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.
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.
4,970 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 2601 – 2800 of 4970 Newer› Newest»I'm glad you're back, Allie! :)
Gah, thank you so much for putting into words what I've been trying to explain to friends for months. You're my hero XD
Glad you're back.
~Stephanie
I cried reading this. I've been there. Sometimes I'm still there. Thank you for being brave enough to share this with us.
In the epoch since your last post I was worried about you. I'm sure a lot of us nameless, faceless people out here were.
Gah, thank you so much for putting into words what I've been trying to explain to friends for months. You're my hero XD
Glad you're back.
~Stephanie
I totally get the corn thing. <3 Here's to hoping you keep climbing up, Allie.
I'm laughing about the corn. It IS funny! And where you are is an OK place to be.
I was worried about you. Glad you're back.
"...right up until I noticed myself wishing that nothing loved me so I wouldn't feel obligated to keep existing." I've been there. Now I tell people my cat saved my life.
Thanks, good message.
I LOVE FROZEN CORN!!!!!
Thank you so much for posting this. It's incredibly brave of you and I think a lot of people can relate, I know I can. I look forward to more posts.
You are the corn.
The dead fish was perfect.
Thank you Allie.
We are glad to have you back, facing the future bullshit together, whether meaningless or not. Seeing truth in small things is your gift.
This did make me cry. But it was from happiness. Hugs to you, Allie.
I think we all need a piece of shriveled corn in our lives. Thank you for sharing that with us.
Thank you so much for this. I'm a novelist. I write about other people's feelings and experience every day. But I've never been able to paint such a clear picture of what my depression has been like.
What an incredible post. Thank you for sharing your story. I've been looking forward to reading a new one from you for such a long time.
Congratulations on making me laugh at some of the uncomfortable moments in your post. -_- / :)
I don't remember what caused my corn moment, but i do remember it. It felt pretty good. Now i'm back to not feeling much of anything anymore, but at least now i know that there is corn, and the corn makes it worth it for me.
I don't know why depression happens. I don't know why it happened you; you are awesome, and I wish you never had to suffer.
I'm sorry it's been a ruthlessly rough ride.
I still like you.
If there's anything we can do to help, give us the straight dope on where you're at. We're here for you, no joke.
From now on when I try to explain my depression to people I'm just going to show them your comics on depression because honestly I have never seen anyone more accurately illustrate what being depressed is like.
Also, I love your work and I'm so glad you're back.
As someone who suffers from sudden, unprovoked bouts of genetic depression, this post is spot on. You've made a very unfunny subject rather humorous and we all love you for that. I've never been able to accurately describe my lethargic feelings I get with my depression, but you did it perfectly. BOREDOM. Sometimes my depression leaves me feeling overwhelming bored and I feel utterly hopeless because everything seems to routine, pointless and HORRIBLY BORING.
Thanks for this.
Quite a lot of "it" really is bullshit, but that doesn't have to be a problem. My depression isn't so long ago that I can't relate to what you've written, especially about the Cloud of Nothing.
A fantastic post, as always.
Allie - I am so glad you are back. And thank you for explaining depression so accurately! I can remember my brother yelling at me "Why can't you JUST BE HAPPY!!!" like it was a choice and I wanted to feel that way. I'm glad you didn't let suicide win. I almost did, but luckily the time I spent at the mental hospital was some of the most pivotal time in my life (nothing like a piece of corn! but I totally get where you are coming from there). I won't bore you with what it is like being on the other side but I'm glad you've started on your way here. Hope you have a great trip!
Sending love...is this too mushy? If it's too mushy then I take it back. If not, then I don't take it back.
Sending 'glad you're back' feelings to you.
I posted something similar to this on my Facebook a few days ago regarding my depression. Unfortunately, I didn't have the awesome art to go along with it.
Anyway, I'm glad(?) to know I'm not the only one who feels like that on that level. Most of my friends kinda understand, but I can tell they just don't fully comprehend the suck. Thank you for this, and I hope one day we can not have to live with this junk.
Also, you freaking rock, I love reading your blog. :)
This needs to be a book. As it is. It's brilliant. True Poetry.
Thank you for this. And thank you for part one. Your description of suicidal thoughts are so on point that I felt my eyes welling up with tears. It is so hard to reach out when you are feeling that way and you encapsulated those feelings perfectly.
I sincerely hope that you are starting to do better. I can identify with every single point in both part one and part two. I've been dealing with depression for as long as I can remember and it's a constant roller coaster. Hang in there.
Hang in there, Allie! You've got a lot of love here, don't ever forget that. Depression is a bear to beat, but it is definitely possible. :)
I'm sorry about your fish. <3
a really touching comic.
fuck people's positivity!
i totally agree that the little piece of corn is the most hilarious thing ever
Dear drawing-person.
I wanted to thank you for telling this story. It sounds very familiar, and is a brilliant show-and-tell of what happens when depression strikes. I hope you('re starting to) feel better. I know that reading your post made me a little sad and a little happy and for all it's worth, the corn story really is funny :)
Take care! <3
This is my life too. Haven't found the corn yet. I'd scare myself, but like you write, don't really feel it.
Allie, I mean this when I say it:
Sorry about how dead your fish are/were. I still like you, though.
I laughed at depression. You facilitated that and that to me is a real big deal. Thanks.
I just spent 5 minutes hysterically laughing about a single, shriveled piece of corn. Thank you.
I am so glad to see you posting again. I'm sending well wishes for your continuing recovery.
You are actively making the world a better place with this post.
I'm glad you're back!
I was so glad to see this post!
May you always find something dessicated under your fridge whenever you most need it.
Laura J
I'm so glad to see that you're back, and to hear that even if things aren't good, at least they're better.
You nailed it with the fish analogy.
So glad to see that you're still alive and kicking!
This post is amazing in so many ways. Thank you for sharing.
Everything you write is great. I'm surprised you didn't have to spend more time arguing that you were depressed for no reason. All the treatment I've ever heard of focuses on figuring out a cause for the depression and then dealing with that somehow.
Not at all disturbing, and rather comforting that so many of us feel the same (or DON'T feel, as the case may be). Been there, not felt that, saw the corn - which for me is usually something odd my kids do. You're right about no guarantees. It just is what it is (which strikes me hilariously funny at the moment). Anyway, thanks for pulling through to give us another thing to smile about. You've helped many of us more than you know with your humor. Love ya, kid.
Thank you very much. That was wonderfully done and in line with my own experiences.
I missed you! I spent a year wishing I could switch off the button of life. Please don't keep picturing forever - it's too much. Whatever you feel or don't, it's ok.
It's incredibly brave to talk about this when you're in the middle of it. Thank you.
I admire your strength to be so open about this, and I appreciate your candor. It couldn't have been easy to put this into words, especially words that resonate so profoundly with me and thousands of your other readers. Thank you for speaking freely in such an open forum. I hope that more and more people will talk about their journey and their experiences with depression so that others can understand it and so that we can remove the stigma associated with it. Keep your courage, Allie. And have faith that there will be other pieces of shriveled up corn in the future that will help.
I am so glad you're back. This post is going to help people. It completely tore me apart by the time I got to the bottom, but it helped.
I love someone (very much) who is going through this. And I...don't know what to do, and what to say. Or when/if I'll get to talk to him again. It scares the hell out of me.
But you helped me understand what he feels like on a different level. Maybe I have been wrong and I've been the syrupy hope yoga person, because that was all I knew. I want to be the "wow, those fish are dead, but I love you" person so bad.
Thanks for this. I mean it.
Thanks for being brave enough to put this out there.
Thanks for being here.
So grateful that you write and draw from what really happens. If you buy the idea that it's meaningful to touch/connect with others, voila! Here to say you have wildly, truly done so again. You remind me why it's worth it to create the not-so-cheery stuff and especially the incomprehensibly funny. I even think I get it about the corn, but even though that's probably bogus, as no one really gets it or loses it since its nothing etc, still: Thank you!
Thank you for coming back. An excellent post.
Glad you are back, and I hope things continue to get better.. This was amazing!!!!!
I know you're getting a ton of comments on this, but I just wanted to tell you how great it is that you posted. It almost brought me to tears, but you are still an incredibly talented writer. I wish the best for you, whatever that may be and whenever it may happen.
Thanks
You explain things so perfectly x.x I know it may not mean much, but your posts were my kernel of corn when I was going through depression before...
I'm so happy you're back and maybe semi-normal..well as normal as you can be :)
It's so weird the way you described this. The more I read, the more it was like you were telling my story.
When I was told I should start meds, I freaked out b/c they always talk about how it could give you thoughts of suicide. I was so clse to the brink and so scared I'd do this. My grandfather was a manic depressive & had killed himself shortly before i was born, so taking something that could have that side effect scared the shit out of me. After my dr talked me into it, I was so thankful I took it. Every few months, it happens for a short time, going back to the dark place. But it doesn't last long.
To all of it yes! And I'm printing this out to give to my therapist, because yes!
I'm with the bronzing of the corn and making it a necklace/keyring/pocket token.
And yay! Simple Dog makes a cameo!
Thanks, Allie.
YES. YES. YES. Thank you for being brave enough to share. And speaking words and pictures to an experience so many people know, including me.
I'm sorry your fish are so dead. I know from personal experience that it's not easy to find that shriveled up piece of corn. Thanks for reminding me to look for it. Hugs to you, Allie.
So I know I'm in the later end of the 2000+ comments you've already gotten, but I still wanted to leave a huge THANK YOU on here. You've captured depression so exactly. I actually think my corn was picture 43 ("I don't necessarily want to KILL myself...I just want to become dead somehow")--I was never able to articulate it that well, and I just found it hilariously funny for some reason. I was actually hospitalized right after going through that conversation (I still remember that time in the hospital fondly, even though it was really boring for the most part, because the mental ward felt like such a safe place--I think I felt that no one was demanding anything from me, somehow, and being able to just be depressed and go through the motions of living while being monitored only to make sure you don't hurt yourself actually *does* help trigger feeling, because you actually feel the relief from not having to make so much of an effort living, all of which is really for other people. My husband doesn't understand why I see that hospitalization as a nice time, it was so rough and awful for him). I'm better now, through not 100% (moderately depressed and in the middle of law school; bad combination), but it still is an isolating thing to deal with, and SO hard to explain. Spot on descriptions like yours are helpful for others who've never been depressed to understand what it's like, and help those who have been depressed because they are slightly less alone, and that's A Good Thing. So, again, THANK YOU and God bless.
This is the perfect explanation of depression. I'm sorry it happened, but I hope you continue your corniness... (har har...)Your posts bring a smile to my (and my friends I force them upon) face :)
I've missed your posts. I'm so glad you're okay. You're a very talented person, and I hope you continue to get better.
You are brilliant and I am so glad you are okay. I am going to keep my eye out for the corn. I know it's there somewhere.
I'm glad you're alive
So glad you are back! And this is so true, so familiar. The fish metaphor, the completely random unexplainable funny thing, all of it. Thank you and welcome back.
Thank for this.
The world is a better place because you are in it.
Love this post! I have been here too. Congrats on being back.
Thank you for sharing. Glad you're back.
I haven't even read this post yet, but had to comment and let you know that I am SO happy to see that you are, at the very least, evidently alive!! Now...off to read post! :D
This is the truest description of depression there is, as well as the helpful crowd that doesn't help. I'm in one or more of these phases most of the time. Glad someone else is in the boat, looking at the piece of corn, wondering how it is that it arrived.
May your undead army of zombie fish conquer the planet :)
Thank you for describing my year too. Thank you so much.
Allie, I've been a fan of your blog for a long time. I'm in awe of your talent, abilities, and honesty.
I read your post today and it brought tears to my eyes. I haven't walked in your shoes before, but I've tried them on, and I've loved and cared for someone who wears very similar ones. I learned a lot reading your words today.
I've spent the last half hour watching the Comments number on your blog: watching how quickly the number goes up. I've read some of the comments. I hope that as you read them you're able to appreciate how truly amazing you are. You have touched so many people and helped them in a way that is uniquely you. You truly have a gift. You make our world a better place. I hope I don't sound like a creepy stalker - I'm not. I'm just trying to impress on you how valuable you are. I hope and pray that you're able to find your corn every single day.
Wow, that bit at the end, I actually experienced that a lot when I was younger. I would hide all of my emotions because showing them usually just got me made fun of, then every so often when things got really bad, the same little response would play out. First I would get super angry, I just wanted to destroy everything, but then when the anger burned through I would just be left crying, and then I'd see myself crying for no reason and start to laugh incessantly. I remember actually triggering such episodes on purpose in an attempt to change my psyche, it worked but I wonder sometimes if I dodged a bullet.
When I saw your pre-post I thought, "yes! yes, make the excited face-this was exciting to me in my old life" Then I read it and I wanted to laugh, but your illustrations are my feelings- or lack thereof and they provoked pathetic tears. Which is good...because that is something. And then we got to the corn. And then I laughed crying. Which was a nice change from nothing. So thank you for that.
I just fucking love your brain,
but don't ever let it control you like it did for the last year. Maybe we have to do things until our brain forgets it wants to slowly torment and kill us. Or maybe we're supposed to defiantly follow the foolish, frolicking heart into the bright fields of happyland where everyone gets laid and feels "all the things".
Maybe everything isn't hopeless bullshit...
I'm so glad you came back to internetland. I hope you read this and go "hey that girl got it" or "that girl reminds me of Eminems song "Stan"", or "she clearly doesn't know how to use quotations".
I probably sound like a lisping superfan as everyone does in the comment collums-but these little cartoons seem to articulate my experience more accurately than I could ever hope to and I had to say something. I wonder if that means you're extremely poignant or my life is extremely predictable...or we're the same person and i'm making this whole life up..
I'm going to stop editing this now
The point was: thank you for writing instead of suiciding.
Many of us appreciate you.
I'm so glad you're better and so glad you're back. It may not help, but I hope you know you are not alone and that you were missed.
I wish I had the mental and emotional means to explain to you how this is one of the best explanations of depression I've ever read, and how the world needs more people talking about this in the way that you talked about it, but unfortunately I feel like I couldn't do it justice.
Just know that this helped, and that's important.
Thanks :)
You know, my husband, best friend, and I have all gone through some sort of horrific depression at some point of our lives, and reading your blog made us realize how systematic it all is. We all felt like you did- that we were all alone, that we were all worthless and hopeless and we couldn't find a reason to keep living. It's funny (I guess- lose sense of the word) how we feel that we're the only ones going through this, but in the end, everyone who has been depressed has felt this way. You're not alone. We're not alone, and I hope that people who are currently in the lowest of the low moments in their lives happen upon this blog, and it will motivate them to seek help and realize they're not alone.
You're amazing, and I'm so glad you're back!
This is such a good explanation for depression. I am going to carry copies in my purse and just hand it to happy people who insist on accosting and "fixing" me.
I can totally relate. I find that being a consumer brings one deeper into depression than being a producer. And produce you have.
Hi Allie, I just found your blog yesterday. I've struggled with depression for years, and it's great to see a description so accurate and sad and hilarious.
I wanted to tell you I'm sorry you've been hurting.
And, thank you for refusing the urge to end your life. Really, person to person, thank you. I know that some days it's a heroic struggle to resist that urge, and I'm very appreciative of the gentle and creative souls who fight like hell to win that battle.
So, thank you for writing and drawing, thank you for sharing your work, and very sincerely thank you for living.
I don't wanna have feelings at you or anything, but thanks for the blog. It helps.
I know the feeling of not being suicidal but not wanting to be alive.
I'm glad I stuck around. I'm glad you did, too. It gets better in increments, I promise.
I mean, some days my brain still wants to destroy me, but I mock it until it settles down. I bet you're pretty good at mocking. You should let your brain have it sometimes.
Thank you so much for sharing your story. As someone who battles depression and anxiety I found that you have put into words (and great pictures!) something that I find hard to express. I feel like you are describing my life, exactly. I hope you continue to post. I have enjoyed everything you have ever done and it makes me happy to see you have returned, though I am sorry for all that you have been through. I wish you well.
What a brilliant, poignant, beautiful and crippling piece. Depression is such an impossible experience to explain to people who have never had to face it or deal with it, and I think you massively succeeded in communicating all of its absurdity. Not only are you essentially brilliant for all your spot-on metaphors, you're also frick frackin' hilarious. I hope you are feeling better and thank you for the courage it took for you to be so open. You've helped a lot of people feel less alone by publishing this piece.
It's so wonderful to see you back! I missed reading new entries.
And I might have cried a little while I read this (read: cried a lot). Ever since I was diagnosed with depression I've been trying to explain to my dad how it feels so he can understand what's going on. I'll show him the fish metaphor. Thank you so much for writing this.
Allie, I'm so glad you're still here and writing. Thank you for sharing your story. I know you're not all of the way out yet, but I hope you can find your way back.
I'm very happy you're still alive. You make my life a little better.
[carry the f]
THAT was my piece of corn for the day. Thank you!
I'm really glad to see you writing again! This was poignant, sad, and funny, a tricky combination which you pull off very well.
On a different note - I really think you should include advertising, if only the non-intrusive Google text adverts, on this website. You have worked so hard on this site that it seems only fair to receive payment that way. I'm sure most of your fans, like me, would have no problem with that.
Fuck yes. You are magic. The corn is magic. That stinky grey hoodie you wore everyday - magic. I've been there. I'm sure I'll go back. This will keep me sane. This will keep me laughing. YOU are my corn. I love you. (All of this is from the heart - my head would revise it to the point of meaningless.) So very glad you're back...
I've struggled with depression for most of my life, and I've never been able to explain that moment when you FINALLY realize you're becoming yourself again. Corn's as good as anything to make it happen. :)
So happy things are coming together for you. I hope you're able to keep up the momentum, and I'm insanely happy to see you posting again!
Thank you so much for sharing all of this. Even with continual depression, I've never been able to describe the effects as well as you have.
I am so glad you wrote this. I have never experienced depression, and I struggle with how to behave around people who do. This gave me a lot of insight; thank you.
I can't honestly identify. But from the description, I think I can understand it. Or at least, as much as it is possible to understand something so fundamentally baffling. But I don't think the important thing here is identification or even absolute understanding. It's that you've been able to bring us all along. And entertain us. And give us insights. Maybe even get us to ponder our own place in things. It is a kernel of truth that is both absurd and profound. That is amazing.
As I read this, I understood everything. Hell, I even got how funny the corn was. And then I realized that there were points in my life that I was depressed when I didn't even know it. I'm past those now, but wow. And the freedom of not caring--yeah, I was there too. You deserve some kind of amazing award for this, like a Nobel. You put into words and images the truth of depression in someone whom the world thinks "shouldn't" be depressed. And you've survived it. And that smile in the last image knows that the depression might come back, but you'll deal with that when it happens. Now, you're choosing the tears and the laughter. Thank you.
The corn is my hero. Thank you corn!
Thank you. Truly......Thank you for writing this.
Nobody knows or understands how you feel, but I am happy that you were able to share it with us. I hope you continue to find pieces of corn that bring you joy.
Nobody knows or understands how you feel, but I am happy that you were able to share it with us. I hope you continue to find pieces of corn that bring you joy.
Wow. That was the most amazingly accurate description of depression I have ever read. You are amazing, and I hope there are more solitary pieces of corn in your future. I'm glad you're back, I like you alot ;)
I related on so many levels and cannot thank you enough for finding your corn and your way back to the Internet. Meds are great but it's the mind over matter crap that this the hardest.
Keep on bloggin' - we love you!!
Wow. Exactly. Thank you for writing this--I'm going to point to this page the next time someone says, "But how do you FEEL? Can't you just..."
And welcome back!
as someone who suffers from bipolar disorder, i definitely know the depression part. i'm glad you got help. i've been struggling with this for a year and i remember one of your posts back then about how being an adult was hard because i was going through the exact same thing at the time. turns out it was the beginning of the depression taking hold of my life.
if blogging and making all these drawings used to make you happy, and you're able to pull yourself in front of your laptop to make these hilarious drawings i think you've already won half the war. one secret to remember though is that there is no glimmering shiny end where we're all happy, but a daily understanding that we gotta get better. the sooner we get that, the sooner we can deal with all the flat, no-feeling feeling.
in any case, i am glad you are still alive and well. hopefully your medications, if any, are helping you and that you find the one that suits you best. <3
This is the most accurate description of depression, the journey of depression, I have ever read. You HAVE TO make this into some kind of a book so that everyone can better understand depression. If you don't I will!
I'm sorry about your fish
i lubs your brains!
I understand the corn.
You have managed to, in a few paragraphs, describe the last 20 years of my life. I, like you, didn't want to kill myself, I just felt, with no feelings, that if I was dead and away from this place it would fucking HAVE to be better somehow.
I have had the uncontrollable crying, laughing, and panic attack times. I just have never been able to describe it to anyone in a manner they would understand without wanting to be understanding or helpful. I applaud you and give you grateful air-hugs for describing the condition
In a way thst I never could.
This was absolutely brilliant. I cried, and then I laughed. I understood every piece of this and it explained it better than I could have ever tried to. I'm sharing this with my family and friends. The fish metaphor is the greatest explanation. I'm glad you didn't stop breathing, people like you are important to people like us; we need someone to explain it, if not give us some kind of bullshit hope. :)
Thank you so much.
So accurate. Thank you.
I once had a therapist explain that "anger" and "boredom" are two sides of the same coin or something. But seriously, everything you said. Just everything.
I'm glad you're still here. Not that that will help -- ohdamn-now-I've-done-a-double-that-I-hate-that -- but I'm glad. And I'm glad that absurd and wonderful piece of corn was there too.
Allie, I'm very glad that you are back and doing okay! I really hope things will look up for you from now on. Thank you for describing your story so well. For me it felt like suddenly being able to see things in Technicolor again, whereas it just to be all black and white (or gray).
Oh God. I know exactly what this is. I'm so sorry you had to go through it. But you explained exactly what my depression is. And that's so tough because I've tried and no one understood. I understand Allie. You are not alone. Thank you for this post.
Wow, this got me. I mean really really got me. I'm right in the middle of it now. I totally had a spaz attack after Donna sent me your page. The hoodie has been my literal uniform for the last ten million months or so, give or take an eon. It scares me, because right now, I can feel anger, sadness or nothing...and nothing is slowly winning. And God knows I can't write anything. More than time to get back in therapy. Time to leave my room too, probably.
Thanks for posting this. I can really relate so much, it's scary. You're a beautiful person, really. I'm sorry if I sound creepy
My father and sister battled depresssion for years. I could never understand and to this point I still did not. I am at work and am a mess now because my heart aches knowing that this is how they felt. I was the guy pretty much telling them to snap out of it, things can't be that bad. Thanks for explaining this and in a way that only you can do.
You have just described the last 25 years of my life. My problem is that I refuse to see some over paid talking robot to tell me everything I already know, or to feed me those same lines of "it'll only get better" bullshit (it helps? that I can't afford to see a shrink.)
Hopefully when people read this, and they have a depressed friend, they will learn that what we need isn't their super gooey over happiness.
I'm so glad you're back, you've been missed! You're hilarious and wonderful and I feel like going and looking under my fridge now.
Excellent! Really happy to read this.
That corn WAS hilarious! Best description of having a case of the fuck its I've ever heard.
Sometimes the hope that everything isn't hopeless bullshit is all we have to hang on to.
I'm so glad that you are back. I hope that you continue to get better.
Kind of weird to say, "Congratulations on writing so eloquently about how beyond-sucky your life has been!" But I've been there, too, like lots of these folks, and your experience sounds a lot like mine was. Also, I'm a counselor now, and I want to hand this out to all my depressed clients to say, "This is what it feels like, right? You're not alone!"
*So* very glad you're back. ...but not in that way that makes you feel pressure to continue to be awesome. :)
THANK YOU FOR WRITING ALL THE WORDS!
I totally get the corn thing! So glad you're on your way back to the world.
I've been using your better pain scale post a LOT lately, so I'd been wondering whether you were going to come back and start posting again :)
I'll admit, with my own adventures in depression crying was never really a feature - that's always strictly been related to terror, the world being grossly unfair and animated Disney movies involving family reuniting stories. But I've done the "feel nothing" routine. Mostly while on the drugs that are meant to help.
Welcome back, and I really hope you start to find more things to make you laugh and hope. In time those things may be games and people rather than dead corn, but any step forward is worthwhile, and anyone who doesn't get it... doesn't get it. Just tell 'em to give you the time and space to come back when you're ready.
Kind of weird to say, "Congratulations on writing so eloquently about how beyond-sucky your life has been!" But I've been there, too, like lots of these folks, and your experience sounds a lot like mine was. Also, I'm a counselor now, and I want to hand this out to all my depressed clients to say, "This is what it feels like, right? You're not alone!"
*So* very glad you're back. ...but not in that way that makes you feel pressure to continue to be awesome. :)
Best tale of the "D" journey ever. Thanks so much for this.
Now keeping my eyes peeled for the unknowing corn!
Thank you so much for sharing this. I hated talking to people about my depression and I hated the reactions I got. Medication seriously helped me so much, but the reactions to that have been pretty negative also. I have nothing but respect for you and your story. I won't say that I know how you feel, because everyone's experience is different, but I can definitely relate with everything you've said.
I totally think you should get a PO box so we can all mail you shrivelled pieces of corn we've found under our fridges/stoves :D May 9th is shrivelled corn day! XD
amazing post as usual! you really captured how hard it is to talk about mental health issues (depression or otherwise) to family and friends. they're so worried about you that any attempt at humor is awkward at best, but i think it can be such a relief sometimes to just laugh at how ridiculous everything is. also, awesome use of the dead fish analogy ("why don't you just make them be alive again??") :D
anyway, i'm so glad you decided to keep fighting! the internets would be a sad, sad place without you.
Oh my god, I missed you SO MUCH!!!!!!! I'm so glad that you are still alive. The simple fact that you are has lifted me out of my much-smaller-scale depression. I hope you feel better! :D
Just simply, incredibly amazing. Thank you.
Thank you for coming back and sharing your adventures with The Nothing and Corn.
I know I missed you terribly, and am glad you brought new pieces of yourself to share.
Keep it up, gal.
=)
It took me SO LONG to figure out how to write comments on this thing, and I did it because I need to tell you something!
You are an inspiration and a source of relief to lots of people just as depressed as you are. I was having a bad day, (another bad day) wandering around my house and being sad and mad at the sun for being there, when a (equally depressive) friend of mine excitedly posted on Facebook that her favorite blog had been updated. After hysterically exchanging comments about how happy we were, I ran (clicked, ran, who keeps score?) over here and glued myself in place to read it. I am creepily embarrassed to tell you I've spent so many nights just sifting through (Every one of) your posts, laughing hysterically to the point where my boyfriend would get up and come see if I was okay. I'm totally rambling so I'll stop but, the point is,
YOU ARE AN INSPIRATION AND WE LOVE YOU.
You made thousands of people's sad days bright just by posting. Keep it up and feel better, sorry if my manic happiness is as weird as I suspect it to be. :)
- C
on a logical level, i appreciate all of the ways you have poignantly and/or amusingly expressed things that i'm feeling or have felt.
but i resent and hate you for sharing it with everybody.
for what it's worth, i'm sorry i feel that way.
Still looking for corn...
It's okay that you have dead fish. I acknowledge that they're dead and you feel the way that you feel. I'm sorry about that. Your feelings are valid.
AND it's okay that corn made you laugh. That will be weird to try and explain, I'm sorry about that too, but not very much because I'm glad that happened. (The funniest memory I have is of a guy taking off his glasses as if preparing to fight someone and then saying "Here, hold my glasses." That story isn't funny when I tell it either, but trust me, it was hilarious.)
I'm glad you're back and doing a little better!
So happy you're back. And feel a weird sense of justification for how I've felt lately. I started feeling selfish and alone, but you really have a brilliant way of putting things.
You truly are such an inspiring and talented writer. Thank you for continuing to share your amazing gift of verbiage with us.
Yes. All of that. Welcome back.
Thank you for this post, I am also struggling on a day to day basis. Things are better now at least, but last year just was the worst. The worst part was losing friends, completely alienating them. Thankfully some stuck with me through it all anyway, but I don't blame the ones that couldn't. >.> Everybody has their own shit to overcome.
I should also mention that I have a friend who absolutely loves all that you post, would be too shy to post anything though. Lets call her S, and I know she'd thank you for this post too. Indeed, it was through her I saw this latest post and we're both glad you're back. :)
I wish more people understood though, hopefully this post will enlighten them. Even now as I type this I am overcoming depression, if only because I'm tired of hurting people who care about me. Also because I don't want to be down there anymore, down in that pit of darkness and nothingness. If I could just cheer up by doing stuff I would of done it by now, nobody wants to be this way.
I want to have a successful life like everyone else. Anyway, thanks and best of luck to you Allie. :)
T thank you Allie. Next time someone asks me about it I will refer them to this post, because you've hit the nail on the head. I've been suffering bouts of depression for most of my life, and as a child it is so hard to put it into words and get help.
You are amazing, and strong , and nobody knows hard it is to ask for help much less fight through everything, and every journey is different. I am glad to hear you are doing better and wish you nothing but the best.
And hopefully your words here can help someone else struggling understand what is happening or give them hope that it CAN get better-it's just not easy.
Allie, I have been that disgustingly overly optimistic person for friends who struggle with depression and i want to go back and hug them all and say that I'm sorry for being such an ass and not even beginning to understand how they're feeling and what they're going through. You have distilled something so relevant, and prevalent, and made it real and tangible and I GET it. I GET it now. For you to be able to do this, and to still make me laugh with something so painful, is a testament to your talent. Keep on keeping on. And thank you
Thank you for being so brave in writing all of this down.
Thank you for this. You are an exceptionally talented writer. I'm still working through my own wasteland and keeping an eye out for my piece of random lonely corn.
I never took your link off my homepage and always hoped you'd find your way back to being you, or the closest approximation you can do at the current moment. Honestly, I would love for everyone who has ever been where you are to read this, because every last bit of it is true and it's so amazing to see it written out and brutally honest about everything. I've been there and I understand even the insanity laughter. I may wind up there again - passively suicidal still exists in my brain, in the Bad Place. Unless you've been there, there is no one way to comprehend it.
So thank you, for saying it. For explaining it. For showing others who haven't experienced it. And mostly, for surviving it, even though it lingers and we're never truly free, I don't think. But for all of that, we become more complex and feel things more deeply simply because we've felt nothing at all.
Good luck. Know there are people out there who understand and wish you the best on this journey. The path is a lonely one, but you aren't alone.
Damn, brains are some messed up organs! Why do they do these bizarre things?
I have to tell you Allie, that I won't be saying welcome back. During the interregnum I thought occasionally about how much your blog had entertained me. How something as simple as "Clean ALL the things" echoed in my head and delighted me. The heart rending earnestness of Dog. And I thought to myself "If this outpouring is directly related to her depression and comes to an end once she's happy with herself...." and decided that that was a good trade off; the person who had shared such marvelous insights with me should be happy, even if it meant she couldn't do it anymore. So choose a path that's good for you and remember that you've truly given so much more to so many than Alot of us have. Thanks and best wishes.
When that happens to me, it's usually because I find myself laughing at how strange it would be to be laughing at this thing I am for no reason laughing at, which is a funny enough thought to occasionally send me into a laughter loop. I don't know about you though.
Never in my life have I been so concerned for somebody I've never met. My partner and I have been very anxiously awaiting your return. We love you and the internet loves you. I've seen posts on a bunch of websites celebrating your re-arrival. Also, as somebody that deals with depression, I'm sorry. It sucks worse than a lot of stuff.
I hear you! And i'm super glad that you're back and feeling marginally less blah! A story for you:
Once, when I went off my meds for the first time in like, 14 years, i was having all the feelings at once for no reason and the subway pulled up and made such a loud scary noise that i screamed out loud. Then, realizing that everyone was looking at me, i started crying because i was embarassed. Then, when i realized how ridiculous that was, i started laughing maniacly. Kind of the opposite problem, but stemming from a similar place perhaps?
<3 Jackie
You make me have all the feels, which I greatly appreciate. My hope is that you will continue to confide in us. When the nothing-ness strikes, I know that somehow, others have found something in the nothing. So I keep searching. Thank you.
this post, like your bit of corn, is something that made me laugh and laugh until i cried. i don't know why i'm laughing. that's probably wrong and bad. i'm sorry. i just thought you might want to know.
If the "maybe everything isn't hopeless bullshit" panel existed as a print, or a t-shirt, I would totally buy it. Just, for the record.
Welcome back!
Best birthday gift girl (today is my birthday) :) you finally posted again! I'm so happy! I love your blogs :) I think you are amazing and even more amazing for sharing your story about depression. And I totally get how the corn is funny. I laughed out loud at that part. I too suffer from deppression/anxiety and have had my total meltdown where I'm crying one moment then I start to laugh like crazy. It really feels good after feeling nothing. You are not alone. I hope that you continue to find humor in life and let that be your feul because you have gift :)
I too love the fish metaphor. It is so frustrating when ppl try to sove everything for you in one simple step when all you need and want them to say is that they agree that it sucks that your fish are dead.
the series of nothing dark room pictures....
I once told my therapist that the main image that came to mind was being in a white, cylindrical room. no corners, no nothing, just smooth walls. and about 40 feet up was a door out of the room. and stairs lead down from that door into my cylinder room, but only a couple of stairs. 5, or 8. there to show the way out, but not at all in range.
i'm glad you're figuring out how to reach the stairs.
My friend has depression and I think this might help her a lot; it makes a world of difference to hear what depression is like from someone who's actually been through it! Thanks, Ally! I hope things get less crappy, and if they don't I hope you still laugh hysterically at it :)
The corn is hilarious, isn't it?
"I grok people. I am people… so now I can say it in people talk. I've found out why people laugh. They laugh because it hurts so much… because it's the only thing that'll make it stop hurting."
"I had thought — I had been told — that a 'funny' thing is a thing of a goodness. It isn't. Not ever is it funny to the person it happens to. Like that sheriff without his pants. The goodness is in the laughing itself. I grok it is a bravery . . . and a sharing… against pain and sorrow and defeat."
This is amazing. You are amazing. I have spent so many hours of my life trying to explain all of this to people who love me, but I've never done it with so much accuracy, so much real clarification, or any amount of humor. I am so sick of being told that it's about my choices, or that I just need a positive outlook. This shit just happens to us. Thank you for writing and drawing a topic that most people probably consider "too dark" for comics. And thank you for laying the gritty details of your life out on a webcomic, where everyone else can see them. "Maybe everything isn't hopeless bullshit" is sometimes as good as it gets. Maybe our loved ones will learn to be okay with that someday. One request: please never stop drawing and writing these strips. Some days, "Depression pt. 1" is the only thing that keeps me going.
No pressure.
Yes. A hundred times yes.
Allie, Thank you! I have struggled with depression for years and am glad that you have shared your struggle. It is a great way to explain it to people who have not experienced it, and it's a wonderful reminder to those of us who have that we are not alone.
Your post last year was the best thing I'd ever ever read about depression, and now... you've topped it. I point people to you to describe the place I'm in. GOD, thank you for that.
Also I suspect a meme will appear soon wherein people will make little necklaces with a single piece of dried corn as the pendant.
A hug for you. Even if hugging back feels weird or annoying and you don't want to. It's okay. You can just stand there with your arms at your sides and take in without having to give back. I'm cool with that.
Yup! Corn >> Dead Fish
Brilliant post - I personally get every part of it, including the corn :-D Glad you are back, I have so missed your work.
No, fuck you. Go to hell.
Definitely the best description of being depressed I've EVER read. I kind of want to print it out and when people are being obnoxiously cheerful at me, just hand this to them and walk away.
Hang in there, and know that there are literally thousands of people rooting for you. As in not figuratively! There are actually thousands of people out there, individual people with their own lives to live, who have only known you through your posts and that is enough to make THOUSANDS of us love you. We are happy when you are happy, we are sad when you are sad, and we want you to feel better. Emotions kind of suck, but they are better than the void (sadly, there are also thousands of us who know EXACTLY what you are talking about).
You have an enormous talent. You have a spectacular ability to take something serious and make it funny, to take something mundane and make it dramatic, to articulate things we've all felt but cannot describe. You are an amazing person, an amazing writer, an amazing artist. Hang in there, and know we love you (but not in a creepy way!). :)
As a fellow Crazy American, I am here to tell you that it does get better. Keep working. It will be OK. I am pulling for you.
One of the best things I've read...thank you :-)
Welcome back, Allie. We checked in on your site often, hoping to see you again... thinking of your last post. You were missed.
That corn is hilarious. It makes perfect sense.
And thank you for explaining what depression is actually like. I can't think of a way anyone could have better summed it up.
I have missed you. Thanks for reminding me that maybe not everything is trash.
Could really relate to this (especially whoever was suggesting yoga). Thank you so much for posting your struggles, it will help a lot of people
How did you put into words and pictures exactly what I've been trying to tell people for years? I've lived through this twice (if "lived" is the right word) and when I finally got anger back (first emotion-like you!) I wanted to smack everyone. I don't like optimists to this day and will probably never like them. People just did not understand and everything they said seemed to make things worse. I recovered by putting myself in exile (i couldn't comfort people after telling them I was suicidal) and just waited until I got to the end of the wasteland. In my wanderings, I found my way back (I wish I had corn to help, though!). Embrace each feeling as they come back and feel them intensely. We'll all be here with you no matter what happens.
You're my piece of corn :)
Whatever you're doing, do more. Even if you're not helped, we're entertained. Sorry if that sounds callous, it's not meant to be. A good part of my life is bringing happiness and amusement to others, and I find some satisfaction in it. Maybe you will, maybe you won't, but don't stop again, we miss you.
This is possibly the best and most accurate thing about depression I have ever read.
So extremely well said. I too have had to realize that "It's okay, I don't want to kill myself, I just want to stop being alive" is not a comfort to those who love you.
Who knew corn could be so ... corny.
I'm so done.
I so know how your not feeling, waiting to find my piece or corn.
I totally had/have the hating everything and simple-event induced crying syndrome. It's not all the way better now, just gradually less and less often so that coping is more and more manageable. My guilty pleasure is disliking small adorable children, especially when they're being sweet and then crying at flowers. Don't tell anyone. They'll think I'm a monster.
I've been there. All over there. And then I came to the conclusion that yeah, life is pointless. Which means I can do WHATEVER THE HELL I WANT.
Luckily for me and the rest of the world, it turns out that mostly "whatever the hell I want" is hanging with my pets, having random adventures, and telling people what I really think -- instead of, for instance, finding the best way to cook babies.
And when the feeling hopeless about the meaninglessness creeps back in, it doesn't take me so long anymore to drag myself out of it, because I remember that if I don't get bogged down in the pointlessness, I can start doing whatever the hell I want again.
I should mention that I was unable to get to this point before being medicated for quite a while. And probably some people would think that this is not the ideal point to be at. But they are not me.
Anyway. You are awesome and very brave to write about these things, and I'm really glad you're back.
This is sooo TRUE. Being depressed is something that feels utterly unexplainable. You just explained it and I love you for that. I'm still in the crying phase so this just made me cry. Thank You!
I've been in that same position... I still have problems showing happy emotions, like joy and excitement and it's frustrating for my husband and myself. But from my experience, people who haven't been there can't fully comprehend what depression is like. Now I'm "over it" and my biggest fear is that it will come back...
I don't know why I felt like to was necessary to add my comment. Just... thank you for this post.
I cried reading this. I suffered from hard core depression for a couple years and meds really helped me. People just didn't understand that my brain was broken. You can't fix a shattered leg bone by trying to walk on it, and you certainly can't overcome depression by doing yoga or taking vitamin D.
At least I know how to talk about suicide now. Pro Tip: Someone says that they were thinking about ending their life, ask why. Get them to talk. Ask questions. "Being there" means allowing the other person to talk it out without fear of being judged or smothered. It means having your phone on so that they can call you in the middle of the night if they feel tempted to hurt themselves. It means not blaming or patronizing them. It means helping them get help because its hard to ask for help when you're depressed.
You'd be surprised how many people start talking to you about depression when you just accept their feelings at face value.
Dunno if you'll read this but it's ridiculously freaky how similar my experience with depression is to yours. Actually, this past year I was suicidal a few times. Your story about the corn kernel makes sense to me because I had a slightly similar incident with a Starburst candy.
I was sitting in my room plotting how I was going to kill myself when I found a really, really old piece of candy in my desk that my mother had given me for Valentine's Day. Naturally, I popped it into my mouth. Then, for some fucked up reason, I started smiling to myself and giggling. That's right. A piece of Starburst candy kept me from committing suicide. It won't make sense to others. It didn't make sense to my counselor. But it makes sense to me. I really hope you find more kernels of corn to help get you through your ordeal.
An absolutely bloody brilliant description of how depression is for some of us - thank you so much. Here's to all us sufferers finding metaphorical bits of corn under our metaphorical fridges. x
You're very brave, I'm glad you're still working on this.
You nailed it! so weird. I've been in both sides of the fence. The "i have no reason to be alive" and the "Chin up!" sides. You absolutely nailed the depression.
I just want to add to the thousands of voices telling you that it's good to know that you like us enough to still be here. My son went through a period very similar to what you describe, and your first post was a way for us to talk about it, and yes, it helped us both understand each other a bit better.
Thank you for sharing this difficult part of your life, because it does help; not just you, but the rest of us who are going through it, or know someone who is. You have a gift for explaining hard things in a way that makes sense, and makes people smile at the same time.
Thank you for this. Glad you are coming out of the black hole.
Its nice to know that you're not the only one who feels that way.
This is the most accurate and incisive description (/cartoon drawing) of depression that I have ever read.
In the past year I have been going through the same sort of thing. Actually, it was a year ago today that I checked myself into a hospital because of depression. It has been along road back to feeling semi-normal. Thank you for telling your story!!
Yes to the helpful-but-not people. I hate that shit.
For me, things are a combination of not caring & feeling empty & just feeling extremely miserable & sad. I do the staring thing a lot. Mostly in bed. Then i might sleep.
For me this has been going on for years now, & i can't get myself to tell anyone that i might need a shrink or something. I've hidden it so well for so long (even the "i want to die" bits) that they don't guess; they just think i have an attitude. I'm terrified of telling them & i don't know how. I don't need more shit than i've already got, you know?
I'm glad you're back.
*hugs* I have experienced that kind of depression and it sucks. I'm really glad that you decided to come back and share with us what's happening with you -- I was worried. I hope things get better for you, or at least slightly less unbearable.
Thank you for putting into words what I seem so incapable of. Especially the whole "I want to die, but I don't want to kill myself" feeling.
Also, the corn. oh yes. the corn. That's the most important part. (also i just laughed too hard at that corn because goddamnit, it's fucking funny. poor little lonely corn)
I'm glad you're back and doing better! I'm kind of in the stage of not wanting to exist but not necessarily wanting to kill myself, so it's good to see that maybe it will stop being so shitty soon.
This is truly amazing, and thank you for sharing this. You've helped a lot (alot!) of people, and given a voice to so many who lacked words. Again.
I found myself particularly inappropriately laughing at your description of wanting to be dead, but not wanting to kill yourself. I frequently feel like I want to kill myself, but I don't want to die. (I describe it as having a self-destruct button somewhere in my head that keeps accidentally getting knocked into.) With our powers combined, we could become a functional human being!
But seriously... as time goes on, I hope (I know, the H word) that your fog dissipates. Mostly, I'm really sorry that your fish are dead. I hope there's more corn in your future.
Check plus to you.
Can't thank you enough for sharing your experience. Your story matters, whether you feel that or not. It all matters.
You'll survive this beast. One day at a time. You got this.
All I can say is thank you.
Just want to chime in with this: thanks for explaining depression better than any posts/explanations I've ever read, including my own. Brilliant, and I'm so happy you found better living through chemistry.
Also? It's great to have you back in the saddle. :)
d
This piece was amazing. You were able to capture what people can´t really understand, especially with you dead fish anallogy! Im so glab you found you corn!!! And thanks a ton for putting so much work into this post! You are really awesome!
So glad you're back! You've been sorely missed!
Oh, sister. That's exactly right. My piece of corn was someone on TV hitting their head on a shelf. I rolled in the floor and laughed until I couldn't breathe, and then I started doing that laugh-cry thing because it wouldn't stop and I thought my brain was splodering.
Glad you're back-ish. I've never been so worried about someone I don't know.
I swear I've seen that cloorn somewhere before!
Yay post! Good to have you back! You're awesome!
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