Depression Part Two

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


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


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


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


Depression feels almost exactly like that, except about everything.

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


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

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


Which leads to horrible, soul-decaying boredom.



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


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

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


Everyone noticed.


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


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


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


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

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


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


I started spending more time alone.


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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

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


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


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


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


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


I had absolutely no idea what was going on.


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


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


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


I don't know. 

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






4,972 comments:

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Jeannie said...

I read this blog all the way through and I can vulnerably say that I have felt everything this writer has written. I have lived in depression just like this. I know it first hand. So what I say here is not said as a distant foreigner who has never been to the land of depression. I do not say this lightly or to dismiss the realness of depression and all that she has written because believe me I could’ve written those very words. However, I HAVE to say that the ONLY place I have been able to be freed of my chains of depression, hopelessness and suicidal thoughts is in the Presence of God and His Word. I also have to say that. when I am in my pit of despair and hopeless suicidal depression, my hope does not return instantaneously the second I am in God’s Presence or the second I read a Bible verse. My hope returns and my depression wanes as I consistently stay in His Presence and in His word. I know I am fighting a lifetime battle of depression and hopelessness. Just because right now I’m not chained to it doesn’t mean I’m 100% free of it. I know it will rear it’s ugly head again. And when it does, I’ll use the same tools that have brought me back to joy, hope and life: God and the Bible.

Why am I discouraged? Why is my heart so sad? I will put my hope in God! I will praise him again—my Savior and my God! Now I am deeply discouraged, but I will remember you—
even from distant Mount Hermon, the source of the Jordan, from the land of Mount Mizar. Psalm 42:5-6

Even when there was no reason for hope, Abraham kept hoping ... Romans 4:18

Therefore, since we have been made right in God’s sight by faith, we have peace with God because of what Jesus Christ our Lord has done for us. Because of our faith, Christ has brought us into this place of undeserved privilege where we now stand, and we confidently and joyfully look forward to sharing God’s glory. We can rejoice, too, when we run into problems and trials, for we know that they help us develop endurance. And endurance develops strength of character, and character strengthens our confident hope of salvation. And this hope does not disappoint. For we know how dearly God loves us, because he has given us the Holy Spirit to fill our hearts with his love. Romans 5:1-5

onthegomom said...

I am glad you are back and posted. I wish you the best. I'm sorry you are and have gone through this.

Tom the Fanboy said...

I am CONSTANTLY trying to explain the corn to my wife.

CC said...

I know what nothing feels like - or is doesn't feel like? - too....

Anonymous said...

Sorry about how dead the fish are, I still like you.

Anonymous said...

My new mantra may just now have to be "Find your corn."

RunningFoxNJ said...

Aly I totally know how that feels, I've been there and it sucks. It's tough to keep from thinking it's all bullshit and what's the point. It's not easy, and all the happy-go-lucky crap people can tell you seems like crap at the time they tell you it.


Stay strong lady, and I'm hoping and praying that you get through this difficult time.

Depression sucks, it's something I still have to battle and keep myself from slipping back into, but somehow I've found what makes me happy and keeps me going and trying.

You are incredibly insightful, funny, talented, a great story-teller, and I do believe you're here with a purpose. Thank you for sharing what you've been going through. Thank you for saying it so eloquently. I can totally relate, and I hope others who have never had depression can get a grasp of what it's like through your story and illustrations.

Be well, and keep fighting. :)

BethKC said...

I totally get the corn thing. Every single thing about this post resonated with me.

Stace said...

Oh so excellent! I'll have to bookmark this and send people to it to try to help them understand .. . they won't but it might help. So in there with you, so glad you've crossed some of the lines back. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

I have never been able to explain my depression to anyone. This is exactly how I have felt for almost 40 years.

It is a long and lonely road that seems to never end. When I do decide to get help I will be using this page as my explanation as it has been impossible to convey how I feel.

Thank you and I hope you find what you are looking for.

Anonymous said...

I find the corn pretty funny. Then again I find a dead clown in the middle of the road hilarious. The absolute absurdity of that little corn. Who knows how long its been there, then you happen to come by and see it.
Life gives you a crap deal, and you look for answers, what do you get? Indigestible piece of truth LITERALLY!
Its like asking for money for food, and someone hands you a used contact lens. WTF? Its not what you wanted, but maybe what you needed, and its just to "corny" to not laugh at.

zemalion said...

i don't know how you have all the words and pictures (freakishly accurate), but it's just right. i got so excited when i saw a friend posting that you'd posted, and thought "omg tomorrow there will be MORE" and then it turns out tomorrow was today, and then i had to read it right away.
that memory of wishing i could just cease to exist, and hating my friendbeast (dog) for needing me to still be alive because who else would take him for walkies, and being confused as fuck because i love my friendbeast and hating him is so wrong, and being in a soul-wither-spiral from the thoughts that replace feelings. you have captured it exactly.
i am glad you are still alive.

Loki said...

Great Post! It's this kind of unfettered openness and honesty that helps in our search to find ways to pull ourselves and others from the depths of depression. It definitely helps that you have the ability to communicate things in a clear and fun way (even when the subject matter is far from fun).


The example of the corn to me just validates that happiness comes from within us, and not from external things. Friend's advice to "watch the sunrise while doing yoga" aren't going to work if within yourself you're not happy or ready to be happy. It's a spiral, but luckily it works both ways. Being depressed brings more depression, but happiness brings more happiness.

I've loved your comics for a long time now. Best of luck regaining those nice feels. :D

Braxton Catherwood said...

I think I started laughing/crying at the corn too. I am so glad that you're all right, Allie. Your courage and determination is inspiring.

Unknown said...

*huge hugs*

Welcome back Allie.

Anonymous said...

Oh my god the fish thing! So often when my depression was really bad I just wanted people to stop trying to make me happy and just to say 'I'm sorry, that's really crap'. I also totally recognise wanting people/things to stop caring about you so you don't have to keep living, even now when things are good it's reassuring to know that I'm not the only person that's felt that way.

Thank you for sharing this in your own amazing, unique way. I can't promise rainbows and happy times but for me, the fight was worth it, and I've been doing mostly ok for a while now. I hope that you can say the same some day, until then: I'm sorry if things are still shit.

bunnyhugger said...

We missed you

Rachael said...

I'm so glad you're on your way back from the abyss. I recently came out of an unexpected attack of depression (because who really PLANS these things) and you describe it so perfectly.

Megan G. said...

Depression sucks a**. I'm impressed with the amount of creativity you've managed to reconnect with! Depression sucks all of the creativity out of me, so I'm glad for you. Thanks for being open and honest about your struggle. It might not make sense to some people, but to those it does, it makes a world of difference! You are stronger than many who deal with the deepest depression... you survived 19 months of it (and still counting!). That is hell. There should be a pink ribbon campaign for surviving that sh*t. I for one am glad you are still around. Thanks for fighting it and not giving in. <3

Unknown said...

=}

Anonymous said...

Allie, I'm really sorry you've had to struggle through this, and I think I echo everyone else when I say if there's anything we can do that's not stupid and unhelpful, just say the word. I definitely missed you while you were gone and I'm glad you are back. The Internet really is a better place with you in it.

jessdani said...

Thank you for saying what I've never been able to properly voice.

Chris G. said...

Wow... Incredible. I have never really understood depression, but this makes total sense. I have always battled with this split of disconnection... One minute I am totally happy, the next and much like you... Just don't give a fuck. This shed some interesting light. Will be back for more!

natalienoods said...

For me, the moment was walking past a parking garage and seeing two cars going the exact same speed in the same direction on two different floors....I smiled so broadly you would have thought it was Christmas or some shit. I'm glad you don't sweep under the fridge very often.

mruthke said...

I floor cry too. Usually in the bathroom. Sometimes in the shower, while the shower is on, for inappropriate amounts of time. Our hot water heater hates me and the boyfriend checks on me to make sure I haven't drowned. I tell people about it sometimes and it wierds them out but I think it's fine. Floor cry all you want.

Raini said...

This is the perfect description of what depression feels like. I'm glad it's becoming not all hopeless bullshit for you and I'll never look at a piece of corn the same way ever again.

Jan said...

Welcome back and thank you,Allie, for sharing this. I have a daughter who struggles with depression and your post has helped me more than any of the many books and articles I have read.

Anonymous said...

So glad you are back! I have been struggling with depression since last October. Your posts have helped me explain what I feel. Thanks!

Arielle said...

You just put into words a whole bunch of feelings that I have been having recently and felt unable to --and too scared to-- explain to anyone. In fact, just last night I had the "I don't want to kill myself but sometimes I think being dead would just be a hell of a lot easier and less painful" conversation with my mom. I hope I didn't scare her too much.
But anyway, thank you for sharing this. It helped me feel less alone and it made me smile and I will start looking for my own piece of corn on the floor.

Anonymous said...

First time to your site.
This post is absolutely beautiful, in just that open, raw, funny because we're so tired of being sad, type of expression that I've only seen from people like me who also experience depression...except you clarified it in a way that makes it possible for others to truly understand. This was a tremendous contribution you made today.

Unknown said...

I inadvertantly laughed and inadvertantly cried while reading this. Also I had to take a break twice whilst reading this. I feel like my emotions about this post are a car that I can't steer or brake with appropriately.

I can relate to your words and this post so much it is scary and funny and sad and truthful all the way through.

Welcome back. <3

Digital Misfit said...

Welcome back from the dark side. You should bronze that corn kernel, or at least encase it in resin and wear it as a necklace. Sometimes we need that reminder that life is absurd, and no matter what, good or bad, these feels will pass. Enjoy the good ones while they are around, and keep holding out for those crappy ones of infinite nothingness to pass. *hugs* from a fellow warped brain chemistry person

Anonymous said...

Dear Allie

I wanted to thank you for your two enlightening posts on depression and your very personal experiences with it. I do not suffer with depression myself, but my sister has suffered with it for most of her life. It is so difficult and frustrating and hard to understand when someone you love has depression – and you just can’t see why loving them and being there for them and helping them in whatever capacity they need isn’t enough for them to want to continue living. I realised slowly that my desperate need to vanquish her depression like some sort of knight on a stallion was doing more damage than good, and when shouting maniacally at her or just leaving her alone to cry/sleep had exactly the same effect I realised how ill-equipped I was to deal with anyone going through this. I wish there was more awareness and support around for depression and that people wouldn’t avoid fucking talking about it because of the social stigma or because it’s embarrassing for them to confront or whatever (I’m British and we’re famously shite at dealing with feels) – and your posts have really helped me to begin to understand what she must’ve been going through, and what I must’ve been doing wrong. Please continue to do what you do; a voice like yours is so so so important. I love you for the stories you tell and for the help and support you’ve given me that I’ve been searching for but could not find anywhere else.

Thank you

auntie sash said...

It is immeasurable helpful to see myself in your words. The coffee shop drawing is so unexpectedly perfect it made me laugh out loud (frightening my own stupid dog).

I'm glad you found your piece of corn.

Ann K. said...

Wow! I would be one of the people attempting to "talk" you into happiness, but then that is my ego, isn't it?
Your explanation is so good and so helpful.
My thought: "How can someone who gives ME so much joy, not be happy?"
SO glad to have you back, Allie! I wish you well.

Jen said...

That was amazing and brilliant. I don't think I've every read a clearer (or funnier) description of depression. Like all of these hundreds of other people, I'm so happy you're back. I'm sorry you have been sick and hope you continue to get better.

bobb0 said...

Thank you. I know how hard this stuff is to even talk about, much less write publicly about. You did a really good job of it.

Anonymous said...

Could you please make a t-shirt of the last panel? It's the best thing I've seen in a long time.

Woolysheep said...

You made me sob and you made me laugh and you made me remember my own bouts with this kind of nothingness madness. And I think I just found a new cover pic for my face book.

Anonymous said...

Disclaimer: I'm not going to use words like "hope", "happy", and "glad" in my comment. Nor am I going to use exclamation points like they're going out of style and draw gleeful punctuation mark faces.

I simply want to say thank you for doing this post.

Anonymous said...

Next time things seem really impenetrably dark, I will remember: somewhere, lurking under a refrigerator, is a lone piece of corn. :)

amberance said...

When I would try to explain my depression to people, I would usually end up giving up for all the reasons you've just cited. When you wrote the last post about depression, I started just sending people there, because you explained it better than I ever managed to. This one is even better. Thank you.

Mary said...

What stops you from killing yourself? Because I am so there.....

LAT said...

I am so glad that you are back. I told a therapist once about not wanting to kill myself but wanting to be dead, and she understood, amazingly, and didn't have me committed. Now with the help of medication I am slowly feeling better. I hope you do too.

katie b said...

My moment was when I got hit square in the eye with a raindrop. So I feel ya. Shriveled lonely corn... Rogue raindrop... better weird and impossible to explain than nothing. Glad you're back!

Technically Leader said...

Oddly inspiring. Truly. I relate a lot except for the not-wanting-to-be-alive part... for some reason my brain is hard-wired to reject suicidal ideation. But I understand the complete apathy for months at a time.

Thanks for sharing your story. No pithy platitudes from me. Just a hope that you continue to find your way through the nothing and into the something.

Jennifer said...

I'm glad you're alive. Not because we're friends - I don't know you! But you're brilliant and the way you think is beautiful, and I'm really very sure the world is better off with you in it.

I'm saying that because it's something I've needed to hear. Not "don't hurt yourself, because people love you." That one brings extra guilt with a side of shame, once guilt and shame come back... Heh. Please don't hurt yourself, you make the world a little bit better.

Like many of us here, I can say that my depression is similar to yours. Explaining to others that no, joy is not possible? So so hard. Joy is something other people do. (I'm pretty sure it's a verb.)

For me, there have been lots of things that have helped (meds, CBT, sheer bloody-minded persistence, wonderful people), but the absolute most important is that I survived the Really Bad Part and got to some Less Bad bits. And some The Kind of Bad That's Almost Good. And even good, eventually! It's like, once I crossed the fucking desert, I knew it could be crossed, and I even vaguely remembered there was something nice on the other side.

For some of us, surviving builds momentum.

I'm glad the corn was there. That breakthrough "oh wow that's what joy is" moment is amazing and terrifying and beautiful. It's like sunlight after fog except the sun is made of a very different kind of hurting than the fog was.

I'm very glad you're alive. It doesn't all get better, but, at least for a lot of us, it does get easier to keep going and find the good bits. I know that's scant comfort, but it's way more true than "cheer up! It's not that bad!"

I told someone once who said I had to have hope that my hope was broken. She asked why I didn't just give up, and I said I was stubbornly determined to see if I could remember what hope felt like. (Turns out it hurts a lot, but not in a really bad way.) Next time this happens, I'm sending the well-meaning people here. Thank you.

Distant Horizon said...

Been there, dude. Actually, not completely convinced that I'm not still there. For me, my "not sure if I even have feelings" and my detachment from things I was supposed to like got SO BAD that I'm not even sure if they've returned to where they were because I can't REMEMBER how they were. I've found new things to like...I think? At least I can like things again and not care if they matter because they make ME feel good, dammit, so FUCK EVERYTHING ELSE.

Totally glad to see you're alive (even if you're not, yet - existing is haaaaaard) for your sake and because when people are fucking stupid and won't listen to what I'm saying I can link them to your depression posts and show them what the last four or five years of my life have been like.

Dana said...

I guess you having weird bouts of laughter, hate, and weirdness is just your brain going WTF IS GOING ON?! by turning on the emotional receptors. Kinda like when your hand goes numb and the tinglies come out to play...

Anonymous said...

Well, even if you're not happy and everything is hopeless bullshit, look how happy you made the Internet! That's got to count for something!

Mack said...

I'm happy that you are coming out of it. The past 18 months for me has been similarly bad, just a little more drinking. This perfectly explained the transitions I went through/still am going through. Good luck!

Violet said...

This is really wonderful, and prolly the best depiction of depression I've ever read. thank you for sharing, and I'm SO glad you're back and making the journey to okay again. We love you <3

Sara said...

I am glad you were born, I'm glad you're still here, and I'm glad you are willing to tell your story. I am NOT, however, glad for your pain that enables you to tell this story. I'm sorry things have been so hard in the last year. 2012 was a shit year for me, too.

Nyghtbeauty said...

ALLIE!!!!!! I hope it doesn't mess with your head too much that so many people are so excited to hear from you, and I'm sorry if it does. But I'm SO glad you're back & you're doing better! I've been through the re-learning feelings thing myself, and it is a very strange experience. The feelings just happen, with or without cause, and it takes a while to link feelings with causes & reasons again. It does eventually come back, though.

It occurred to me the other day that when you turned back up, I should point something out to you, just to make sure you knew it. That thing is: people now say "ALL the things" ("things" being interchangeable with any plural noun) in normal conversation, without even knowing your original post where you said that (one of your best, btw). This means that you have officially won the internet. Just something I thought I should say.

Unknown said...

Your stories are my shriveled piece of corn. Welcome back! The Internet has missed you!

Beth said...

I have looked in to abyss of pain and sadness and walked the other way. t was the hardest thing I've ever done. Everyone thinks getting "better" requires big things...sometimes it is just a piece of desiccated corn under a fridge.

knittingrid said...

How perfect to find this on Not Myself Today day during Mental Health Awareness week in Canada. Not to mention that you've captured perfectly the not-feelig feeling.

re said...

Amazing. Simply freaking amazing. I'm so thankful for that nasty ass corn. And doctors. And people who make enough unpleasant noise to get you some help. Rock on sister.

Meg said...

You laughed because it was just so...corny. (Sorry, I had to.)

I teared up and laughed and then sniffled a bit reading this. You are so not alone. Glad you're back; you have a talent for making people FEEL, so even if you're having a hard time feeling, it's not all hopeless bullshit. You touch people. Thank you.

Blood Rose said...

Thank you so much for this. This is how I felt and I was never really able to express it in a way that people would understand.

Mary said...

What keeps you from killing yourself? Because I am so there......

Liz said...

Allie, thank you. By describing an experience I found myself unable to describe when I was going through it, you've shown me that there's someone else who gets it too. That means more than I can ever say. Obviously, I hope to see some more hilarity from you soon, but more importantly, I hope you feel great even sooner :) Thanks.

Meghan said...

Very well put.
Happy you have managed to move forward.
It was the words'flute setting on a keyboard' that made me start laughing again.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for the things that you have written about depression. It is extremely hard to be articulate about the way that depression feels, particularly when you are in the center of it. Your previous blog post about depression was something that I was able to use during my own experience with it to say, "Here. This is not my experience but the feelings are really similar." I cannot thank you enough for being strong enough to say what you said and helping me to articulate what I needed to say to those that I loved. There is value in that beyond what you can imagine.

I wish you the very best. As one of your community of appreciative readers, I am happy to see more of your work and look forward to the next comic but support you too, if this is your end point for this work.

Rena said...

I relate. Your fish metaphor? The best way I have ever heard that explains it all. Keep putting one foot in front of the other, and hey maybe make the corn into a necklace or something! It can be your talisman against fish!

GurlNxtDoor said...

Girl, I fucking missed you. I am so glad you are open about your depression. Any time my family or friends don't understand that it's an illness and not something I can control, I refer them to your post. They still don't quite get it, but it makes me feel a little better.
Thanks.
Please don't leave again. But I understand if you have to.

Cookie said...

I AM SO HAPPY that I've read this post three times and I am crying. My year is now complete. A long long time ago when I had three little kids and was pregnant with the fourth, I didn't want to kill myself but I wanted to just lay down and die. The only ray of not-sunshine that I was able to cling to during the darkest of times was that I didn't want my three young boys to see me dead. I understand how messed up depression is on the brain. I understand the corn. <3

Beth said...

thank you - you put it into words.

Chrisfs said...

Glad you posted and are feeling somewhat better. :)

Raab Rashi said...

Thank you so much for sharing. I've missed you!

Anonymous said...

yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.

This puts into words and pictures the feelings I've felt (or NOT felt) for years.


YES.

Thank you.

Anonymous said...

I can relate.

dirtycarrie said...

New post <3

Hi, I'm a stranger on the internet and I'm totally selfishly glad you decided not to die yet, because I like the stuff you make.

Doesn't have to matter to you, obviously, but I did want to say thank you for the awesome free stuff and for deciding to be around and maybe make some more sometimes.

Maine Runnah said...

Glad youre back!

Anonymous said...

this is one of the bravest things anyone has ever done...thank you for sharing your story. for those of us who deal with depression, just knowing there are others out there who feel (or don't feel) the same makes all the difference. here's hoping there's corn in everyone's future. keep going.

pcflamingo said...

Nailed it. So glad you're back. Tiny, hopeful steps or more happy encounters with shriveled vegetables under kitchen appliances.

Ali said...

You are amazing. This post sums up that experience so well. I am crying tears of some sort all over my face and it almost feels like relief. thank you. <3

cenobyte said...

*I* thought the corn was inordinately funny. I've had a very similar experience, only with string.

Anonymous said...

Best post about depression ever!

Miss Me said...

You're alive and back and I'm so glad D: and it's awesome you got through all that. I've never liked corn but apparently it can do us good?

Shannon said...

I admire you so much right now, Allie. I'm sharing this with as many of my fellow psychology students as I can - I hope that understanding things like this makes us a little better at what we do, and that maybe we can help others like you find your corn :)

Anonymous said...

Thank you for posting this. I've never been able to properly explain how I feel when in a depression...esp to my friends who have never (nor will ever) go through this. This is brilliant, thank you. Very glad to hear you are on the upside of life.

vanessa aleji said...

I think I finally understand why I've always loved the word "cornhole."

Allie Brosh, I love you! Thank you for putting into words something I've struggled to articulate since I was in the womb.

Glad you finally feel well enough to share with us again. I hope things keep getting better for you, and that if you backslide, you'll come back to these comments and see just how many there are out here who see how truly dead those fish are. We get it. I get it.

For the rest of the day, I am going to have Beavis sound bites on loop inside my head. "I am the Great Cornholio. Are you threatening me?!"

All Out Events said...

I can't imagine how hard it was for you to do this - just on a creative level. You're definitely back. I'm so sorry none of us knew this nor could reach out to you from the computery beyond.

I'm glad Simple Dog kept you going. Like many writing, I've been there, and more than once, and this was an important, funny piece. You were brave to do it and we love you, EVEN IF WE DON'T EVEN KNOW YOU!!!!!!

SkyPork said...

I hope you kept that corn.

Jessa said...

this is the greatest thing I've ever read. I've already spent the last five minutes trying to get everyone I know to understand this.
Is it weird that we were kinda on the same depression schedule?

Nicole said...

I'm glad you're still existing. Sometimes just existing is exhausting and shitty. I can absolutely relate to everything. Thanks for making depression a little easier for everyone to understand.

I'm sorry your fish are dead. They probably are making your hands smell terrible. But I still like you and your fish-hands.

Anonymous said...

Welcome back! I really enjoy your site, because I've been in similar places. I've missed your drawings/writings, and I'm glad you're doing them again.

Anonymous said...

I am definitely guilty of trying to force people to be happy. This line made me blush with apology to those depressed people I have interacted with:

" . . . 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. . . "

Anonymous said...

I showed this to my mom so she could get a glimpse of what my life's been like the past few months. She's been really supportive, but like the dead fish people, she didn't "get" it. Thank you so much.

Anonymous said...

You don't know me at all - but wow, love you girl. I've been there. It sucks. I'm so glad you're doing at least a little bit better...here's hoping that happiness eventually finds its way back to you. It eventually did for me.

~Tara

Shawna said...

OHmygosh! The corn! It's so perfect! I totally understand the corn crazy laugh. Thank you for sharing your story. I've been worried about you. Stay alive, you are loved.

Turnstyle said...

I laughed at your corn. I laughed a lot.

I think that's more because you're an incredibly skilled writer/artist/humorist than because I actually get it, but I think it's a little of both.

Thank you so much for sharing this.

mei said...

I have said the exact same words about not wanting to kill myself but just wanting not to exist anymore (or in my case, to never have existed) and felt the same pull against doing anything to actively end my life because of people who love me.

Thank you for posting this. I'm terribly sorry you're going through this but am kind of glad (in a sick way...) that neither of us is alone in it. I hope that your emotions continue to return.

xx

Anonymous said...

I am so happy you're back, and that you're starting to feel better.

Anonymous said...

This is one of the best things I read in a long time. Thank you so much for sharing it.

Anonymous said...

Seriously scary how accurately this portrayed my own depression. Good luck, and I (along with countless other strangers) are so glad you're back with us again.

Kelly said...

I am so glad you wrote this. I laughed hysterically at parts and completely understood everything. I have depression and it is nearly impossible to explain to anyone who does not experience it. I really hope you get into writing more posts, because they are some of the most hilarious and joyful parts of otherwise incredibly boring days at work for me.

Anonymous said...

Wishing nobody loved you so you could just die: I swear, the only reason I'm alive right now is because of my kid. I almost definitely would have killed myself, but I was pregnant and didn't want to hurt the baby. I kind of resented it sometimes because I felt trapped - stupid fetus, won't let me die without guilt.

Wanting to ask for help but not wanting to upset people/get accused of attention-whoring/seem overly dramatic/actually say anything to anyone is agonizing. I wish I'd thought of writing on my face, that would have been efficient.

Excellent work.

Anonymous said...

Thank you so much for posting this. I always struggle to explain to people how I am feeling, and this is a brilliantly accurate and hilarious description. Thank you, thank you, thank you. SO happy you are back.

Hailey said...

Thanks for coming back. We all missed you. You probably won't read my comment (lost in a sea of so many), but we love you.

*tears*

Thanks for being alive.

evenstar6q said...

I'm glad you're back. And thank you for explaining this on behalf of all of use who've ever felt like this, I never knew how to tell anyone. So many comments... we all thank you.

Adam said...

At first I read this and thought 'well, this doesn't describe me, so clearly I am not depressed'. I don't have a lack of emotion. I have too much emotion which I then cram down so it shows until some tiny thing happens and I just lose myself for a bit in the black. But as I read on and got to the part about wanting to not exist, I could see that. I frequently think to myself "I think I'll kill myself." I never do. I never get much further than that. Though I know that even that small thought would be enough to deeply alarm my parents, much less my wife. So I keep the thought to myself and don't tell anyone.

Unfortunately, reading this story isn't changing anything. I mean, you wrote it to explain, not to share your own fountain of joy into peoples' faces. It's not meant to be motivational and even if it were I doubt it'd do anything. I'll feel this way tomorrow. I'll think this way tomorrow.

But thank you for helping me to put a name to how I feel.

Anonymous said...

I'm so excited to see you back, Allie, although I'm sad to hear about what you've gone through. My depression never got that bad, thankfully. I did have a psychotic reaction to prednisone a couple months ago and the emotion of crying happened in a big way. It also made me overnight suicidal, I wound up having to call my friends and ask them to sit with me so I wouldn't lose it. I can't imagine feeling that for more than a day. D=

BookofMudora said...

My moment of starting to crawl out of the hole of depression (at least the second time I fell down that well x.x)--I stubbed my toe. It made me laugh because it hurt so bad.

Holly said...

This is so relatable and wonderful, Allie.

I can't really imagine now whether I'd have felt anything reading this during my depression but I like to think I'd have felt a little less lonely. And maybe that I just had to keep slogging on until I found some comical vegetable!

You are fantastic and I hope you continue to feel more things :)

Tanya said...

Allie! Thank you!! thank you for being honest and open and still funny about your pain. You inspire by being authentic. I am so glad for that shriveled piece of corn. Thank you thank you thank you. And I don't know if it helps but for me, when I get those bouts of depression, if I can figure out a way to fight back (sometimes by literally punching something - not living - a wall, a pillow) I feel better. So I tell morons that tell me "chin up" - unless you want to get punched, please replace "chin up" with "keep your fists up." and, just.... thank you Allie. :)

Anonymous said...

I just found my piece of corn the other day, so this hit home really hard. I even started to tear up at various points; you've written everything I've ever wanted to say about the subject so much more eloquently than I ever could have. I've always struggled to find the words.

"Maybe everything isn't hopeless bullshit" is exactly what I'm going through right now. So, even though you don't know me and you're already at more than a thousand comments, thank you deeply for this. It helps more than you know.

Nil17 said...

This is the first time I've ever read your glorious take on the absurdity of life. Thank you--you illustrated my brain in a completely precise way that is a little concerning.

No platitudes or bullshit hope-y words; just thanks.

Anonymous said...

Wow.

Beetlecat said...

It's just an amazing read. You have brought it to utmost clarity.

Allie -- I love you. There, I said it.

lesles said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
MrsLinAtl said...

YAY corn! Love ur story

Gienah Ghurab said...

Allie, I am DEATHLY ALLERGIC TO CORN and I love this post. I've been there and back, too. More than once.
YAY FOR CORN!!!

Katie said...

I just want to thank you for posting this. I have been dealing with depression the majority of my life and it has especially been difficult the last year or so. People do not understand why you cannot just turn it off and be happy. But you perfectly sum up what it is like for people who are stuck in a bottomless pit. When I'm feeling down and just need to feel something, I come to your blog because without fail it will make me laugh no matter how blah I feel. So thank you for being brilliant. You are incredibly talented and I am so happy that you are on the mend. Can't wait to see what is coming next.

vingleburt wingeldank said...

<3
Yay for corn.
And you.
And the possibility of fish.
:-)

Anonymous said...

I relate to a whole lot of this - especially the wanting to stop being alive part.

Maybe, one day, I will be back too. Right now, I'm not there.

Anonymous said...

Thank you.

Machaela said...

This was the most amazing thing I've ever read on the internet. I just kept reading and saying to myself YES! Yes! And then hysterically bawling, thanks for that :)

Fogwoman said...

As one of the many who have been thinking of you often and hoping you were ok, so happy to see you check in. Sorry you are having such a hard time, glad you are getting help, yadda yadda ;)
Here's to potentially less suckage down the road!

Anonymous said...

Sorry you had a hellish year, but SO happy you're back! Seriously, someone crawling into my brain and explaining my feelings/lack thereof with humour, intelligence, and hilarious pictures does me good. Better than positivity bullshit and sunrise yoga for sure! Glad you didn't become dead somehow, and also a bit glad I didn't become dead somehow too and miss this kernel of corn.

Allison B said...

You continue to be a blonde me. (Down to the name sort of!) I especially liked that last picture and want to hang it up in my house and look at it when everything is bullshit.

I think I will do that. Thank you for posting your painfully accurate descriptions and I do hope things get a little less bullshitty for you soon~

Mich said...

OMG YAAAAAAAAYYYYYYY you're back!!!!

But sucky about the depression. I sympathize. I kind of want to print this post out and give it to everyone I know so I can stop explaining why I'm sedated up to my eyeballs and on constant suicide watch.

It makes me very happy that someone else calls people "guy."

I hope you're still finding things that make you laugh. My corn-moment was caused by this:
http://youtu.be/rzxzho63csU



xoxoxo!!!

Dave Jones said...

A word of warning: Sometimes it DOESN'T get better. Or it gets better, and then it gets worse. So be cautious, because the setbacks can crush you if you don't temper your hopes and expectations. It's not necessarily all "ham and plaques" as a friend of mine has been known to say.

Good luck. It appears that thousands of us are here for you.

Unknown said...

I don't even have the words to adequately thank you for this post. I've been following you for a long time now, and after your first half to this story, I knew that I wasn't alone in these feelings. I know it sounds silly, but it's oddly comforting to know that I'm not the only one (doubly so because you're another creative soul, as well).

Wanna get weirder? My experience of crawling out of the wasteland was so similar that I actually know EXACTLY your feeling when seeing that piece of corn on the ground. I call moments like that "the stupids."

Anyway, I'm glad you're back to blogging. I've missed you. ^_^ If you ever need a sherpa on the mountain of bullshit, let me know.

Marnee said...

I'm so sorry all your fish died, but I'm glad that you're getting some new ones, even if some of them are piranhas. Thanks for sharing your experience with us -- your story telling is as brilliant as ever.

I hope there are whole cans of corn waiting for you in the near future.

PlanktonGirl said...

Those fish are certainly dead and we still love you.

I'm with you sister.

Anonymous said...

To the Awesome One:

I was doing my homework when my best friend, Bug, texted me, "ERMAGERD. ALLIE IS ALIVE."
I was seriously about to cry when I saw the new title. I have missed you so bad. After reading your posts for so long I had felt like I had lost a friend. I'm just happy you exist; it may be for my own selfish gain, but Bug's and my world would certainly be far blander (Is that even a word? Yes, it's a word now.) without you.
Stay Awesome, Allie Brosh, because we love you very much!
-Meranda Devor (Second only to the Awesome One)
P.S. "Not today, I've got LEGS, Motherfucker!" Best image ever! XD

lindsaykathrynn said...

Yay!! You're back!! Sorry you've been sad. Hope you start feeling even better soon. <3

Unknown said...

And THIS is a perfect description of how and why the ways people talk about depression and address depressed people are BULLSHIT. Thank you for sticking it out anyway, Allie. I'm sorry your fish are dead. You're so great even though your fish are dead.

Cass said...

I think I'm going to print out that last picture and pin it on the wall where I can see it from my bed-fort. Maybe that will help.

lori said...

Im so sorry your fish are dead. My fish died too. Thanks for reminding me so clearly how that felt and to listen to what people are saying. Beautifully and honestly said.

TiffanyD said...

Oh, darling. I have been there. In fact, I LIVE in that weird headspace where you are now, for about 25% of the year, off-and-on. The rest of the time I am okayish. Sometimes the bad-bad depression comes back for a few weeks, but usually it's just the "everything is bizarre and nonsensical" headspace where you're not happy but just weird feeling. I am apparently hilarious when I am like that. My pain is hilarious. I try to take comfort in that. Even if life seems utterly meaningless to me, when I express my pain I guess it's hilarious so at least OK am bringing joy to the people around me, and so that means that my life is meaningful to them (even if not to me). Plus, I now know that eventually the morose hilarious weird phase will pass and stuff will be more or less okay again. Hang in there, darling. Your pain will abate (with treatment and creative strategies), although it may be a slow meaninglessfeeling to achieve that.

Pat said...

I was a little afraid to read this because I'm still in the middle of the woods myself. I'm so glad I did, and I hope a piece of corn jumps out at me soon.

Glad you're still here and kicking.

Anonymous said...

I've been there, and yeah, the turnaround moment was...a little odd. You've a bit of a ways back but have patience! So many of us (random internet people) missed you and are glad you're back!

iSwear2Listen said...

I laughed at the corn- because it made you happy and that made me happy.

I have a question- I dont know if you will even see this but maybe someone else who feels this way will...

If someone you love is in this depressive state, and as you stated, being positive and encouraging is not helpful, then what is? I'm asking in all seriousness because I want to be helpful to those I care about and not make them feel worse or feel like i'm helping them look for dead fish.

Me said...

So last night when you posted the transition message thing I was in the middle of one of those "I'm going to lay on the bed because I literally can't function anymore because it hurts too much" moods and I kept looking back at old posts of yours and I began laughing hysterically so much that I cried.

The boyfriend looked at me weirdly.

Unknown said...

Not usually one to comment, but I love this post. It describes what depression is like to a T and what it's like to come out of it. I know the bullshit phase and the angry phase and the crying phase and am in the trying-to-get-my-shit-together phase. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

Thank you so, so much for writing, drawing, and posting this. I consider myself to be a very articulate person, but I have never been able to explain my depression to my family successfully. I'm sending them the link to this right away. I feel very hopeful that they will understand me better.

Anonymous said...

The corn made me laugh. :)

Mara said...

I had no feeling one way or the other except curiosity about how it was for you, until I have read about the crying for nothing and laughing at a that single corn on the floor! I cried and laughed at the same time for like 5 minutes. Although I don't think I've been depressed,the state of laughing and crying at things that make no rational sense is well familiar to me - so it really hit a spot!

Unknown said...

It seems to me we are living roughly the same thing at roughly the same time... That is, without all your epicness and colorfulness. I wish you well!

fizgig1202 said...

Thank you. Thank you a million times. Much love.

Anonymous said...

I'm glad to see you back and hoping that each day gets better. At least your break through moment happened in your kitchen rather than say, an aisle of packing supplies at the local Home Depot. To this day, I'm sure the police have no idea what was so amusing about the diagram on the underside of a plastic container that indicated it should not be used for the storage of children.

Unknown said...

Hi allie. Welcome back. But no pressure ;)

Jan said...

When you said you didn't so much want to kill yourself as to just somehow be dead, you could have been talking about me at one point in my life. The "nothing matters and so-what if it did" emptiness just made being alive feel pointless. As you can see (as a rule, dead people don't post online), I made it out... yeah, alive.

Will it piss you off if I say I'm glad you're still here? Because I am. So there. Neener.

Anonymous said...

At the risk of sounding corny, your writing this is making a connection, maybe it's merely with those of us who'll never meet you but love your spirit and your insight.

It's those connections that make it worth it to keep on the journey.

Beetlecat said...

And -- I need to add -- isn't it one of the stupidest things about depression; that we feel so alone in it, but are in fact surrounded by people who feel the same way and have no way of connecting and helping one another because of it? AGAHH!

TKW said...

You are my corn. welcome backish.

lesles said...

i made my psychologist go and check out part one when you put it up because i had never read, seen, or heard anything that remotely captured the experience as fully and concisely as you managed to. sort of, if you haven't actually experienced it, this is about as close as you're going to get to knowing how it feels from the inside.

and part two is going the same way for the same reasons.

and it's nice timing because the whole random and unannounced return of awol emotions is my gig right now.

and the best thing is these pieces are fucking funny. every time i see myself reflected in a panel or situation you describe, i can't help laughing at it - at myself in that place. at how cosmically insane and nonsensical the whole thing was and is. the disjunctures that come from an alien in a human suit dealing and interacting with a world that seems like it and everyone in it are the real aliens.

and for that gift, intentional or not, i have to give you heartfelt thanks.

Anonymous said...

That corn is funny as hell.

mistressofmuses said...

I'm very happy that you're still here.

Part of the range of emotions you talk about definitely is familiar to me. Especially the emotion of crying and the bizarre hysterical laughter that can be brought about by something completely random.

I hope more things begin to fall in the "possibly not utter bullshit" camp.

Jordyn said...

This was the best. My heart feels like this: <3 :) ~*~* :)

Anonymous said...

So incredibly well put - even people who have never experienced severe depression (however, I am someone who has) should be able to get a sense of how soul crushing it can be, and that sometimes it just won't get better for awhile. Thank-you for sharing, it surely wasn't easy, but you really provided a public service with this.

Sam Goodman said...

Amazing story, hilariously told. It's an unfortunate irony that you are able to bring so much laughter and happiness to others, but what a way to get a positive out of a sea of negatives!

Anonymous said...

I love your honest approach to this difficult subject. Your post made me laugh, cry, cheer, sob, and cringe. I'm glad you wrote it, and I wish you good luck in your wasteland wanderings.

Also, I see that your fish have died. I'm sorry about that.

Gemma Finnigan said...

I love you and your spectacular posts. Thank you.

La Yen said...

Thank you so much. I am almost to the corn, I think. Maybe if I show this to people they will shut up.

Anonymous said...

I'm so sorry for what you've been going through. It's a miserable place to be. I am glad you're finding your way back. Hugs and love to you. <3

Anonymous said...

Fuck depression! It's a mean, mean disease.

It is SO VERY good to "see" you again, and I'm sharing this post with friends who need to learn what depression is like and friends who already know what depression is like.

I'll hope for you that all your feels come back and get themselves organized.

Anonymous said...

thank you for sharing with us your story. it's hard for people who've not experienced depression to understand it and this post definitely helps readers to empathize. :)

Rain said...

I missed you. I missed how well you verbalize the same hopeless bullshit that I've been living in for years. I still haven't found that piece of lonely corn yet; maybe I'll go look under the fridge.

Penguin said...

"Maybe everything isn't hopeless bullshit."

That's too perfect.

Thank you so much for sharing this. I can relate so much, and I'll keep waiting for things to get better. Maybe I'll find a piece of corn one day.

Anonymous said...

Your metaphors, as always, are perfect. I have never been clinically depressed, but now feel like I understand the experience much better than ever before. Glad you seem to be coming back now. This bullshit world needs you.

Karen said...

It makes me laugh a bit how many people are expressing emotions at you. Not as much as your post made me...sort of laugh. More like smirk and snort and just feel like that's the most explicit, concise expression of nothing I've ever seen.
I have no idea if you are going to read all bazillion comments you get. It doesn't really even matter, I suppose, if you read this one. But in the off chance that you do read this, please know that my first reaction to today's installment was a slurry of swear words intended as a prayer of gratitude to whatever the fuck will listen that you aren't in some abyss--emotional or otherwise--and have written something. This was followed by the fervent plea that even if you don't get it, even if there is some amount of limbo/nothingness/fuck-all-this in your space, you'll just keep breathing and writing and drawing. So, to sum up, thanks.
This was followed by some sort of earnest pledge that I will WILL you to continue to feel better. To feel. Good things. Would that I could.

Anonymous said...

I can imagine it's very strange or detached to be missed by complete strangers, but I have missed you so much. I understand your absence, and why, and I identify with your depression. This post helps others who both can and can't identify with what depression does - or rather - doesn't feel like.

It's awesome that you found your corn. Kernel by kernel, bit by bit, may you find other things - and feelings - as well. Here's a cyber hug for you if you want it!

StacieMichelle said...

I KNOW THIS I KNOW THIS I KNOW ALL OF THIS YES YES YES YES!!!

Thank you. I love you.

Anonymous said...

I don't think I've ever gotten to this level of depression but your post was still awesome and inspirational for some reason xD I've been checking your blog around once a month and missing you so YAY YOU'RE BACK! The drawings for this one might be some of the best ever btw xD I'm glad you're feeling better :)

Caroline said...

My dried up corn was leg hair so long that I had to use two razors to do the job.

Lauren said...

Allie, for starters welcome back. Your fans have been waiting and now they are springing in action because of your amazing skill at making even the hardest topics relatable. I have been following your blog for a few years and look forward to more. I still think of your revenge post against Kyle when I hear the song. “it’s too late to apologize” I wish you brighter days ahead and that the groundswell of support is inspiring to you and bolsters you into doing great things. I hope that in the dark times you could absorb the impact that you have on the faceless thousands that are charmed by you.

Anonymous said...

This was so brave and beautiful. I was floored. I've been there too, and my mom, and my grandma before me. I lost my dad 2 years ago and couldn't feel anything for the longest time. Please keep posting, we need you. Thank you for sharing your story.

Anonymous said...

Thank you.

Scraps said...

I understand a LOT of the feelings you described. Depression sucks a LOT. And it's really hard to keep going when everything just feels hopeless and meaningless. Sometimes just living hurts so much that it's nearly unbearable.

I hope you can get back to a point where you can feel good about life and yourself again very soon.

Anonymous said...

Thanks. It's nice to know that at some point I might be able to have the crying feeling again. Now I just plaster a smile on my face and fake people out with jokes to make them think I'm okay.

It's definitely good that you are feeling again. I sometimes have little bits of feelings crop up, but they are usually anger or frustration at how others just try and "solve" my problem. I'll start counseling next week, so I can be told about how great life is and can feel angry again about it. Thanks for being so open about how depression is just not something you can go and fix like the flu or something. And my favorite part, that I most resonated with was, I don't necessarily want to kill myself, I just want to become dead somehow. I get that. I've said it before and I always get yelled at for being negative and suicidal. But I don't want to kill myself, I just want to close my eyes and stop not feeling, or maybe just stop not having hope as you say, b/c that is so much more accurate.

BTW, we did miss you and you are amazing! Thanks for coming back!

WMTnrubuA said...

I´ve been there. Still there, back and forth. Nutrition helps -- a nutritionist is a good idea as the Standard American Diet (SAD) can itself cause depression -- but, for me, when I get depressed, I´m lucky I can find the energy to eat at all, and nutrition goes right out the window.
You´re an absolute genius, Allie. Your descriptions, your insights, and even the expressions in your drawings -- amazing. I want to read posts from you forever and ever and ever.
--Tamara

Mato said...

I hope your new set of feelings work out for you.

I've learned to do this nifty thing of appreciating each and every emotion. I savor them now, like sushi. Seriously, sushi is just the best analogy. Each one has different tastes, flavors, meanings, ingredients, and preparations. I've decided to appreciate just the simple act of feeling, like I was eating sushi. Some emotions are like eating expensively prepared tuna. Yummy. Savory. Maybe a little sweet. Intense and complex and simple at the same time. Not all sushi is yummy though. Some sushi is dollar-per-plate, day-old, dry-rice crap. I dislike the flavor of those types... but even eating that, I'm still eating sushi, and that counts for something. I like to think that I've got in some hidden closet of my mind a collection of every piece of sushi I've ever eaten, every emotion I've ever felt. I trot them out every once in a while, and enjoy the memories of what those things were. I hope you like sushi. It's pretty good.

Anonymous said...

Thank you for writing this (and your previous depression post too). When I need to explain what I'm going through, I'm just going to point them to this, as it's far more eloquent than I know how to be.

Rin said...

Thank you for having the courage to share this with us all. Even though I'm only a random internet reader person I'm VERY proud of you for not giving up.

From this day forward, I will always look for the corn when I feel a hopeless situation.

Thank you. So glad you're back!

Mathew said...

Excellent as always.

Sarah Wynde said...

My 16-year-old son once said to me, “The opposite of depression isn’t happiness, it’s hope. You know you’re depressed when you’ve lost all hope, and you know you’re getting better when you find it again."

Around the same time, we bought a ticket for that gigantic Powerball lottery. We were playing the game where you imagine what you'll do with your lottery winnings and I was trying to convince him that we should give it away in million dollar increments to random strangers so that they could do cool stuff with it. He was somewhat unpersuaded, until finally he nodded. "Okay," he agreed, to my imaginary disbursement of millions of dollars that we didn't have. "That sounds good. But can we give money to Hyperbole and a Half first? I'd really like to know that she's okay."

He will be happy to know that you are, if not okay, at least trying hard to stick around. I hope you find more corn.

Anonymous said...

This is really wonderful. I want to hug the computer when I read this.

krjames said...

Now *this* is what they call a "triumphant return"! So insightful, from beginning to end. (I'm especially impressed with the end.) Thanks for telling this story and for telling it so well.

Anonymous said...

To see over 1500 comments on here within hours of posting means you were supposed to stick around. Glad you are back. And I did laugh at some of this. And it made me feel weird. Congratulations, this post was a success. <3

Stasia said...

THANK YOU.

I love you.

Geneva said...

I missed your writing and art!

TheIncredibleShrinkingSoprano said...

Yeah. You made me cry at work during my lunch break. This broke my heart, but I'm so glad you're moving forward, or at least moving in what seems to be a trudgingly positive direction. I pray I never have to experience this again, and that I won't be stuck in that directionless existance again. It's so hard to leave, and terrifying to consider going ack to.

Sarah said...

So glad you're back! I hope I find my piece of corn someday. You really put together how being depressed feels.

Ellen Eades said...

Oh, Allie. I have SO been there with the fish and the fog and the desperately cheery non-depressed people. And I haven't found my corn. But I too have a Dog, and sometimes he brings me something that looks like corn, and I laugh. I love you so much. Thanks for coming back and saying your things.

Jen McGee said...

Brilliant, profound, and so awesomely funny!!! Welcome back!

onlyson said...

I will now post for the first time. In homophones, when I can:
Sew, ewe half bin aweigh four a wile. And now ewe r back. Good. Stick around. Something could happen. Ewe never no.

Admin said...

lolz depressed people are funny :) I'ma skimmer but the parts a skread wuz funeye!

Claudine said...

Welcome back. You were missed.
...syrupy positivity goo...
I feel slightly uncomfortable about laughing and smiling while reading this post. Uh, it's a cute, whimsical, and funny post about depression. Awkward.
Seriously, I've never had to deal with depression like yours. I'm very happy about that.
But I have friends who get lost in that dark place.
There is immense insight in what you've shared. I have a better understanding about what they've dealt with. I am guilty of being one of the positivity pushers. I am unable to grasp not finding joy and hope and happiness in even the most difficult days. All my clouds have silver linings. So I guess I've been pretty irritating at times... Knowing that will help me be less irritating in the future. So thank you.
Thank you also for your honesty, and your vulnerability. You are a truly amazing and admirable person.
Hugs, but not creepy clingy ones. And Blessings, because we can all use them.

Irene said...

Thank you for posting this. It helped me understand the depth depression can reach. Also why all the talking and cheerleading in the world does no good.

I'm sure there is more than a piece of corn under our fridge...now to get someone to see it and hope it gets the same results. Corn=kid

Anonymous said...

I had that corn moment as well, except it was on a train, in public. I think I freaked people out a bit. there were some lows after that too but the trajectory was mostly up from there. I'm really glad you're writing again.

Camille said...

Welcome back, Allie. I've been there.

Joe Lastowski said...

Thank you so much for posting this. And don't worry, there will always be folks to laugh at your corniness.

Unknown said...

Thanks I was feeling kinda crappy and this made me feel a bit better!

Andrew said...

I'm sitting her trying to verbalize what I'm thinking in response to this post. It's a myriad of emotions and feelings. I've felt what you've felt and have managed to come through to the other side (so to speak). It will always be with me, but I have a small pill that makes the dark haze go away and I can be myself.

Here are my feelings in no particular order
A) I want to give you a big hug. What you've done with this post is very brave and honest.
B) Corn...giggle.
C) The rest of the feels that make no sense to me because I am still learning them. 35 years of hiding my feelings makes it difficult to understand them.

Welcome back, Allie. I missed your posts and your humor. And thank you for posting this.

Anonymous said...

You are made of amazing. I will be passing this around, especially to the people in my life who keep trying to tell me to feed my dead fish. And yeah, it's always awkward trying to figure out how to tell people you just kinda would rather be dead. Writing it on your face just cracked me up. Thank you for being able to explain it all this well. I'm still looking for my corn, but I'm sure it's around somewhere. I've never thought to look under the fridge...it's kinda gross under there.

Melissa said...

I've been here. Thank you for putting it into words. <3

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