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Therese Borchard

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The Moment I First Knew I Was Depressed

Posted: 04/19/2012 11:46 am

I have stopped describing what depression feels like to the person with no experience of this "black dog," as Winston Churchill called it, or even an occasional bout of melancholy, because my inability to express the physical and mental deterioration, the frustration at trying to articulate my madness, tends to make my black dog growl and attack strangers. I agree with the ever-wise William Styron who wrote in his classic, Darkness Visible:

Depression is a disorder of mood, so mysteriously painful and elusive in the way it becomes known to the self -- to the mediating intellect -- as to verge close to being beyond description. It thus remains nearly incomprehensible to those who have not experienced it in its extreme mode.

The closest description Styron finds is that of drowning or suffocation.

Many people feel a gradual slide into this state. Breathing becomes a task to check off the "to do" list along with laundry and the dishes; an insecurity settles in, making simple responsibilities like watching your son play lacrosse alongside a field of fellow moms feel as though you are attempting to sit down with the popular group at lunch in a high school cafeteria divided by distinct social castes; and suddenly you hate yourself more than the cruel cousin you haven't talked to in 20 years. According to depression checklists, if you feel like this for a month and a half, it's time to call your physician.

So... That means I should have called my primary care doc like every day of the first two decades of my life. As long as I can remember, I've been fighting the thoughts in my head. It's like the World Cup in there, where Team Negative Intrusive Terrorists have a 10-point lead over Team Positive Perspectives. I have always -- or at least from my earliest memory -- been sweating 24/7 inside my noggin, asking God to give me a water break with orange slices. Could you imagine my med chart if I had called every time I became uninterested in my hobbies or had difficulty making decisions? I'd be blacklisted from every medical institution. Kind of like I am now with health insurance companies.

There was never a moment when I said to myself, "Self, it's been two months since you haven't been your cheery self, and if the Zoloft ad on TV is any indication of what depression feels like, you are certainly a sad egg who can't -- or doesn't want to -- catch that damn butterfly." However, there WAS a moment when I realized that my modus operandi wasn't exactly typical, and that life wasn't meant to feel like a hike up Mt. Everest. In fact, I can pinpoint the exact afternoon that happened.

I was a freshman at Saint Mary's College in South Bend, Ind., and was working with a college therapist, not because I was depressed (of course!), but because I was having trouble staying sober at a time when every other college kid I knew -- especially the ones across the street at Notre Dame -- were experimenting with their newfound freedom. (Thankfully, I got to do that in high school.)

I detested the D word because it brought back memories of my aunt, my godmother, who killed herself when I was a sophomore in high school. I associated all language of depression and mental illness with her and was adamant that none of my current troubles had anything to do with the reason she breathed in too much carbon monoxide in my grandmother's garage.

But I was also sick of struggling.

And my therapist knew this.

During one session she was firmer than usual.

"Coping your way through life is not a way to live," she said. "If you just admit to being depressed, or having some mood disorder, then I can help get you the treatment you need, and your life can be better."

Her first sentence -- i.e., Coping your way through life is not a way to live -- was my epiphany moment. I had incorrectly assumed that coping is what everyone did. No one actually wants to be alive, I had always believed (and still do when I get depressed). They just pretend they like they are having a good time on this excruciating planet because no one likes to hang out with a downer. "La la la la la ... Sing a happy song ..." We are all joyful Smurfs.

Like most statements of truth, this one took a few years to sink in. I resisted meds. I opposed labels. I avoided anything that might cause someone to suspect that I was born with a brain, involving some creative wiring. But it was my beginning. The moment I cried "uncle." And even though I'm still no singing Smurf, and cope through life more hours than I want to, I have kept the piece from that afternoon that makes the strain more bearable: hope.

Want to share the moment you first knew you were depressed? Submit your video with these instructions.

For more by Therese Borchard, click here.

For more on mental health, click here.


Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

 
 
 

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I have stopped describing what depression feels like to the person with no experience of this "black dog," as Winston Churchill called it, or even an occasional bout of melancholy, because my inabilit...
I have stopped describing what depression feels like to the person with no experience of this "black dog," as Winston Churchill called it, or even an occasional bout of melancholy, because my inabilit...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dancinggrandma
Therapist, writer, dancer
04:37 AM on 04/24/2012
I've read most of these posts and want to contribute a few observations after both struggling with depression myself for nearly two decades and treating depressed people for 25 years as a therapist.
I worked for years with an incredible therapist to overcome/resolve my own depression. Many of us "seasoned therapists" believe that depression is anger held in. Suicide is the ultimate manifestation of pure rage, rage which gets trapped inside and is very painful. Untreated depression can become so gripping that the sufferer feels completely trapped in an emotional hell with no respite. For too many years, my first thought every morning was, "I wish I were dead". I realize that there are exceptions, but depression is largely unexpressed grief about losses which accumulate over many years (loss of a childhood, trauma, sense of worth, etc, etc). I strongly believe that a quality healing relationship with someone older, wiser, and who's "been there" is the only way to go from surviving to thriving. This saved my life; I in turn offer such a relationship to my clients and have seen every one of them rise from the ashes. The good news is that it only takes ONE such relationship to repair the wounds of a lifetime. Each of us deserves to tell our stories to a safe, compassionate and wise therapist, and in the telling, we are released from the pain.
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elitecloaker
Keep the children safe...
01:53 AM on 04/26/2012
I appreciate your comment.
05:35 PM on 04/22/2012
It's interesting that I was a freshman at Saint Mary's College when I figured out I was experiencing depression, too. Something in that South Bend water that brings moments of clarity, maybe?!
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surferlaments
Help me Rhonda......
03:50 PM on 04/22/2012
i read alot of the posts here. not all, but alot. i wish everyone well. good luck everyone.
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LOVEALLANIMALS
03:44 PM on 04/22/2012
I would speak to my doctor about TRUEHOPE.COM & EMPOWER PLUS, B Complex, B12 lozenge or B 12 shot

All the best
03:41 PM on 04/22/2012
Lay off the big words and eloquent elocution for the sake of those who truly suffer. They're not all Harvard grads, you know. Speak in English, please.
03:35 PM on 04/22/2012
I enjoyed the articles about the moment depression was recognized. It is a serious, life altering, and difficult condition to deal with. It is impossible for anyone to truly understand the pain unless they have experienced it first hand. Those afflicted are very aware of their differences and struggle each and every day to be "normal". Hopefully, awareness will help everyone suffering and those who do not understand the pain.
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hhijena
03:23 PM on 04/22/2012
Why does this country have the most depressed people of all? Take countries where life is abominable and there's no depression. Maybe they don't have the time or luxury to be depressed. I don't know.
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hhijena
03:18 PM on 04/22/2012
My wife used to get depressed. Not so much, anymore.I can't remember a day when I was depressed. Had some really bad days but never depressed. I guess I don't take many things to heart or I believe in the fact that I can't control anythng or anyone but myself.
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Tim Day
Am I waiting to Live or Waiting to Die.....
02:51 PM on 04/22/2012
I have been battling depression for a better part of 20 years....I have tried evey anti-D known...they usually make me sick...Then in 2006 I became disabled...You want to talk about a ride...Those of you who have it know what I mean...You can be in a room with 1000 people yet still all alone...Always tired...Colors don't seem as vivid...I remember the day mine started, they treated me for vertigo...then I started going to the ER at least once a week...believing I had every disease known and they was lying to me....Still don't have it figured out
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surferlaments
Help me Rhonda......
03:43 PM on 04/22/2012
please don't take this wrong but.... have you tried marijuana to combat depression? a suggestion only. best wishes to you.
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Tim Day
Am I waiting to Live or Waiting to Die.....
05:28 PM on 04/22/2012
No...pain meds work in moderation ...actually less than I'm prescribed...I also think that more testing should be done with the pain med Tramadol (Ultram) as an anti depressant...It is not an opiate but works like one, it works within 15 minutes of taking it with few side effect, some paper have studies that confirm this....Pot on the other hand is illegal where I live and I do not run the risk of arrest...However I am a firm believer it should be legal...I am a chronic pain sufferer, have been since I broke my back, legs , feet and knees in 06'...I am very open to it, but only if its legal first...but thanks
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mmiller459
I am the nothing man
02:49 PM on 04/22/2012
I have been severely depressed since I was about 12, when my family moved back to the States. I was assaulted when I was eight but it did not affect me until I moved here. I never fit in; at that point culturally I was Swiss. I acted differently from other kids, had different interests, different expectations, and I never became comfortable in American culture. I have become acculturated -- I act like an American, but after 40 years, inside I am Swiss.

I began self medicating at about age 16 with alcohol and by 21 was a full-fledged drunk. Alcohol temporarily ended the pain but made my undiagnosed depression even worse. Outwardly I looked and acted normal but inside I was a wreck. I made a series of nonsensical decisions did stupid things. I believe I was insane; eventually committed myself to a mental hospital when everything collapsed.

I sobered up about 8 years ago and started anti-depressants. The meds help some, and I have been able to maintain my sobriety, but I still find myself falling into that chasm. Sadly, despite all these years of medication with some talk therapy, I still find myself ambivalent toward life and finding very little pleasure in anything. But at least I am better, and I cling to that.
03:43 PM on 04/22/2012
Could you go back to "home" (culture: swiss) for a long "visit and see if that relieves any of your depression. Could it be that you are feeling like a trapped animal here in the States and maybe a trip back would allow you to "decide" for yourself. just a thought
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mmiller459
I am the nothing man
05:37 PM on 04/22/2012
I would prefer to move back but cannot ask my family to do that -- my wife and kids do not speak French and at their age would have a hard time adapting to a new culture. I wouldn't want them to go through the difficulties I had in adapting to a new way of life.
Sweet Grace
it is what it is...
02:35 PM on 04/22/2012
Thanks so much for sharing your story. Depression runs in my family as well. With my mom, I've noticed that she pretty much runs on a negative slant all of the time. She criticizes everyone- even strangers and just for the way they look. She only found faults with my father, sister, and I, as well as my dad's extended family and rarely gave us positive feedback. Even when she did, she would undo that good by once again lashing out at us. She's on medication now but she's still the same person at the core. Not a day goes by that she doesn't say something mean about someone. It has obviously affected all of us- especially my sibling and I. My dad tends to be very passive and just accepts her as she is. I am always tense around her- she has a way of doing that to my sister and I and I've noticed my children started to really dislike her as well. She is not all bad, but there's only one very small part of her that is tolerable to any of us. I do believe that what I'm describing is a form of depression.
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dancinggrandma
Therapist, writer, dancer
04:07 AM on 04/24/2012
You're describing a form of depression that most people aren't aware of: dysthymia. It's a chronic, long term, protracted depression which can literally grip people for an entire lifetime unless diagnosed & treated. Usually, this form of depression escapes notice unless a clinical (acute) depression superimposes on top the chronic depression. The treatment is the same for both kinds of depression: talk therapy & meds. Dysthymics make everyone around them miserable. The leading indicator is unrelenting negativity. These folks experience life as joyless and burdensome. On the other hand, some personality disorders manifest such negativity as well.
Sweet Grace
it is what it is...
08:13 AM on 04/24/2012
dancinggrandma, thanks so much for the information. I'm going to do some research about 'dysthymia'. It might help me learn to better deal with things.
02:16 PM on 04/22/2012
What's sad is, people who have plenty of 'dopamine' or whatever else they need in their brain to be happy and are able to take every bad thing that happens as a 'part of life' and deal with it gracefully, have NO SYMPATHY for those of us who have suffered with depression which is basically constant negative thoughts about everything. Compassion for others, even if they are going through something you don't understand, is the first step to being a good human being. Don't throw stones when we all live in glass houses of one kind or another.
01:51 PM on 04/22/2012
I am bi polar and it is very painful .It feels like someone is beating in side of my self. People make fun of me and it is not funny.
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beckym1488
I have dislike for Libs
01:14 PM on 04/22/2012
I have a disorder called PMDD (premenstrual dysphoric disorder). It started when I was 32. I'm now 35. Every Dr I have gone to has no clue about PMDD. I think it's something that could be possibly affecting many women and their Dr's may no know. I have to tell Dr's what I have and what I need to treat it. Don't always depend on Dr's to evaluate your symptoms. Do some research before going to the Dr. Then you can discuss your thoughts with the Dr. If you are a woman in your 30's and you have a portion of each month that you feel nuts then research PMDD, it's treatable.
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elitecloaker
Keep the children safe...
01:57 PM on 04/25/2012
I have a friend with PMDD and you're right...not much understanding of this condition out there. Keep up your "educational work." : )
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beckym1488
I have dislike for Libs
06:30 PM on 04/28/2012
What I have figured out through research and trial and error that I have to be on the Yaz birth control pill and an SSRI drug. During my PMDD I slightly increase the SSRI dose.
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collectsrocks
It's good to be good & nice to be nice
01:14 PM on 04/22/2012
High praise and gratitude to Ms Borchard for her blog sharing her experiences with depression. Hopefully it will provide those with little or no first hand knowledge to understand the dark depths where depression takes a person.