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. 






4,970 comments:

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Marnie M. said...

Look at how many people your honesty has touched.....Look at all these people who have experienced--or are experiencing--the Big Fucking ASSHOLE Devil that is Depression. Your illustrations--the corn--the childhood toy/loss of imagination all make us feel less alone in our struggle with this beast. Let's form the most strange, neurotic army of all time and kick its ass.

Meena said...

Depression sucks. I'm glad you have kept going and that you are getting help. I hope that things only get better from here.

Thank you for sharing this with us. You might not be able to feel it, but your words connect and touch a lot of people.

I am glad you are in the world.

decathlon jones said...

omfg. This is brilliant. This is EXACTLY it. hahaha! thanks.

Anonymous said...

Allie! So glad you're posting again, I missed you!

Mandy said...

This could not have come at a better time for me, not that this post was at all intended for me or anyone else that could relate but seriously, I am about to seek counseling because of the whirlwind of "life is bullshit" is crushing me against a wall. This post was comforting, funny, and wonderful. This might sound weird so I apologize but... I love you, and not only you- but we, are all going to be okay, somehow.

I really want to see some corn...I hope I do, soon.

Unknown said...

Today is my twenty-third birthday. I got a few really great presents from my friends, but the greatest present I received today was seeing that you were back. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

I just want to say that this is the best anything that ever was or ever will be.

So thanks for that.

Also, I'm really sorry about your fish. Mine died, too, a while back, and it sucked. I finally got some new ones. They're not quite like the old fish: there aren't many of them, and they're kind of weirdly deformed and not too bright, and they spend a lot of time just sort of listing in a big circle around the side of the bowl, but they're mine, and they're definitely alive. Which is nice. I feed them dried corn.

Here's hoping there's some hope out there, somewhere.

Anonymous said...

I'm glad you're still here. I was as close to hoping as I can get that it was going to be an even "happier" ending but that's only partially for your sake and partially out of a selfish -"I haven't found the corn yet" place.

Allison said...

Big Hugs Allie! This was so amazing. Been there too, now on meds that have saved my life really. I hope yours work too. And cherish the corn.

literatebean said...

So weird. I JUST tried to explain that "remember the moment when you didn't like playing with your toys anymore, but you kept trying anyway and it was depressing? Sometimes things feel like that" to someone last week. They totally did not get it. (new-new new-new music playing in the background)

People seem to thing depressed means angry, bitchy, distraught - some intersection of horribly strong emotion. Detached is impossible for people who don't know what it un-feels like to even conceive of. Blank stares all around. Fist-bump on that one, sister.

So here's what I would say to you if we were sitting on a couch together: "I'm really sorry your fish are all dead, I bet they stink." I'd probably say something un-helpful but insightful, like "existing detached is very lonely, and everyone expects you to know how to re-attach."

And maybe when I left you would at least know that someone SAW you. Doesn't help much, I know, but I wish people would SEE me. So I try to just see other people. Most the time it just freaks them out and they stop talking to me because really... being seen is scary as hell. At least so I hear. :)

Glad to hear from you, and if we hear from you again before another 18 months goes by I will be equally happy about it. In the meantime, thanks for letting us see you.

Jaxie Fantastic said...

So glad you're back, and this post is one of the most amazing things I've ever read. Also, I did awkwardly laugh. You're awesome.

Unknown said...

Thank you Allie.
Thank you for sharing your experience and telling your story. I have enjoyed your stories for a long time, and have had a hard year as well. I too know that things may never get easy, or euphoric happiness will not be something easily attained on a daily basis. But sometimes it is about pushing through the bullshit, to find the less bullshitty bullshit. That's what I live for.

Thanks again. :)

Wesley said...

Thank you. <3

I'm pretty sure it's incomprehensible to know how many people you have helped, just with this one comic alone. I suspect this also includes saving some lives.

Thank you for still being alive and sharing your work.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this. Even if you struggle to find yourself or your life meaningful, you mean something to perfect strangers on the internet. Just be.

The Mother Freakin' Princess said...

I'm happy you found that piece of shriveled corn under the fridge. xo

Unknown said...

oh man. my mom struggled with depression big time, and I don't have it, but my brain levels are just enough off that I see where you're coming from. I struggle with moderate loneliness a lot, but I've learned not to tell people about it because most people want to do silly things like "talk about it" and "ask me to do things with them." I don't know what I expected. random stuff can set me off a lot, too; one time I went to a friend's room (I'm in college) and they were watching Tangled, and next thing you know my brain was like "we're so alone, aren't we?" and I'm all "brain stahp." I had to leave my room once because my roommate and a friend were talking about doing stuff with people and formatting their room next year so they could have people over and watch movies and I just couldn't handle it. however, once I get home I've got a friend who's struggled with real anxiety and depression and managed to beat it, and I'm planning on hanging out with her like every dang day.

also, I lol'd at the crying for no reason part because I got lost on the way to a pool party, and it stressed me out, and then I got there and realized I forgot my towel and swimsuit, so I had to call someone to bring it for me, and then my brain was like "hey, let's just cry" and I was like "what" and it was like "HAHA WE'RE CRYING NOW" and I'm like "whyyyyyy *sniffle*"

Kitt813 said...

Thank you for sharing this. It really resonated with me, and I think you're incredibly brave (and wonderful) for letting us into your story.

mr roses said...

My piece of corn was a hard-boiled egg.

Unknown said...

This is an amazing piece of writing. Seriously. It's incredible.

I am so glad that you're back and feeling better.

Anonymous said...

As silly as your observing a piece of corn may seem, it's actually a pretty profound step in the right direction.

There was a philosopher called Jiddu Krishnamurti who spoke often of the importance of observation, and some of the stuff he said completely changed how I look at life. He wasn't some Jesus figure or guru, he just asked a lot of questions, the kind of questions that get right to the root of misery and happiness and love and all the rest of it.

I understand the immediate repulsion that comes from someone saying "oh you have depression? You should read x y and z", but it's just a suggestion. It helped me, maybe it can help you.

Unknown said...

this post is my piece of corn, thank you xx

Anonymous said...

This post made me cry. And, that is a positive thing, I suppose. Thank you for putting forth the effort to write this. It's hard to get the focus, the energy and want to do much of anything, so am impressed by what you managed.

If you figure out how to decide life's worth living, please key me in? Tired of being tired.

percentblog said...

Thank you for sharing, this is so helpful to so many people.

Unknown said...

ALLIEALLIEALLIE!!! I love youuuu :3 I literally have felt the same way for a while. I've wanted to give a fuck and found myself unable to, and for the longest time it felt like hopeless bullshit. But it really is all *pointless* bullshit. Just remember that as a random stranger on the internet, I'm always here if you want to talk, in an "I-know-that-sounded-creepier-than-I-meant" sort of way. The Internet has missed you. I'm happy you're home. <3

Anonymous said...

I'm glad you're back. We all love you no matter how confused you are. Good luck.

Alex said...

Allie I know exactly, well not exactly, but the feeling of nothingness and emptiness is terrible. I've been dealing with it for years, and let me tell you that you are not alone. I am so happy you are back and are honest about how life has just not been meaningful at all lately. Honestly, I find it hard to get out of bed most days, and everything feels like it's covered a grey fog. Take one step at a time and you got this. :)

mr roses said...

If you haven't yet, see Melancholia. It's the movie for people like us.

tk said...

You are great.

Anonymous said...

I laughed at the corn too. Thank you...

not supergirl said...

You are powerful and made me laugh, even though I've spent years, off and on, in that place where my toys won't play with me, and I have no feelings. The last time started in 2010 and starting clearing up in late 2012. It was a bad one. I was talking to my dad at one point, and he said, "you know, I think no matter what was happening in your life, you'd just be sad." It's funny because he was trying to show me something, and it was the same thing I'd been trying to show him. It was also sad, because he still didn't really see it. I love your post today, even though it's sad, because it's true and because it shows that we can come out on the other side. And because it's funny. Funny stuff is fucking awesome. Thank you for making something awesome.

Unknown said...

I'm glad you are getting through this and maybe seeing there's a bright side to life, even if it sometimes contains dead fish and lonely corn. Your muchness is not lost.

We here at the house <3 you muchly and are glad you are posting again.

Anonymous said...

Sorry about your dead fish. Hope you continue to find more shrivaled corn kernals along the way..(though they might be in the form of a dried up blueberry - or some more funny fruit/vegetable.) in any case- hope you happen upon them when you need it the most...not to cook with, of course.

Lauren Wilder said...

You're amazing. I doubt you intended to help people when you made this, but I guarantee you, there are folks all across the internet who you have officially helped to feel Not Alone In This. Which is a big deal.

Thanks for that.

Anonymous said...

Wow. Its as if someone has been jotting down everything I have been thinking for the past however long. This is the first of your posts I have watched and it wont be the last. All the best and thank you.

MKM said...

Thank you for writing this, and for doing it so brilliantly and insightfully.

I have only gone through mild depression in my life, but many of my close friends have struggled with it and I think I made every mistake you list here in terms of ineffective comforting and positivity!

It is so hard to feel like I just don't know what they are going through. This gave me a window into the (horrible) reality, and while it may not really help me solve any problems, it gives me more accurate empathy... and that's worth something, right?

Be well, friend. The internet (which, really, is just a whole bunch of thinking, feeling, typing individuals) loves you.

Anonymous said...

Totally get the "I don't want to kill myself, I just want to not be alive"! They are two different things and people do freak out when you admit it. Glad you're back and making people aware of how awful depression can be.

Anonymous said...

My name is Ian and you just described my life for the past month. I haven't seen the corn yet.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for helping me understand the person I love that has this as it helps to 'get' why they seem so 'angry' with me!! Hope you continue to do well and keep these coming!!!

Anonymous said...

I'm sorry about your fish. :(

Devgamer said...

I like you.

Unknown said...

I get the corn.

You're laying on the floor dramatically, feeling alone and despondent.

You see a piece of corn, looking all sad and shriveled, all alone and discarded under the fridge.

And you get each other.

You realize that corn understands. Your corny friend.

And it's hilarious that it took a piece of corn to see your deepest truth.

(Anyway, it's a theory I'm working on)

;-)

Glad life isn't so shitty now.

Tutness said...

I won't presume to understand the corn ... but I have a hypothesis - perhaps in weird twist of whatever the corn was so funny because you foresaw how ridiculously funny it will be to post about it? :P

probably no really ... either way, it's really good to hear from you again, I like reading your posts - alot (intended). I hope you continue to feel better, and I think you're great even though your fish are (were?) dead (I'm not sure if the metaphor continues by getting new fish or what exactly).

Kalon said...

Really amazing work. You did such a great job of capturing the crushing weight of anhedonia.

I wish I had told you earlier how sorry I was that you were going through this. I know precisely what you mean, and how easy it is to fall into the trap of wanting to fix things - when really, sometimes all you care about is that someone tells you that you're right, that DOES suck, and I'm sorry that it sucks, and it's okay that you think it sucks because it totally does.

Really powerful work, Allie. I hope it helped you as much as it did me.

Unknown said...

As somebody who has battled depression for years, I can honestly say that your "dead fish" analogy is the best I've ever read to describe it. It's not all bullshit (although, some of it is!!) Someday, you'll be able to feel things again. Good luck with your battle.

badgerhoneyx said...

Allie, so very many things in life seem like hopeless pointless bullshit to me. Your comics provide genuine refreshment in that wasteland. I'm happy to see you're still writing. Keeping writing your words and the people on the internet, the people like me, will keep reading them alot. The Alot will read them too. That's what your gift for entertainment means to the internet. Thank you alot.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this, I've never been able to put it into words.

Intrepidcat said...

Thank you.
For giving us all a way to finally show people what this feels like.
For explaining the unexplainable.
For putting into words and pictures what we could never explain to our friends and families.
For showing us that we are not alone.

And for creating the only place on the entire internet where you can read 1000+ comments and all of them express love and unity and connection and community and goodness. I have no idea if you moderate this, but it is a miracle, one way or another.

So thanks.

anintrovertinla said...

Thank you for writing this. I am now on my 10th different antidepressant (I've been dealing with treatment-resistant depression since I was a kid) and it's just not helping. I'm running out of options and people around me just aren't able to understand. What you wrote is almost exactly how I've felt and I'm going to send my closest friends this link to try in some weird way to show them that it's not just me and that other people feel this way and why yes I've tried yoga and therapy and yes you can also go fuck yourself, etc.

The crying is so hard to explain. I was already sobbing reading this before I got to your mention of it. And now this self-conscious voice is saying "Don't say that, this person is going to think you're weird," or "don't tell people about your depression, you don't want to bring them down."

I just, thank you.

Jacob said...

Why am I doing this? I mean, what's the point? I'm seeking happiness but it doesn't seem to exist; it's just an abstract concept and anyone claiming to have some of it is lying.

Thank you for your eloquence. As a lifelong depressee I have just been reminded that I'm not alone in this.

Mark said...

This is so brilliant and on-point it hurts. Having had to care for loved-ones going through this--my God, how often I've fucked up and done exactly the wrong thing.

I've missed you, Allie. I think we all have. Thank you for walking through the rocks--those fish may have died, but I for one, someone you have never met but who's been reading you for a long time, still like you.

There are at least 2850 others who do too. :)

Anonymous said...

I was on the phone with my friend when my brother called. It was so weird getting a call from him at that time of day because he should have been in class. He was calling because he was standing outside of a hospital trying to work up the nerve to go inside. He'd cut his arm open with an exacto knife. I knew he'd been feeling down about school, but he was over 3 hours away so I couldn't really see how he was, you know? I ended up talking him into going inside to get some help and then I had a meltdown on the phone with my friend (she was still on the other line after almost 45 minutes), I had to call my parents. That was a year ago. He's been better. He's been worse. I had depression in high school and it sometimes flares up again. Your descriptions are so accurate with how things are. I hope people who have never experienced this will read it and finally understand.

Rachel said...

The day Allie Brosh is back online is a good day.

So many of us are so glad you're still here, even if you have days where you don't want to be.

Sorry it sucks. I sincerely hope it begins to suck less very soon.

JawaKitten said...

It's difficult to properly express how much I relate to this post without sounding insincere and toadish.

Hippolyta said...

This. Is. Brilliant.
I predict this will be shared for decades to try to explain depression to people who don't get it.
Totally rooting for you to find the not-bullshit in your life.

The Hard Femme said...

YES. Exactly. Strap in though, sister, because when I finally got to the end of my own can't-feel-feelings depression episode, feeling normal again felt FUCKING AMAZING. like everything good was turned up to 11, and everything bad at least felt like *something*. It was awesome. Enjoy.

Pearl said...

Hot damn.

You've been missed.

Pearl

Anonymous said...

I am so glad you posted again! Your first one on depression really hit home, and this one hit even harder. I got my boyfriend to read it so he can kind of understand where I'm coming from. Thank you and I'm glad you are back Allie!

Joanna said...

I enjoyed this and laughed too loud in the archives of my college's library. I think I might have actually laughed at the corn, or perhaps more like the idea of you laughing at the corn. I'm glad to see you back.

canopy_ said...

I'm so glad that you're making strides to feeling better. I know this might not mean much coming from a stranger and I know that it might be slightly silly considering all the things you said in your post, but I really do hope that you continue to get better. Everybody deserves to be happy, especially someone who has brought so much happiness to others.

citydog said...

Thank you, Allie. Thank you so much.

Welcome back.

Been There Too said...

Good God, you time traveled inside my brain and killed me softly with your song. I wish telling you that I was there and somehow (not even sure how) I found my way back out would help. It might not but I'm telling you anyway. And those things you resented keeping you here because they loved you might be the things you end up grateful for in the end. Love you, gal - glad to see you posting again.

Yvonne said...

I totally laughed cuz I've so been there (am there?) and you describe it perfectly. And I get the corn, I really do. Glad you're back!

Marcepan said...

1. You are brilliant.
2. That touched a lot of nerves.
3. There are a lot of people that are having lots of feelings about you being back right now, and I am one of them. Welcome back!

Anonymous said...

Thank you for this. It was brilliant and so incredibly accurate. I was sitting here laughing like a maniac for the first time in very very long time. Depression is a bitch, but thank you for making me laugh about and making it seem more manageable.

Unknown said...

Thank you. This explains the experience better than anything else ever has. Hug. High Five. Toss you a piece of corn. Etc. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

Did you end up trying any of the medications and getting bizarre but potentially amusing side effects?

Wellbutrin made me start having incestuous lesbian inappropriate sex dreams. After the second night of these weird dreams (sister and then grandmother, which was horrifying!) I called my doctor and told him "I only have one female in my family I haven't been groped by yet in these dreams and it's my mother. I love my mother, but I am not Oedipus Rex, thankyouverymuch."

Giordano said...

Thankyou. I laughed. And felt awkward. And kept laughing. So thankyou. I missed you, Allie. =)

Unknown said...

Wow, um, my brain can't decide if it wants me to laugh or cry, I think I may do both at once. To some of us you're blog is that piece of corn. Well, except instead of sitting on the floor on its own, everyone on the internets knows about it.

The Libst3r said...

I'd been worried about this total stranger whose weird fucking sense of humor made my days a little less shitty. I don't have any uplifting, positive things to say about depression. Depression fucking sucks, and that's really all there is to it. Some people conquer it. Some don't. I am, however, glad you're alive...whatever that might mean coming from a complete fucking stranger.

Lizzy B said...

Hi Allie, I'm glad you're still out there. Thanks for writing about this.

The Candy Monster said...

Ok. Have read post now. I definitely know how annoying it is when someone says, "I know exactly how you feel..." But, well...*sheepish* I do! I've also experienced (and to a certain degree, continue to experience) that desire to just stop being. Thankfully (?) during the worst times of that experience, I've also been completely exhausted by the huge weight of my lack of feelings - and therefore didn't have the energy to actually kill myself (or, really, even actually think about killing MYSELF)...just kept thinking it would be ok if I was squashed by a truck, etc., you know?

Anyway, I'm still kind of there, kind of in and out of "there". So...you aren't alone, at least?

Anyway, you managed to make me laugh even as I was nodding grimly with understanding.

Is it weird that I've worried about you so much? We've never met, never spoken, but I feel like I kind of know you through your blog.

I'm glad you are still with us.

Anonymous said...

So glad you're back! I love this post because it describes exactly how I felt when I had depression.

I struggled with depression for 2 solid years during college and it was the most horrible time of my life. I still have to check myself on occasion to see if I'm slipping back into that awful hole. The psychiatrist at the time told me it might come back. I called him an asshole.

But there was one time time I gave up carbs and suddenly was depressed. I didn't realize the two were related but thankfully I had a good doctor who told me to stop trying asshole diet fads because carbs are good for some brain receptors (the ones that like to go wonky on me) and not eating carbs was basically fucking up my brain and making me depressed. Moral of the story: eat the fucking carbs!

You're brilliant, thanks for sharing.

Erin said...

I've been there too, Allie. Thank you for writing this. I am so glad to see this post, and I hope to read more from you soon.

Anonymous said...

This post likely has helped 1,000s of people. It's awesome to have someone accurately explain what I have been through. Your analogies are always spot on. Best wishes.

nikole_115 said...

Plus, if you say the word 'corn' enough times, it does't really sound like a word anymore and that's funny, too.

Anonymous said...

YAY! :D I think this post was my piece of corn.... I just started laughing and laughing. We love you, Allie! And I don't mean that in a creepy stalker way... Or do I?

aav6424 said...

My brother has depression, and I never really got it until now. Thanks for helping me see things through his eyes for the first time in years

Anonymous said...

YAY! :D I think this post was my piece of corn.... I just started laughing and laughing. We love you, Allie! And I don't mean that in a creepy stalker way... Or do I?

Aldís Amah said...

So good to have you back. And I'm very sorry for your unhappyness. Here's to a different state than just depression and new a state of confusion!

Keep going Allie! :) You're great!

Anonymous said...

this is so beautiful, and funny, and TRUE. thank you for posting another wonderful piece! i'm glad to hear things are starting to look up a little, and i hope they continue to get better! i know all too well what depression is like, and how hard, and frustrating, and back-and-forth, and LONELY the way back to, er, normalcy (whatever that is) is. i'm glad you're getting help, even though getting help often really sucks! :hugs and support and validation:

Unknown said...

I got the link from a random person i follow on twitter. From now on i will link people to this to explain how i feel. I just need my corn.

Thank you truly for explaining how i feel with a spot on level of humour.

ian said...

I understand the corn. I can't explain it, but I understand it. I've been there, and it is wonderful.

Just wanted to say that it's a good thing, it happens to people. You can trust it, what it points to, even if the maths don't line up.

Thank you for your bravery. I've understand the rest of it all to much as well. Much love.

Crazy Sane Mama said...

Admitting you have suicidal thoughts does kind of suck, because then no one ever trusts you again when you say you don't feel them any more (except maybe someone else who has been there). That being said, I am proud of you for seeking help and for working so hard to try to get out of depression when there feels like there is very little reward at this point. And I have been in the same "it would be awfully nice if I just stopped existing" place that you were/are. Thank you for sticking with it.

By the way, I'm really sorry your fish are dead. My friend and I started something we call the "That Sucks" ministry a few years ago. One of us is dealing with something horrible. The other one says, "Wow, that really sucks." It's surprisingly comforting not to have someone tell you that you need to feel happier about something that really frickin sucks.

Emma said...

Allie you are the bomb.com

That's my website.

No it's not.

LUH U GURL ;)

Anonymous said...

Thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Someone I love to the moon and back suffers from depression like this and I just did not understand. I wanted this person to love me enough to get better. I wanted to love this person enough to make them better. Now I understand, I think. I cannot possibly thank you enough for sharing.

k said...

I'm glad to see you are back again and also recognize so much of my own depression in your description. I definitely remember the "crying for no reason" stage of recovery... and, oddly, also feel that I can understand on some level why the corn was so funny... In fact, hilarious. It was pretty funny hearing about it today... and I've been "recovered" for years!

Anonymous said...

Woah, those fish ARE really dead. Sorry about that. I still like you, though.

Anonymous said...

As usual, you have summed up my life with frightful accuracy. This is how I felt for the majority of the last five years, except with more despair and mania and less consistent numb.

So far 2013 is the longest stretch of time I have not wanted to be dead in about six years. I really hope things pick up for you like they have with me. All it took was $400/month in non-SSRI anti-depressants and a job environment that doesn't make me want to go on a killing spree for once.

Kate said...

I experienced the emotion of crying for damn near nine months straight. It was a giant ball of suck. It ended but it felt like it never would while I was in it. I'm glad you didn't stop living. That's all.

Anonymous said...

Wow! just wow! THIS- what you wrote, what you drew- is what my depression is like. I've had it for years, combined with other issues also, but the depression aspect...that's how it is.
I am amazed and grateful for you writing this- and me seeing this- because I am SOOO sick of all the happy ppl trying to make me happy. THE FISH ARE DEAD! I love it! And the corn- made me start laughing hysterically. It was priceless.
It's hard to remember that there are other ppl trapped in the dark/hole/desert. So thank you. Just...thanks

SunsetAdventure said...

I've dealt with similar cycles of depression my entire life. I have had my fair share of corn and juice and black holes of nothingness.

Anonymous said...

+1

Anonymous said...

Thanks for sharing your struggle, Allie. I'm glad to see that it's slowly starting to get better. You take all the time you need to get where you want/need to be. We'll still be here, rooting for you.

So much love sent your way girl! You're a fighter, and we're all so proud of you.

Craig said...

Allie posted again! Drop everything!

Unknown said...

I feel so bad that you have had to go through this. Many of us we know exactly what "i don't want to kill myself, i just want to be dead" feels like. This is a real glimpse at how depression takes hold and what it can do to you...this is largely how i've felt off and on since November 19, 2009. I've had a few "kernels of corn" along the way that have kept me going, but every SINGLE day is a challenge. This is why we need to have open and honest discussions about mental illness, folks. It's real. It's painful. And even when we look like we've got it all together, on the inside we're really just laying on the kitchen floor laughing and crying about corn.

Thank you Allie-- thank you for posting this. Thank you for finding your way back. Thank you for being honest about depression. Just thank you.

Jacob said...

Congrats.

Second sentence: "they died repeatedly" (you have repeated).

Unknown said...

Really good stuff, just like all of your other posts.

Anonymous said...

This is the most brilliant explanation of depression I've ever read. It was eerily similar to my last breakdown when I finally asked for help. It's been almost 2 years since that time and I'm still struggling but it's better.

Unknown said...

This blog is definitely that piece of corn.

Anonymous said...

I'd just like to say that I'm really glad you are back. Your post was... well.. disturbing, and clear, and beautifully honest. I'm so very sorry you have gone through such crushing depression.

You described the process brilliantly. I think it will help other people understand a lot more about their own depression, or that of others.

You are amazing as always, and I've missed your posts, and hoped you were ok. (Not a stalker, I swear. I'm to busy and sleep deprived to stalk anyone even if I wanted to.)

Anyway, it makes me happy to know that you are moving toward a healthier state of mind again, and I hope things go well.

And thank you, because there have been days when your posts were one of the few things that made me smile (and even laugh) while I was horribly depressed after a severe injury some time ago.

Most of all, thank you for being who you are, and for your willingness to share a part of yourself with your many readers. :)

Styles said...

Having wandered the wasteland myself, It's good to read your blogs again

Unknown said...

This post is perfection.

Explaining an almost unexplainable subject as perfectly as you have shows how deep and dark you have been within your own mind.

I have no doubt this story if yours will save someone's life from death and misery. Thank you.

LJ said...

Thank you for being so honest and open about your depression. I think I'm going to go lie on the floor in my kitchen and stare under the fridge for a while now.

Unknown said...

Thumbs up for relevance.

Jane Lovering said...

Thank you, sad little fish, for making me realise that others can't feel too. I truly didn't know that this was depression. I shall carry on pretending to have real feelings and hope that the real real ones come back.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for putting words and some definition to what i feel.

Anonymous said...

This is my piece of corn.

Thank you for coming back.

Emily said...

I am so glad that piece of corn brought you back to us. We missed you.

Anonymous said...

I have missed you!
From MQ in Seattle

Erica H said...

Lady, you are one gifted and insightful writer.
I am so glad you wrote this. I can't say that I have ever had severe depression but these feelings are not unknown to me.
I can't say I'm glad there is someone out there who understands how I feel because obviously that means that they had to go through it too.
It's not quite schadenfreude but it but somehow wierdly comforting to know the wasteland you speak of is well populated.

Anonymous said...

That's 3,000 people in a matter of hours who are right there with you. Recovery = you're doing it right. We love you!

Anonymous said...

I recognize some of these feelings - I was spiraling when my contracting job (working part-time for the company that had laid me off 18 months earlier) was driving me crazy. I didn't quite reach the point where I didn't feel anything, but I was close.

I'd cry every morning in the shower before going to work - that was the only emotion I exhibited (besides the random flash of rage at stupid things). I stopped caring about any crafty thing that made me happy (I live to knit and chainmaille). I'd sit and leave the television on and play games on my phone. I stopped eating, and sleep was a suggestion that I'd take some of the time.

Heck, I can totally relate to the wanting to be dead, but not wanting to kill myself feelings too. I simply just didn't care about eating, cooking, sleeping, even going to the gym was a chore (and I live for that place). My teenage daughters didn't know what to do with me. My husband was thinking about dragging me to a doctor (he said so later...).

I found my two pieces of corn. One piece was when they told me the company was shutting down. Something snapped in my brain and said "YOU'RE FREE". I almost laughed at the CEO who was telling me this.

The other piece of corn, I can't discuss, but I can tell you that I laughed like never before. I hadn't laughed like that in months - there were tears, someone thought I was going to die because I could barely breathe, and I hurt so much from laughing. Everything - ribs, lungs, head, stomach - everything hurt so much.

Loved the fish metaphor. It's not like we can run right out and acquire new "fish", right? We need the fish we had to come back to life. I totally get this.

Anonymous said...

2 Things: First, this is absolute brilliance and i am so glad you are back! Second, I would LOVE, (okay I NEED) a tshirt of the mad face at the cafe. Please sell some!!
~Deepest admiration from a fellow floor-crier. <3

Rattify said...

You are doing God's work by posting this. Let my gratitude and respect wash over you like the incomprehensible social interaction that it is.

Thank you.

Elizabeth Moore said...

I wish I had read this a couple years ago. Thank you for your honesty and bravery.

Jimmy said...

Allie,

I'm so proud of you for overcoming your obstacles and I'm very pleased to see that you're posting again.

Just one step at a time! =)

Take care.

hannah said...

:')

Anonymous said...

Hi Allie,

I'm sure you are completely and totally overrun with comments and emails on this post. I just needed to say this, even if you never read it.

Thank you.

Thank you so much.

The line that resonated with me the most was, "No, see, I don't really want to kill myself.... I just want to be dead somehow." You somehow spoke the words that I have been trying to say for over a year now. Monday of this week, May 6th, 2013, was the day I decided to keep going. And really, for the first time ever, committing to that, instead of half-assing a "recovery". Tonight I have my first doctors appointment and I plan on printing out your post and giving it to her and saying, "read her words, they are mine also."

Best of luck on your continued journey,
Rachel

Anonymous said...

Thank you for helping me to understand my husband.

Ericka said...

You make the stuff that doesn't make sense...make sense. The fish are dead, the corn is all shrively, and because JUST F**KING BECAUSE.

Welcome back. We missed you. And we love you.

Meg and Midge said...

Thank you. You explained depression so well it's like you opened a door into my mind, but explained it in your own words, because I did not have your super cool corn epiphany. Thank you.

notext said...

I hope you continue to feel better. It got easier for me, I hope the same for you.

Unknown said...

Stories like these are always filled with mixed emotions for me. There's the sadness and anger that anyone else out there would find themselves in such a position. It's a horrible state of mind that nobody deserves.

Then it resonates, and I remember that simply because this is coming from someone else, it means that we are not alone. As much as we may feel isolated, there are those of us out there who understand 100%.

So thank you for sharing. I needed this today, and I hope someone can do the same for you some day.

Echo said...

I am SO happy you are back! And just... yes, from A-Z yes. There is no logic to fish or corn anyways so they fit here perfectly....

Liz said...

Thank you for sharing. I think this hits home to a lot of people and your ability with words and other media makes it very relatable. Thank you

Jennifer said...

WOW. Almost 3,000 comments as of my writing this. I feel a little bad for laughing at your struggles. But not too much, as I have been there, as well. You've humorously brought words and images to something that is next to impossible to explain to the people who have never experienced just straight-up not really caring. Very well-done, and I wish you the best. :)

Anonymous said...

Allie,

Thanks so much for all this, but especially for the fish metaphor. I feel like now when I'm trying to explain to people how I feel when I'm in that state, I at least have an illustrated diagram I can pull up for them and show them and say, "This is what it's like right now! EXACTLY!"

It was hard reading this, but at the same time it was a great gift, because it was SO much what I go through as well that I'm more aware that this isn't me, it's a disease, others have it, etc. etc. Again, thank you SO much.

IWH

Anonymous said...

Thank you for being you and welcome back :D

Geoff

Unknown said...

I laughed at the "mouse." I learned, as I trapped some in a rental home, that others dtagged and fed on the dead one. Weird, but interesting fact. I went from checking the traps, to looking for the ones that had been dragged around. Also, it turns out, that leaving one dead mouse might deter others from returning.

Erica H said...

Holy typos Batman! I meant "...but it is somehow wierdly comforting to know the wasteland you speak of is well populated."

Sam Nulman said...

This is quite literally word for word how I feel. I've never seen it explained this perfectly before. I hope I find my corn.

J. Gill said...

The Internet is much better for us when you're on it. Brave thing you wrote/illustrated, Brava.

Have that piece of corn encased in a see-through cube of acrylic. Worth more than its weight in gold.

Glad to see you back again.

Jeremy said...

Wow. Thank you.

Anne said...

I'm glad you found your corn. Peace...Anne WF

Anonymous said...

This is amazing. I went through the same thing a few years ago. Instead of my family trying to give me hope, though, my mom basically told me to snap out of it. She told me I had a good life, better than a lot of people and had no right to be depressed. She then essentially accused me of just trying to get attention and sympathy. Feeling that sort of depression and having someone yell at you like it is your fault that you feel that way is the worst thing.

zbigley said...

The world is so much better with Hyperbole and a Half in it.

Andy said...

This is the first time I've discovered your site. I read all the entries under Best Of and then found this one.

I have been dealing with this same shit for most of my life. This post really touched home for me. Im tired of not being able to care about anything.

I just made an appointment with a Dr. This will be the first time I have let a Dr. near me since I was 13. I am 25. So this is a big thing for me.

So, I guess, thanks for posting the things you go through. People can relate and someone (like myself) might be helped by them.

Chelsea said...

I'm so glad you're doing better. Welcome back, Allie. We've all missed you.

Anonymous said...

amazingly,brutally honest. you will help so many people with this. praying for your complete recovery. thank you

Jordan S. said...

This is pretty eerie! I just showed my mom your website yesterday, and we laughed over "Adventures in Depression" together. And then the next day... you update out of the blue! WOW! Oh man mom's going to get a kick out of this...

Anyways it's wonderful to see an update! I am literally experiencing the SAME ROLLERCOASTER OF USELESS UN-EMOTIONS. This has been... a strangely emphatic moment.


-Jordan

Unknown said...

I am so fucking glad you are back, in whatever way you can be. (((hugs)))

Trinny said...

As I said to someone on FB, this is extremely personal all around. I laughed at a few places because it was reminiscent of what I went through. I can't emphasize how much you nailed everything about depression. And I too laughed with the piece of corn. I got it, easily. You doesn't need to explain that to me.

Occasionally, I do feel like my feelings are the worst things in the world. Occasionally, when I am back in the pit of abyss, I want to not die. I just wish I could stop wanting human interaction and kill every single feeling in my body so I could stop feeling anything, stop giving a shit and just be an emotionless robot.

I am slowly accepting that my feelings are me. And I'm learning to manage them.

Keep it up. Keep fighting. And keep laughing.

Anonymous said...

Tears are streaming down my face, thank you for putting into words what I can't. You have the whole world in your corner.xo

Jenn said...

Thanks so much for posting this. You captured depression so perfectly. It was a relief to read this and know that I'm not alone in what I've been experiencing off and on for most of my life.

Jane Porterfield said...

My 'corn' happened around 4:00 a.m. I was sitting, alone with my thoughts, TV on. All of a sudden, reality appeared & before me were my 3 very young kittens, all awkward as only they can be, rolling around on the floor, 'play' fighting & playing. I laughed a big belly laugh, which was the first positive emotion I'd felt in about 3 years...

Anonymous said...

I never read your blog before yesterday, but I am glad I did. Your hilarious, and I can honestly relate with most of what you posted the past couple days.
And this article actually made me feel a lot better. <3

Theresa (Miss Charlotte) said...

Thank you for finding that corn.

Jen Pem said...

Allie,
So glad to see you posting again. Everything may or may not be complete bullshit. The key is to finding people who support your bullshit and can help you laugh at other people's bullshit.

Also... I am not saying that depression does not exist. But, before you go through an endless number of anti-depressants and doctors who tell you that "It is all in your head," do me a favor and get your hormones tested. HORMONES MATTER and there are all kinds of things in this world that royally fuck up our hormones. Just a thought. I had been through an endless number of doctors who kept telling me I was depressed and anxious before I finally ditched birth control and was diagnosed with endometriosis and PCOS... which are both extremely common and treatable. When I was off birth control and got treated, amazingly the dark cloud lifted.

Regardless, I am happy you are back. I missed your brain.

Aidan said...

My piece of corn was an ultrasound picture of my friend's baby in utero. Waterworks for like twenty minutes, long after I'd come to the realization that yes, baby's have heads. Congrats on feeling again. It'll all come back eventually, don't worry.

Melicious said...

I'm glad you're writing.

Anonymous said...

Wow! I've never read anything you've written before and seldom comment on anything. Thank you for this!

This unfortunately, is very accurate and you've done an amazing job of trying to explain it.

What is even harder for people to understand is that you lose YOU - and are somehow ashamed of that fact. When you finally begin feeling again and don't have a clue who you are or what matters to you anymore - how do you tell people it's still mostly nothing.

I've lived through 7 years of varying degrees of depression (bad to worse), exactly what you have described yet different too.

FYI, I have many more good days now - but nothing days too. I'll take the 'gooder' days if I can.

I hope you find some 'gooder' days for you too!

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this, Allie. Sharing something so personal takes a lot of bravery and I admire yours.

Anonymous said...

So glad you decided to not kill yourself! I've never been depressed but the feeling of not wanting to kill yourself but still wanting to die is how I felt after my dad died. I'm sorry everything was shit for a while.
We're all a little messed up; please continue to get help if/when you need it.

Jessi S. said...

Thank you thank you thank you. My husband is an avid webcomic reader, and after he found this and read it, he came to me in bed (where I was being depressed and ill), and said "I think I understand it better now. You don't have to be happy for me. Just be you."

The dead fish analogy pretty much sums up a lot of the difficulty he and I have sometimes. So thank you, that helped a lot.

Anyways. Thank you. One of the first times since I was 9 that I feel like someone else actually knows what it's like. Good luck to you.

Unknown said...

Hurray for the tiny shriveled no longer lonely corn! It now has a friend! :)

Anonymous said...

I cried, I laughed. In the empty black hole I live in it was a nice fucking break! Thanks for that

Sunburn Sarah said...

You have a way of putting "hard to explain things", in a way that can be understood. Thank you.. you are a voice for many others who stutter or just can't try. hugs.

Anonymous said...

I acknowledge your dead fish, and will not try to convince you otherwise of their deadness. I only hope that one day, when you're ready, those dead fish can be made into fish sticks! Until then, I still like you and your posts.

Maybe...just maybe...it ISN'T all bullshit! I'll keep hoping with you...

Julia P B Warren said...

you are so talented. i'm glad things are getting better. did you keep the corn?

Anonymous said...

I have been there and I don't want to be back. I don't think you're being at all hyperbolic (pardon the term). I'm sorry people were all up in your depression grill with their bastard positiveness.

Anonymous said...

Finally someone else who understands depression.

Anonymous said...

Thank you so much for sharing this! <3

db said...

thank you so much for creating this. i have had the shittiest year of my life and am just (i think) getting out of it (i hope) (maybe). in fact, a good friend of mine, one of the few people who hasn't abandoned me throughout this whole, terrible time, emailed this to me saying she finally got it and wanted to apologize if she sounded like a jerk for all those times she tried to cajole me into happiness. so thank you. so much.

Amy said...

How is it that you are totally and completely CHANNELING MY SOUL?!? Holy Buckets. I read this entire thing with my jaw dropped down to my desk, nodding dumbly and drooling, going "My life...she is describing my life..." That's how Depression Part 1 felt also. Thank you, Allie, for being so honest and authentic and accurate. You are amazing. I send you enormous hugs, if you can stand them. :)

db said...

thank you so much for creating this. i have had the shittiest year of my life and am just (i think) getting out of it (i hope) (maybe). in fact, a good friend of mine, one of the few people who hasn't abandoned me throughout this whole, terrible time, emailed this to me saying she finally got it and wanted to apologize if she sounded like a jerk for all those times she tried to cajole me into happiness. so thank you. so much.

Helen said...

I totally understand all of this. Even the corn. No, especially the corn. My depressions always lead to anger more quickly than yours did, which is unfortunate, because not only do I still feel dead inside, but everyone around me gets alienated more forcefully.

You take care of yourself. Never trust depression, it's an abusive liar. You should keep talking to us! Welcome back!

Anonymous said...

I connected with this more than I should... Glad you're back! ;_;

Morningstar Bloom said...

Yay!! You're writing again! Your posts on depression are exactly what I've gone through, off and on, for years. You've given words to the process far better than any textbook ever could and the idea that someone else does the same process somehow makes the world seem a little less lonely. Thank you!

Anonymous said...

I can't tell you how much reading this makes me feel a little less alone. I'm there with you...going through the same bullshit. I would've expressed exactly the same sentiments if only I'd thought to (and could articulate as well as you do). Thanks for sharing your story. There are plenty of us who needed to hear it. I hope one day I'll be as brave. I hope you continue feeling better.

Anonymous said...

It's scary how close your story sounds to mine (and a lot of other people here). I've been in the same position of feigning emotions to pretend to be normal. Despite the proper inflections in my tone, hand gestures, and body language, some people are able to sense that something is off. I've also tried to cognitively reason myself out of depression. Which didn't really work. So I ended up just hiding at home and putting on my sweatpants and hoodie. People made me mad, like the guy in the starbucks who was breathing too loud and the girl's plate would wobble every time she picked up her coffee.

Thank you for your post. I shall await the day when I see this miraculous piece of corn.

The Atomic Fruitbat said...

I am very sorry about your fish, Allie. Also, if you ever again want everyone to stop loving you so you can stop existing... tough. Not gonna happen. :)

NecroBones said...

From a fellow survivor-- I totally understand. Glad you're back.

Anonymous said...

I am weeping and weeping right now. I got sick with a greatest hits album worth of chronic diseases two years ago, and have slowly slid down into depression ever since. I've done yoga at sunrise and am right now on a dream vacation to try to shock some joy back into myself. I'm going to keep looking for my grain of corn. Thanks, Allie, you are my angel today.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for this! You are an amazing person.

Anonymous said...

I'm so happy you're back, and this post is amazing. Thank you for sharing it. <3

Dana said...

Im so happy that you are posting again... You made me cry, I related a lot of what you are/were feeling. It is like hearing myself a few years ago. Strong hug and kisses from Argentina. (sorry if I made a grammar mistake :)
Dana

kelly summers said...

This was amazing!! I'm so glad you decided to share what you went through. I know so many people will be able to relate to you and this story. You're awesome!

Anonymous said...

Hey, just wanted to say that your posts about depression have helped me. I have been in the "bored and lonely" stage you describe for quite a while and I couldn't make myself seek help because I don't feel like I deserve to be depressed and therefore I must not be. But I really want my own "finding the corn" moment now, even if only because I have not laughed in a long time so I maybe I'll look for a doctor now, so... thanks!

Zabet said...

I'm sorry your fish are dead, but I missed you and am glad you are back. I don't judge you by the alive-ness of your fish, anyway. (I have a secret algorithm! IT INCLUDES CORN!)

Caryn said...

Amazing.

kira said...

Thanks for writing this. I've struggled with explaining it to people and this pretty much sums it up.
P.S. I'm really glad you're alive. You're pretty much the funniest person on the internet.

Polaris said...

Brilliant. Just brilliant. I knew some of the words before I even read them, your description of these - well, not feelings - whatever these are was so close and familiar.

I am glad, that you have found your piece of corn, and you are on your way out of all this hopeless bullshit.

Unknown said...

That was the most clear explanation of depression... EVER.

I know exactly why the corn was freakin' hilarious, because I've experienced it myself, (although not with a corn kernel per se).

Take what you will from that and leave the rest. You are so human, Allie.

Anonymous said...

Wonderful to have you back, Allie! Fantastic post, you completely succeeded in making me laugh out loud repeatedly, while simultaneously knowing exactly how you felt/are feeling. I missed you for 18 months! Yay for shrivelled corn!

Anonymous said...

Great post. Glad things are at least slightly better.

The part that used to get me was when folks advised me to just give to someone else and I'd feel better. That's really good advice if you have anything left to give, but I got it at a point I didn't -- and folks who have never been there literally have no idea you can feel that broken.

Eshajori said...

Thank you.

Warren Etheredge said...

Thank you for sharing your experience, it resonates with me. My dalliances with "depression" may be fleeting, relatively, I understand the nihilism it can engender. I found some solace in a conversation with Jodie Foster, of all (wonderful) people as she sat down with me to raise the bar for mental health and how too many wield optimism as a blunt instrument. Things really start cooking ten minutes in or so. If you have a moment, listen in. Jodie offers some insights that might just ring true. http://www.thehighbar.tv/2011/08/03/jodie-foster-on-mental-health/

DasChlo said...

Congratulations on coming so far. You've written about some incredibly deep things here and it was kind of you to share your experiences. Thank you for that; I wish you the best of luck in your continued recovery.

Anonymous said...

I am pretty speechless on what to say about this but wanted to say thank you thank you thank you. This was such an impactful read to me. I can relate to it in so many ways. Thank you for sharing.

Me Person! said...

Bleh--the no-feelings bit is the worst part of being depressed, I think. But (and having read the post and knowing you're not all up on optimism right now) on the bright side, you're still pretty badass awesome even with weirdly dull feelings and corn hilarity.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for sharing this post; it definitely hit home with me. I am glad to see that you are starting to get back on the right track. Welcome back!

Anonymous said...

This is brilliant!

You've managed to perfectly communicate what I assumed was impossible to communicate, and I absolutely love you for this.

I really hope it gets better for you.

Taellosse said...

Thank you for writing this. I've never suffered from depression anywhere near this, but I've had shadows of it enough that reading your experience, and connecting it to that, makes me feel like I understand it a bit better now.

Hopefully, things will continue to improve for you, and you'll eventually be able to look back on this period with the same confusion that you've been seeing the way you felt before it started. Hopefully you'll also be able to return to sharing your unique and delightful perspectives on life with the world again, too.

Melvis said...

1. It's good to hear from you. You've made me laugh like I've seen corn under my fridge many, many times. I was wondering where you'd got to.

2. Also, I was missing the pictures of the stupid dog & was delighted to see it again tonight.

3. My brother has had periods of severe depression and I thought I understood, but now I realise that I didn't at all. I was totally all of those dead fish people at different times. That's the clearest I've ever had the condition explained to me. Thanks for the insight.

4. You're really, really talented. Very few people would have been able to get something as personal as this over so well.

5. Sorry about how dead your fish were. I still like you though.

KCObamacan said...

I get this. I get the corn. I get all of it. You aren't alone.

I use "I want to run away (to Costa Rica)" as a substitute for "I want to die." Because ultimately, what I want is to stop feeling trapped. Get your passport:

http://travel.state.gov/passport/forms/ds11/ds11_842.html

It's an inexpensive license to dream of escapes other than the grave. You have fans all over the world. Connect with them and travel. Maybe you'll experience something that will spark your imagination again.

SNZ said...

“Oh, there is hope, an infinite amount of hope, just not for us.”

Anonymous said...

I went through it off and on for most of my life, with a few years ago being the worst. I understand. I'm glad we're both still here. Thank you so much for sharing.

Anonymous said...

This is the truthiest truth ever. Thank you.

Patrick Lindsey said...

Thank you. So much.

Anonymous said...

This is the best description of depression I've ever read - depression (for me) isn't unhappiness it's just bleak, hopeless, numb nothingness and this articulates it so well...

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