to come around and I'd cry and then I'd feel a bit better. The next day things would be amusing enough to seem somewhat meaningful until I was okay again.


Then eventually yeah, depressed, and blurg. Cycle. It's fine.

Anonymous said...

I can relate so much to this...

"until I noticed myself wishing that nothing loved me so I wouldn't feel obligated to keep existing. "

I have wished that so many times as well. It's hard to carry on when you are so depressed. I'm happy you're a little better I hope you stay that way.

Holly said...

I agree with Molly way up there that you should have that piece of corn bronzed and keep it forever.

Anonymous said...

The corn made me laugh too and, in some of the deeply indifferent self-portrait drawings, you resemble Tarda Sauce the cat. Thank you for this post!

Amanda said...

This is by far and away the best description of depression I have ever seen. Thank you so much for sharing this!

Jocelyn said...

You probably won't get a chance to read this, but hopefully.

You must read Kafka's short stories, Sartre's existentialism, and Jason's comics "Low Moon", "Athos in America", etc. (Norwegian).

Critical Zombie said...

That was incredible. x

kina said...

Welcome back...you were missed.

Sara said...

I missed you alot. Glad you are feeling better!

Gem said...

This means so much to me because I went through the exact same experience. It became normal to the point where I didn't even know I was depressed. I remember trying to get a pie out of the freezer (even feeding myself seemed pointless) and I collapsed on the kitchen floor in tears too. Thank you for your complete honesty, it helps to know someone I respect and understand has gone through it.
*smiley face (because I'm happy now)

Erin said...

God, you hit the nail right on the head - I am right there in that same bleak hole.

It would be great if my piece of corn would show up.

Unknown said...

Welcome back! You were truly missed!
Great post about depression and describing depression. No one understands someone with depression, I know, I've there too. The emptiness and just drowning feeling and how close loved ones just tell you to get over it and do something with your life. I was told, you're 13, it's a phase. Well, the depression continued until my early 20's. Now after professional help, I'll be 29 soon and I still fight on a daily basis some days, especially when bad things happen. But I get through. I try to find one thing or two if I'm adventurous to smile about. Now recently married and learning to truly love life and live it to the fullest! Maybe my husband is my corn?

Unknown said...

I wanted to share with you what I said when I shared this on facebook.

"Her new post is here. And I want EVERYONE to read it. I'm extremely serious about this. I am hoping that if you read this, you will finally understand my "depression" and my anxiety and my complete lack of feelings.

You will understand why I don't like to leave the house. Because the Outside is full of "hope" and "joy" and people who try to force it upon me like an itchy sweater made by their Grandma Ruth. It's annoying, and I don't want it, because it means nothing to me.

Give me a silk robe instead. Soft, made slowly, and encompassing my whole body.

I know what hope and joy are. But they still currently mean nothing to me. Instead of trying to make me be happy, which some days I just physically can't, just hold me, let me know that you don't know if it will get better, but that you're here for me. And then maybe let me lay my head in your lap, while you play with my hair, and I fall asleep. Because that simple act gives me some modicum of joy, as best as I can feel it.

And yes. That piece of corn truly makes me giggle like an idiot. Because it IS the funniest thing on the planet. And no, I don't know why."

Simple Musings said...

I am glad you wrote this. I'm glad you're working towards... I don't want to say better, but I'm glad you're working on you. Whether that gets you back to who you were or who you will be, it doesn't matter- you're doing it.

I hope you're keeping the corn.

Eyece said...

Absolutely one of the best explanations of depression, ever.

Welcome back to wherever it is that we are.

Anonymous said...

THANK YOU FOR PUTTING ALL MY FEELS INTO WORDS AND PICTURES!!

SAMI★SPOON

Truly said...

It's amazing how unhelpful we can be when people around us are suffering emotionally. Most "comforting" comments are actually said to make US feel better, not the suffering person. It's as if, the moment we are aware of the problem, we want the problem to go away so that WE feel less uncomfortable. All the "maybe it's not that bad, look on the bright side" kind of comments I think are because we know we can't really HELP, so we want the problem to go away.
Thank you for reaching out, for getting some help that I DO hope really helps, but mostly, let me say that I'm so very VERY sorry that your fish died, and I still really like you.

Unknown said...

Thank you so much for posting this. Absolutely accurate!

Unknown said...

Super excellent!

I vote CLOORN necklace pendant!

CLOORN FTW!

KristiMcMurry said...

So glad to see you back! I hope things get better health-wise for you. Best wishes!

DustiMc said...

yeah. What they ^^ said. And thank you for sharing this incredibly personal journey. <3<3

Anonymous said...

Glad to see you back and posting again. My "corn" was a dead bird, of all things. I hope you have more and more corn coming your way.

SoCalWendie said...

I love you so much, this is the best explanation of depression I have ever read. As someone on meds who has battled depression for years I totally relate and will share this with my family and friends so they can understand me a little better. Welcome back love!!

Anonymous said...

I hope you find more kernels of uncontrollable laughter.

Anonymous said...

Cloorn!

Unknown said...

We missed you. Glad you found your corn.

Elle said...

vive la corn!!!

Unknown said...

Another great one. You're very talented. Looks like you worked pretty hard on this one too. Thanks for that.

Linds said...

Love it! Brilliant!

Jason Grover said...

Thank you. As strange as this sounds, as someone who has suffered from depression, this was the most beautiful treatise on depression I have ever read. Finally someone who has been there and can respond without meaningless platitudes. Thank you.

Unknown said...

I can totally relate (though I'm still way at the beginning of that post), you've described it in such a perfect manner. This is exactly what it feels like (for me as well). I'm really happy you found your piece of corn. <3

Taylor said...

Everything: Precisely!!!! I especially loved the dead fish. Very funny. You are a genius. Thank you.

Andrew said...

This is a great post. Very insightful. I love the metaphor at the beginning about how depression is similar to the 'growing up' feeling where everything just isn't the same anymore. I'm not depressed right now, but I feel like I am constantly on the edge of that feeling that suddenly the world will collapse under the meaninglessness of itself. When simple pleasures no longer bring joy, the question of 'why live?' is definitely one that's hard to ignore. I'm glad that life is going better for you, though. Hope you will keep at it. In my view, our lives are worth living because they don't actually last that long and we only get one of them anyhow. We'll have the rest of eternity to experience Not Living.

Jennifer Hall said...

Sounds like you're almost afraid to feel happy again, which, I get. I've never had drepression like this, but I've had other things, and I find myself feeling a litte bitter and jaded about them, and the possibility of good things happening in the wake of th eother things.

So I kinda get it.

Unknown said...

Thank you for this. I suffer from chronic depression myself.

It is comforting to know that there are people who are willing to talk about their mood disorders.

Nat said...

Thank you, from the bottom of the hearts of so many people around the world, for sharing your posts with us. We're so happy you're back!

Anonymous said...

I have been so tetchy lately after a long period of depresseion and you have made me realise that I am feeling again! Yes it's irrational grumpiness but it's something! Thanks for that. It's made me feel really happy and hopeful :)

hoyden42 said...

The way you explain these things is so accurate. Having suffered from severe depression, I know that it's really hard to explain the sensation... or, rather, lack thereof. But you did it and I think that it will help people who have never had depression understand a little bit.

Thanks for being you, you are excellent.

Love, Steph.

Unknown said...

Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you.
I hate that you suffer, too, but it really was amazing for you to put my many years into words that can help me explain to others.
I hope that you are in a good place now and able to use coping mechanisms to maintain.

korinthia said...

Thanks for sharing this so clearly and well. I think you should wear that piece of corn in a locket.

Welcome back.

Kinjou Okumura-Ten said...

Your ability to articulate these complicated, horrifying (and COMPLETELY FAMILIAR) things is what is going to save you. Extra bonus: You're going to save a lot of other people who read this as well.

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

I didn't think anyone could possibly understand what I'm going through, but you do. This post should be required reading for everyone in the lives of depressed people

Fitness with Rachel said...

I laughed at your corn, and will likely be laughing about it intermittently throughout the day. I'm glad you're back. Thank you for being you and sharing it with us. I've been in the land of nothing-ness before, and I'm glad you're nothing-ness is becoming something-ful again.

Anonymous said...

I'm so glad you're back, and so glad that you're writing about something that, for me, has always been mysterious and ineffable. I agree with so many other commenters that your perspective and descriptions will be helpful both to people experiencing depression and those trying to support their friends and family members. While I have only experienced the palest shadow of what you described, you make me feel less crazy. Even though I don't know you, I love you. Maybe hope is crazy, but I still hope for good things for you. Sending love and sunshine from Alabama!

Brent said...

I've never in my life read such an accurate, well-articulated example of what it's like to live with depression. Everything about this post is so familiar, it felt like I could have written it myself- every piece clicked. I went through a similar situation with meds in trying to regain my feelings again, and the same crying-then-suddenly-bursting-into-nonsensical-laughter happened. I had no trigger, no lonely, shriveled piece of corn, it just happened spontaneously. Pacing around in my garage, wildly sobbing about absolutely nothing somehow morphed mid-gasp into hysterical, chortling laughter. I'm going to link to this article whenever someone is confused about my condition. In short, I love you. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

I discovered your blog yesterday through a facebook friend that posted because she is YAY! so happy you are back. I started by reading yesterday's post and then the previous post where you first talk about depression. Then I followed links and read a few other posts, but it was late and I seriously had to stop when I read "Why I'll never be a grown-up" because I was afraid I was going to throw up from laughing so hard. The truth is, I haven't laughed that hard in ages and I didn't think I remembered how. That post was my piece of corn in a way. I have had every feeling and non-feeling that you have had, you explain it all so perfectly. Walking through life wondering why you don't give a shit about anything sucks. I am not at this time at the depths that you describe and hope (see-I hope a little, sometimes a lot) that neither of us never are again. Thank you for sharing.

Anonymous said...

If your sense of hope is currently unavailable, we will hope for you. Whether it's dead or lost or drunk on the corner, we hope you get it back.

I guess I just wanted you to know that.

Anonymous said...

The line "I don't necessarily want to kill myself.... I just want to be dead somehow." totally hits home with me. I go to a university where I walk across a bridge over a gorge to get to class every day. For a very long time, I'd look over the edge and think to myself "I don't want to jump... I just want to skip to the part where I'm at the bottom." And I know exactly how it is with not wanting people to keep trying to be cheery. Sometimes you just want someone to listen and be like "yup, that's shitty... but I understand you."

Kathy said...

Oh lord, I've been there. I've been sitting, and staring at a piece of lint and howled. I couldn't explain to anyone why it was so important, but it was.

Thank you so much for sharing your journey with us.

Sparrow said...

As horrible as it is to be glad that another person is experiencing/has experienced this, I am incredibly grateful to know that I was not in that wretched wasteland alone. This was so relatable for me, it could have been me explaining it. And I'm glad to know that someone understands that all the emotions had flatlined, and the solution was not to look for them or magically turn them back on. And that when they did return, they returned inexplicably and asymmetrically, and were impossible to explain to three uninitiated.
I read this in a Vietnamese restaurant and I couldn't help the year-inducing hysterical laughter. I'm fairly sure everyone in this restaurant thinks I'm crazy. I don't care.
Welcome back to the Outer Yettilands of Emotion, Allie. We've missed you.

Anonymous said...

So glad you're back, Allie. You are amazing.

WhorledDomination! said...

Thank you, Allie, for making me feel a little less alone. As somebody who has been dealing with depression for 25 years, when I read this I was like "how long have you been sitting on my shoulder taking notes?" Your description is perfect. Glad you're back.

Rodafowa said...

Really sorry about how dead your fish are. I still like you.

Mimi said...

Okay so I'm crying too now but thank you for explaining something that is so difficult for people who haven't experienced it to comprehend. Sending you lots of corn XXXXXXXXXXX

Anonymous said...

Keep up the good fight Allie! I've been unemployed for 2 years since I got off Active Duty, fighting PTSD and severe depression. This article is a great, and humorous, way to describe what it feels like. I'm happy you found your corn. --- A fellow corn searcher.

Dr. Cyn said...

Sending you some annoying joy! Great to to see your posts again. You are a brave voice.

Hillaire said...

I'm so glad you are back! You have tapped into exactly what depression put me through. I can't thank you enough!

Jami said...

Best explanation of the unexplainable I've ever read. I've been there and it's gotten better. Thank you for sharing your experiences. You have a gift.

Many people never experience a recurrence of symptoms, but I've gone through the cycle several times in my life and the return of symptoms is horrifying. Just remember that just like it got worse again, it will get better again. (The reverse isn't true. It doesn't always get worse again.) If it does return, remember there's a shriveled piece of corn somewhere in the future.

Anonymous said...

Allie, thanks for writing this. It gives a great sense of what depression is like for people who haven't experienced it. My question is, when you were still in the thick of it, can you think of what would have been the best things for your friends to do or say to help you? You've explained perfectly why the usual things people say are completely un-helpful, and I get that, but if I have a friend who's going through what you have, what are some good things for me to do for them/say to them? (Other than listening, assuming they actually want to talk about it.)

Anonymous said...

Allie,

You've explained how it feels PERFECTLY! I've struggled with depression as well, and people who haven't experienced it first hand just-don't-get-it. And it's hard to not be frustrated that they don't get it or understand...

My coping mechanism was (is) sleeping. I could just sleep and sleep and sleep and sleep because when you are asleep you don't have to feel, or think, or feel the non-feelings. I could clock in 18-20 hours of sleep a day easily, because it took so much less effort to drop off to sleep than to move around and get up and interact. I've tried several medications, and I think I've found the right one to be on. I have to stay on top of it too: When I feel the depression creeping around the edges of my brain (it IS like a fog), I know to stay busy and exercise and resist the urge to take an unnecessary nap that will turn into a 5 hours sleepfest. I know I know, easier said than done, but after struggling with this through my childhood and adolescence (I'm 26 now), I do NOT want to go back to it if I can help it.

Pulling yourself out of the depression is almost harder than the coping of depression itself (at least in my opinion). But I'm so glad you've talked to family/friends/doctors because WE'VE ALL BEEN MISSING YOU SO MUCH!!! It is a start. And it takes patience. Try to stick with it, because even if it doesn't feel like it at all, life is worth living once you come out the other side. Plus, you have so many amazing fans who are here to support you :) <3 <3 <3

Sara

Chris said...

I missed you. This made my day.

Theresa Fletcher said...

I'm so happy to see you back! It's an incredible thing you did putting this experience into words, and of course the best pics ever ;) Wishing you all the best!

The Brand Gazette said...

This needs to be made into a pamphlet so that it can be handed out to well meaning people who don't quite get it.

I don't know if you read your comments, but I do want you to know that I have used a picture you drew to bolster me up during my own bouts of anxiety.

I am glad you are back and I hope the swim to the top of the murky waters of depression is quick and relatively painless!

Unknown said...

I just wanna say it's a bummer how dead your fish are, but we still love you. No matter how super dead your fish are.

Unknown said...

I'm still looking for the piece of corn, but I'm super glad for your latest post.

Anonymous said...

I'm sorry your fish are dead.

MissElaineEous said...

Totally, utterly, completely relate... You nailed it 110%! Please don't stop posting. You made me (and many others from the looks of the comments) feel like someone else actually GETS it. I (we) need to know someone else has dead fish and shrivelled corn too. <3

Unknown said...

I'm so glad you're back and you found corn!!

XOPJ said...

Lifes just there, then you find funny corn. So glad you found your funny corn.

angela marie said...

I sincerely am thankful for the "dead fish" analogy.

Last month, I had to call 911 on a friend who was too close to suicide. Last week, I found out another old friend actually did commit suicide.

The fish help me to explain to others/understand myself about the struggles of depression.

mimi said...

i tried the write it on my face thing. people creeped out. also all your metaphors were right on.

but i am super glad you are writing to us again, the internets need you!

Angela said...

I laughed, I cried...this should be required reading. I'm sharing it all over the place.

Unknown said...

Fish, wanting it to end, finding corn...I'm still waiting on my corn...Thank you for sharing.

Anonymous said...

I'll never look at corn the same way again.

Daniel.Unsdorfer said...

corn is funny.

what's under my fridge, not as funny.

but i think i'll look the next time i need feelings

Shane S said...

I wonder if your subconscious realized that that dried, shriveled piece of corn was a metaphor for yourself.

Anonymous said...

I found you because of awesome ladies who love you on a chat board (2% Owl baby) that I lurk. They talk about you like they know you, you add value to their lives, you matter to them. I envy that, and your writing and illustration skills. They linked to you and I am so glad they did.

I am autistic and I related to the part where you are having to think about what expression is on your face so you look normal. I have to think of every word to say or not say, too. I don't feel a lot of things that I know I am supposed to, it's pretty blank. It's exhausting and I avoid people because tired and not worth it. Thank goodness we have keyboards. You helped me feel like a normal person today; connections are rare and I love them.

I totally get the corn. Thank GOODNESS for the corn. It would look awesome framed in a little shadow box, mounted on black velvet. I laugh just thinking about it. All hail the corn. And Allie.

Bohemian Rapsody said...

"The Kingdom of Heaven is like a grain of mustard seed, I mean kernal of dried corn..." Matthew 13:31-32

Noica X said...

thank you, Allie. from someone who has been set in jell-o, lost in the thicket, fell into the void. glad to hear from you again.

Anonymous said...

Yes. Yes. Yes. Insightful and hilarious, as always. Very excited about the book coming out (my wife and I already preordered)!

Me said...

The corn is probably funny because you recognized yourself in the kernel and thought, 'wow. i am like an old corn kernel lost and alone underneath the fridge' and being able to identify with literally anything, even something completely absurd (maybe especially something completely absurd, and especially if the identification resembles the awkward profundity of an angsty tweenage poem) woke up that part of your brain that is responsible for laughing at the exceedingly strange and absurd things that comprise existence. Possibly. Also,explaining that fish are dead to people who are weirdly blind to fish deadness is exceedingly frustrating.
Also, I'm really glad you're still here.

Anonymous said...

I'm sorry your fish died! You didn't mention individual counseling or group therapy but those can provide corn moments, especially group! Group does magic things, and it might take weeks and weeks then suddenly, corn. And you get to the corn much faster than if you're working on your own. Group is magic I promise. There are groups specifically for depression and there are general "process groups". A good book that describes group is Yalom's "The Schopenhauer Cure", if you want to read a book. Thank you for coming back Allie! I truly appreciate it.

Amy Cappelli said...

Exactly how it is! Thank you, thank you for sharing this.

Anonymous said...

You have helped me.

Anonymous said...

So many great artists are tortured souls; perhaps that is what makes them great. Your incredible ability to describe depression in a way that is heart-wrenchingly honest and human, but coupled with your signature brand of humor, is simply amazing.

Even if you can't feel how much the world needs and identifies with you, trust that we can.

Katharsis said...

"Nobody can guarantee that it's going to be okay."

During a similar time in my life (no, not totally like yours, and I won't bullshit you), I just wish people would have said that. NO, you DON'T know.

Also, the fish analogy struck close to home for me. At the time, I had used this analogy:

Me: I think my heart is dying.
"Encourager": Oh, you should probably go to a foot doctor to get that looked at.
Me: Are you stupid or deaf?

Kelly Deneen Raymond said...

I am really, really glad you put this all out there. Depression is the weirdest and worst thing to experience. I think you described it with surprising clarity. And welcome back.

Unknown said...

Thank you. Just, thank you! Brilliant.

. said...

I have un-felt all of this! Excellent "I'm sort of back, if I knew where I was exactly, other than laughing at corn" post. And that series of hate faces were spot-on. In the future when people look at me confused and say, "What are you doing?" I'm going to have to call it the Hyperbole and a Half Hate Face.

Anonymous said...

"I'm really sorry. Can I get you some juice or something?"

YES to these three panels, and to "That would be too many." <3

Those made me laugh in a twisted way that no doubt made me look creepy. I may have to print those out and put them up on my fridge, regardless of the awkwardness this will produce in other people.

People smile uncomfortably when I show them this comic I ordered a print of, too: http://achewood.com/index.php?date=10222002

I think you would appreciate it.

midgetnazgul said...

So glad to see you're back! This post was excellent - you've given me quite a bit of insight to help my own friend with depression. Thanks a lot! I hope you continue to find things that aren't hopeless bullshit. <3

SaraJune said...

I've been in the non-feeling zone before. I'm glad you found your way out. <3 I was concerned when you didn't post for so long and your last post was on depression. So there is that: people across the country who have never met you are concerned for your well being and want good things for you specifically.

Anonymous said...

"Why are you crying?"
"I don't know. It's just something that's happening"

I've spoken those exact words verbatim

DeeperSymphony said...

Brava!

Over the years, your blog has become a bright spot in the lives of so many. Sometimes the people who give the most just run out of happiness to give.

I am so glad that you see the sun peeking through the clouds of depression. It sounds stupid, but your fans have come to care about you because you let us into your mind and your memories. We want the best for you and just want you to be okay again. Yeah, we love your funny blog posts, but so many of us fans love and care about YOU even if you don't produce another funny thought again in your life.

Be well, Allie.

Ashley Evelyn Mazur

Beth said...

I am so, so, so glad you're back. Damn I missed you, woman. Love, A Chick You Don't Know Who is Overjoyed You Exist.

elizabeth said...

It may still not matter or emotionally influence you much right now, but you are the corn under the refrigerator for a lot of us. Even in your absence, you gave us the laugh that built up the laugh spiral. I hope things build again for you. And my friends and I already pre-ordered your book.

Anonymous said...

THIS.

I think the worst part of my depression was the vague sense of guilt. People I loved would try to "snap me out of it" but instead of making me feel anything useful, it just made me irritated and exhausted. It was like, cognitively, I knew I loved these people and used to take pleasure in being with them, but at the moment all I could feel was a faint sort of hatred and an overwhelming desire to be alone in my fog of nothingness.

At one point I found myself debating what would be a good way to die where no one would know I did it on purpose. I fantasized about how much of a relief it would be if something just happened to me and I stopped existing. One night it was raining and misty, and I thought to myself, I could drink a bunch of vodka and go lie down in the road. A car would run over me and when they did the autopsy they would conclude that I accidentally passed out there. I actually got up and started putting on clothes to do it. Then I realized, this has got to stop. If not for me, then for those people I used to love that would be devastated.

So I called my mother and told her, I don't care what you do, or what you put me on, you need to come get me and take me away from all the things that are making me want to die. Lucky for me she did.

I spent the next year almost literally paralyzed with the attempt to process what I was feeling. But the worst is over now, and I'm glad I made the choice not to give up.

Thanks for your honesty. Glad to see you're still hilarious and witty and brilliant.

IANW said...

I love you. Nothing more to say. Not now, anyway, but I love you.

Kevin said...

Hurrah! Your corny posts are back! (see what I did there?)

Kelsi said...

Thanks, Allie. I can't articulate it either, but I understand about the corn. Thanks for honestly examining depression--it's something nobody wants to ever talk about realistically and I just think it helps so much to bring up the parts (like...most of it) that aren't just "feeling sad."

Anonymous said...

I'm not gonna lie, there were parts of this post that made my chest tight and made me feel a bit panicky. Thank you for sharing this, simply from the point of view that it lets others know that there are other people out there that share these strange and isolating feelings.
I'm so glad to see you're posting again, though, and glad to have you back.

Lisa said...

I feel weird and funny, happy, sad mix. I'm glad I kept hope. Hope your brain settles into a good place.

Anonymous said...

Absolutely amazing. So happy you are back- and so accurate and insightful about what depression can feel like.

Katie said...

I'm going to have to reread this post later, because I was bawling (and laughing) too much to follow it closely the first time through. I'm not doing so well myself at the moment, and while I can't say I am going through all these phases in the same order that you did, I have definitely been in each of these shitty places over the last several years. Thank you so much for this.

Anonymous said...

As someone who doesn't have depression but has a significant other who does these posts are so valuable for me in understanding what is going on and how I can help without being annoying ;-)

Anonymous said...

I like you very very much.

Anonymous said...

BRILLIANT.

When reading I was keeping a close eye on the scroll bar trying to calculate how far through I was... I was like "Oh no I'm past halfway", "Oh please let this go on to another page","I MUST have more of this"....

Corn Of Happiness - Brilliant drawings, hilarious and moving.

I realised I had a problem when one day I found myself being excited and happy about a possible way out of my misery, this was the thought -

Brilliant! If I get some terminal illness then I can end this without having to kill myself - because I can't do that.. it's too nasty for the people close to me, but an illness - thats not my fault! That would be great!

Stopped in my tracks and shuck my head and laughed. I'm a really wishing horrors like that upon myself?

TC said...

Oh Allie! Seeing you back today made my sadness become a little better. Sorry to hear what you've gone through but yes good to have you back. Hope 'feeling' gets easier. I identify with this post so I'd like to say...'feeling' comes and goes. Just need that piece of corn to pop up once in awhile. Welcome back. :)

Ann said...

I can't tell you how much I relate to this--especially about how difficult it can be to finally reach out and ask for help because the prospect of continuing to exist seems so incredibly pointless. I'm glad to hear that you're making the difficult journey back to the world, and I'm glad you chose to share your story. Take care of yourself--you're worth it.

Anonymous said...

I would have gone into helpless loopy laughter loop too, but then I;m a chronic depressive myself. Welcome back. There are cookies and dogs on this side.

C.J.Wolff said...

Thank you

Anonymous said...

I really can't thank you enough for sharing this. I'm a counsellor and have struggled with depression myself...this hit home for me big time (even unexpectedly brough me to tears!) and I know it's going to resonate with a lot of people I work with too. Thank you thank you thank you....I hope that things get less bullshitty every day!

Anonymous said...

I'm actually incredibly amazingly happy to know you're still here.

I missed this blog and you so much!

M said...

So glad to see your writing is coming back.

I understand you pretty well. And even if it doesn't touch the feels yet, I hope some day you're proud about writing this -- it's an important deed for those of us who have done time all alone and shriveled under the fridge.

Keep working at it. This is an illness that makes your mind lie to you. You can experience joy again.

Everyone missed you. You are valued and love, Allie.

Lizzie said...

You're possibly the only person who could ever describe how depression feels in a way so many of us relate to. So glad you're back.

aimee said...

Welcome back, even if it is just for this one post, Allie!I am trying really hard not to fall back into this myself. I just keep reminding myself it's stupid brain chemicals making me feel that way and then yelling at my brain. I don't know. It worked when I used to do mushrooms when I was a kid and I had to remind myself that I wasn't dying. Worked for me, maybe not everyone.

Unknown said...

Such a good post. I recognized so much of myself in what you wrote - especially when I was at my worst and finally got help. It's one of hte hardest things in the world to tell someone you don't want to exist anymore and while getting help seems so logical afterward - it's so difficult to actually take those first steps. Wishing you health and happiness! Managing depression isn't easy, but it's possible and it's possible to find happiness again.

Anonymous said...

I'm not going to pretend like I totally understand what you've been going through because I've never experienced depression like this. But I am really grateful that you wrote this. I've had friends go through depression, and I really couldn't figure out what their deal was, but this makes it a lot easier to understand. I wish I had read this before so I could try not to overload them with positivity :( Thank you for explaining! & I hope things keep getting better... because enjoying things is really nice!

Unknown said...

Thanks for this! It's nice to see you again (in as not-creepy a way as that can be construed).

Unknown said...

"Pull yourself together." Yeah, that's helpful.

Lobe said...

Welcome back to the land of the almost living! you're hilarious even when talking about depression, It's amazing. Go corn!

molly said...

This is what I will send people when they ask me how I'm doing. Just this link, with a line indicating which stage of the process best describes my current situation.

(Right now I'm in the "what are facial expressions" phase)

In all seriousness, Allie, I have immense respect for you for writing this out at all. It is so easy to give up trying to explain and just let people be cheerful at you because it makes them feel better. Kudos to you and best of luck at finding your way out of that desert.

Unknown said...

I just wanted to say it's a bummer your fish are dead, but we still love you. No matter how super dead those fish are.

Nicole said...

Thank you for sharing this with us. You've expressed how the depths of depression really feel in a way that I think even those who have never experienced depression will understand. I'm glad to see you posting again, and I hope for the best for you. *hugs*

Andy said...

This corn story somewhat reminds me of the zoo monkey passages from Stranger in Strange Land (Heinlein). In that, Mike learns how to laugh and thus understand humanity, not because what happened to the monkey is actually objectively funny, but because the scene ties something together in himself that highlights the absurdity of the universe. I remember those passages being very meaningful for me when I was going thru some very dark times as well.

jen breese said...

Thank you Allie. This helped me. Glad you made it to the other side and found the corn. That really made me giggle.

Anonymous said...

Thanks, Allie. It's good to have you alive and corny.

-Bob

Anonymous said...

My corn was a glass of fruit juice. Thanks for telling your story.

lilkittin said...

I had something very similar happen except instead of a piece of corn it was the sound of a wet rag hitting the floor. No one will ever understand the comedy in it and there is no recreating it but sometimes it can still make me laugh just thinking about it. I'm glad you found your corn.

Anonymous said...

THIS.

You write ALL the non-feels. Perfectly.

I'm sorry your metaphorical fish is so dead.

Lizzie said...

You're possibly the only person who could ever describe how depression feels in a way so many of us relate to. So glad you're back.

Taby said...

I'm glad you're back and feeling good about yourself Allie :)

Phobia said...

I am happy that you're back. I am also surprised, Simple Dog is all growned up!

Mary said...

I have been there and I love this post, it's accurate for my experience except for that my "corn" was Scotch and my way of talking to people was to not. You are so brave. Fighting yourself is SO much harder than fighting external things.

Life will get better but it just takes a long time.

Just glad to see you and your amazeballs.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for illustrating the bullshit..... good to know someone else can see/not feel it the same way.
I'm looking for my corn, glad you found yours.

Anonymous said...

You forgot about being unable to sleep even though its the only thing you want to do.

Anonymous said...

What so many others have said. You have described it PERFECTLY. I particularly identify with "I don't want to *kill* myself, I just don't want to exist. I want to have never existed."

I have shared this in a few places that support people with depression, so they know they aren't alone... and also so they can share it with people around them to understand what it's like being in that pit of nothing.


I hope your journey continues to be as uphill as possible. Much love.

breyo said...

Bend, Oregon is soul destroying

Anonymous said...

I'm so glad you're out there. Welcome back to the internet, come back soon!

Melon said...

............... I wish I could explain feelings (or lack thereof) as well as you can. You are seriously spot on. Welcome back! I look forward to your posts making things seem like they aren't hopeless bullshit. Your posts definitely make me happy when I'm feeling nothing. ♥

Megan said...

As one of the blonde chicks on the couch with depressed friends, THIS finally helped me understand. FINALLY.

Maureen Walshe said...

im happy you found the corn. :) we all need to find corn sometime. :) I hope theres more corn in your future. :)

Anonymous said...

You nailed it! Especially the part about people throwing all of those positive one-liners at you. That makes me more angry than anything, and the anger itself and wanting to right the wrong of the insensitivity of these clueless people gives me the will to keep living. I'm going to go look under my refrigerator right now, although I am pretty sure there will be a lot more than one piece of corn under there. I know there will be popcorn, but I won't be able to see it for all the dog hair dust bunnies. So I'm glad I got to see the corn through your eyes. Validation of someone's feelings or lack of them goes a long long way. But it's like people who think they want to help will do everything thing they can to keep from validating. You find one such person and it's like proof. "see, it's not that I need so awful much!" Thanks for another great one!

Kitwench said...

Thank you. These things.
Not always in the same order.
But these things.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for being awesome. Thank you for being honest. Thank you for being here. Just thank you, so very much.

Anonymous said...

As many have already said, and I'm sure many won't say, and many more will say after me.....I know EXACTLY how you feel/felt!
Thank you for writing and drawing it all out--it's perfect.
So happy you're back!

somnomania said...

Like basically all of the other hundreds of commenters on this, I just want to say that all of it except the suicidal part is far too familiar, and you described all of it with your usual with and ridiculously funny metaphors. I was never suicidal, but I had periods of just not wanting to exist or just to sleep until something came along that was better.

We of the internet are very glad to have you back. <3

Chesley said...

Lots of love to you from a fellow traveler.
I think I need a" maybe everything isn't hopeless bullshit" mug? shirt? front door wrapper? billboard?
Something big.

Anonymous said...

This was totally flinch-y and sometimes uncomfortable. Also, about halfway through I started just nodding and feeling and thinking "she understands this thing that happened to me better than I ever did." I will laugh at corn. *hug*

Sparrow said...

As horrible as it is to be glad that another person is experiencing/has experienced this, I am incredibly grateful to know that I was not in that wretched wasteland alone. This was so relatable for me, it could have been me explaining it. And I'm glad to know that someone understands that all the emotions had flatlined, and the solution was not to look for them or magically turn them back on. And that when they did return, they returned inexplicably and asymmetrically, and were impossible to explain to three uninitiated.
I read this in a Vietnamese restaurant and I couldn't help the year-inducing hysterical laughter. I'm fairly sure everyone in this restaurant thinks I'm crazy. I don't care.
Welcome back to the Outer Yettilands of Emotion, Allie. We've missed you.

lisa said...

just going to leave a HUG here. and kudos to you for writing about this.

Elizabeth said...

You were right, there's a distinct lack of planes in this post...
I still like you though

Sparrow said...

As horrible as it is to be glad that another person is experiencing/has experienced this, I am incredibly grateful to know that I was not in that wretched wasteland alone. This was so relatable for me, it could have been me explaining it. And I'm glad to know that someone understands that all the emotions had flatlined, and the solution was not to look for them or magically turn them back on. And that when they did return, they returned inexplicably and asymmetrically, and were impossible to explain to three uninitiated.
I read this in a Vietnamese restaurant and I couldn't help the year-inducing hysterical laughter. I'm fairly sure everyone in this restaurant thinks I'm crazy. I don't care.
Welcome back to the Outer Yettilands of Emotion, Allie. We've missed you.

Anonymous said...

Allie,

A couple of things...I'm glad you're back.

I'm sorry your fish are dead...and that your feelings are either non-existent or mangled and weird.

I've gone through small bouts of depression, but nothing like you've been through.

I hope your hopeless bullshit soon turns to hopeful bullshit. Hugs from here...because honestly, that's the only thing I can think, is that I want to hug you. Alot of hugs, because alot of nothing isn't much fun nor helpful.
p.s. Thank you for including stupid dog. I luv him.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for posting this.

Anonymous said...

I'm so glad to see you posting something new! I love your website, it always brings a smile to my face. I'm sorry you're going through a depression. Maybe you can take some comfort into knowing that people all around the world think you're smart, funny and incredibly creative. You would be greatly missed.

MiT said...

Yes! THE FISH! The CRYING for the sake of CRYING. So glad you're back :)

Anndria said...

So glad to see a post from you. Going through my own depression thing now, though it seems to be a little milder than yours. Hope you have less and less bullshit every day until there's none left.

lauragrace42 said...

Hey so yeah.

(Also, since you noted concerns in your previously post, please know that I laughed my ass off.)

Holly S. said...

This describes depression better than I have ever been able to. It also made me have a bunch of feelings, which I don't do very often any more. Thank you so much for being so open, honest, brilliant, and funny. I'm showing this post to everyone I've ever tried to explain depression to. Glad things seem to be improving for you. <3

Anonymous said...

i'm kinda crying and kinda laughing and i'm so very happy to see this wonderful thing you do done as wonderfully as you've always done it.

get well!

Corbett Cappon said...

Just in case noone has said it yet, I'm sorry your fish are dead Allie. And thanks for posting. And I still love you, as I'm sure many of the other people here do too.

Susie said...

Thank you. Just thank you. The way you've described this is utterly amazing, and it's put my own feelings into words better than I could ever hope to (especially the fish metaphor).

I'm glad you're back, and I'm so glad you found your tiny, shrivelled piece of corn :) You give me hope that one day I will find my own :D

Rebeka said...

You are so f-ing brilliant, even in the midst of your hopeless. I'm glad you're back, even if just for one post. I missed you.

Anonymous said...

"...wishing that nothing loved me so I wouldn't feel obligated to keep existing."

Yes, this, absolutely this, on most days. Thank you.


Joe said...

I'm glad you're back. You're not bullshit. You might not be as funny as corn, but you're close.

Even if it is all pointless bullshit (and I've had months and years of that in the past), I'm glad you're back.

Anonymous said...

So glad you're back! And with a very accurate description of depression, I hope all the fountains of happy read this before trying to fix their friends!

Angeleen said...

My moment came when pressing an elevator button. Yup. I kept clicking it and it was so amazingly HILARIOUS! So I kept hitting it. And kept laughing. And pressed it again. And laughed. When it opened I was a laughing mess. And then someone else came in. I still love elevator buttons.

Unknown said...

Allie, depression is a horrid thing and it has completely different effects on all of us. So I won't pretend to understand what you have been going through. But I have also suffered with depression and I am beyond estatic that you are back and blogging. Your blog is a ray of sunshine in my life and I am so happy that you are feeling better enough to write again. I am looking forward to your next one, take your time your loyal fans will wait a lifetime for it!!!!! Thank you so much for being awesome!

46-2 said...

I think you just helped me understand my girlfriend in a way that 6 months of conversations between us couldn't. I do not have the words to express my joy that you are back, and since I shared this on facebook and there's a pretty good chance i'm gonna make her read this, Hi Kourt I love you. :P

mcd410x said...

I don't feel our brains have developed well enough yet to tell the difference between a happy spray and a lion attack. You brace, you prepare to fight or flight ... and where's the fucking lion? Everything is just the same stupid shit, and I didn't even get a lion. Which makes it worse.

Anonymous said...

Missed your insight, thanks for returning!

Love This Space said...

You did such a good job helping us all understand depression and what we can do for our loved ones (and ourselves) that are depressed.

Good on you girl. You continue to fight. All of us weird strangers you've never met love you for it.

And I sort of get the corn thing. Sometimes you laugh at the funny little image and then you start laughing at the fact you are laughing. It all works.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for sharing. I've missed you.
When I had the miscarriage that knocked me down for awhile, I cried and cried and cried. Days, weeks, months... To keep the crying at bay, I watched movies. Lots and lots of vapid movies so I didn't have to cry or figure out how to stop crying. The best movie I watched in that time had me laughing sooo hard at its ridiculousness. It was Snakes on a Plane. I'm sure that at any other time in my life I would not have liked that film, or even watched it to the end. I laughed way to hard and long at those motherfucking snakes on that motherfucking plane.
I'm glad you found that lil corn.
Be well, Allie!
kelbel

Chris Green said...

Depression sucks. It's almost impossible to explain the true feeling of feeling nothing. You have had to experience it to understand. I understand. Bless you!

Unknown said...

This is so damn true that it hurts. I just want to give you hugs right now. <3

Anie said...

I'm glad you're not dead. I wish you all the shriveled pieces of corn. Maybe other vegetables one day!

Anonymous said...

What a perfect description. Thank you so very much for sharing.

Megan said...

Paradoxically, I just made a bunch of people's day by telling them that you just posted about depression. As always, smart, clever, and heart-felt in its honesty.

I want to make a fish metaphor, but I think it's going to end in zombie fish. Instead, I'll just say: I'm glad your fish aren't dead anymore. :D

M said...

I teared up with the corn incident. Maybe the corn has magical brain twisting powers. Maybe I'm just really glad you wrote this and at the same time really sad about the depression part.
In any case, it's good to have you back.

Unknown said...

My hopeful place came when I realized that being depressed doesn't make me a bad person. Being told all the time if I could just be positive enough I wouldn't be depressed and then failing miserably was just causing this hate loop, hate of myself. I wanted to die too. I'm better now. I thought of you often and wished you peace.

Anonymous said...

Thanks so much for sharing this. And for finding the corn.

Tish said...

I'm so impressed you were able to capture just what the "blahs" are like. I had such a hard time explaining it to people I swear. I went through some hella scary shit, the exact same scary shit you described. You're not alone lady...in any of your feelings. I hope, hope, hope your brain can balance out those crummy synapses that aren't firing correctly. It's not our fault! always remember that!

Anonymous said...

Allie,

Someone brilliant posted a comment about vitamin deficiency causing their depression.

I'm with the masses and thankful for the sequence that led to you finding your shriveled corn kernel, but as the feelings continue to come back, please focus your energy on finding the root cause. I hope you discover and correct the root cause of your depression so that it never comes back.

Anonymous said...

You aren't alone.

I can absolutely totally completely relate to this.

Like the Bloggess says "depression lies".

I'm glad you are back.

Azara said...

You wrote my mind and experiences. Thank you for having the courage to put this out there!! Also, I'm sorry your fish were (are?) dead. Medication brought mine back to life, but it took awhile and they're still sort of lethargic sometimes.

Your last line is brilliant. Actually the whole post is brilliant. Hopefully this is something people with lively, wide-awake sparkly fish can understand, even if they can't quite relate.


Blurple said...

Dude. Sorry about your fish. That sucks.

Holly Anderson said...

Glad you're back! I can totally relate to this post...well up until the suicidal part. I never wanted to do that, but I didn't really want to exist, so I slept as much as I could because it's the closest thing. Depression is so so so hard, and those who haven't experienced it just don't understand, which only makes it harder. P.S. Your illustrations are awesome.

Daniel J said...

First off it's so great to have you back. Secondly I recently went through these exact same emotions. So identical that it is scary. Totally relate to everything you have written. It's that stupid bullshit cliche "Time heals all." Anyway thanks for writing again. It really does make my days better when I have the chance to read your new material. Hopefully you can keep writing! We all love you, Allie!

Radiant Zombie said...

I have never in my life related to something someone said about the nothingness as much as I am right now. NEVER.

Katie said...

Glad you came back to us, dude. But mostly--I'm glad that you came out the other side. Depression runs heavy through my family. My grandmother suffered for 30 years before she killed herself. And I've been struggling with it and PTSD for a long time.

Everything you wrote and drew here--in that way of yours--feels so honest and perfectly describes what I feel like whenever someone tries to feed me that line of 'hope' crap.

But--I do want you to see these comments, so you know how much we care about you. Thank you for all the laughs you've brought me over the years--but also these moments: true, genuine, human moments.

Good luck, my friend.

Rachael said...

We missed you so much!

And you aren't alone. We are all here with you.

Unknown said...

Thank you. My piece of corn was a dust bunny under my bed.

Big McLargeHuge said...

Thank you for sharing this. I've only recently started to shake off my own depression. Mine ended one night, laying in bed, thinking about how worthless I was, how I had fucked up quite a lot these past 29 years, and how there wasn't much point to anything. My piece of corn moment was thinking of my mother, but instead of laughing, I cried like a baby for half an hour, because I could never in a million years hurt my mother the way it would hurt for her to bury a child. It's a pain I've already seen in too many mothers of friends I have said goodbye to forever. No, that would not do at all. After that, I decided I would try to do better and make her proud. Ah shit, did someone cut an onion?

Jowita said...

I've been trying to explain mental illness on television and radio and press for the past few weeks and I wish I had this to show them instead (although my particular situation is alcoholism & being bipolar). Thank you for sharing this. You're brilliant.

P.S. I was diagnosed with depression for a long time but recently got the bipolar surprise -- because I had a similar reaction to a kernel of corn.

Unknown said...

I totally know where you're coming from on the corn - I have a theory that the best fits of laughter come from completely random things. I think the reason they're so awesome is because that laughter lives in that moment only for you. Sometimes you get to share that with someone close to you who understands your weird, which multiplies the awesome of the laugh exponentially. Often I will laugh at something for several minutes, and when I think of it later even I don't get it any more. The brain is a strange thing.

I had a bout of depression like this when I was younger, and honestly I can't even REMEMBER how I got out of it...so it's totally ok to not have a heartwarming story about how your life started to feel a little less bull-shitty. Things like this don't happen in magical story worthy life chainging points (people who have not faced depression are the type to think that's true), but in little strange bits (like the corn) and sometimes random large chunks that wallop you on the head as they go by.

Either way, maybe an oasis is coming up in your desert. An oasis where cakes grow on trees. You never know!

...I think I need to draw a cake tree now...

Unknown said...

Glad you're back Allie. We missed you!

Steve said...

I have gone to this place before, and the way you describe it is so accurate that it's almost too accurate, like a TV picture that's somehow higher resolution than real life. I never enter it willingly, but somehow with an effort that seems to come from outside myself, I am usually able to leave it. If I ever figure out exactly how I am able to do this, I'll let you know.

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