"And I started to see that something
was tricking me out to trick me in. I made this my next
journey, to find that cause and ELIMINATE IT" -Blog 1.
…So, I began to eliminate.
Eliminate the phony job which seemed to devalue me daily. Eliminate the insubstantial career of modeling, the men of fleshly desires I formerly dated and the friends I had at one
point spent my time with. I had to make these changes…I had to.
With the eliminations, I began
to espouse a few of my favorite hobbies—anything in attempt to create happiness.
I just wanted to be happy. I began
playing my violin again, studying even harder, hip hop dancing more, made a
deal to spend more time with the few people I labeled as friends. I actually even
inquired about getting back into all the sports I once played. I also increased
my gym time, began to bake frequently, and I pursued the writings of my book. C’mon,
what else could I need?!!
Months went by. The changes didn’t bring me complete happiness per se,
but nonetheless I felt better. The
hobbies and new friends created happiness at their point of attainment, but
upon completion, the hollowness drifted in and filled me again. Still, something was missing. My depression
continued to present itself, alongside those thoughts of ending it all. My emotions, I realized, were completely dependent upon what I experienced. I had highs and lows,
nothing was consistent. I still felt lost, with no direction; just this ambiguous
life full of meaningless nonsense, and to know I had to endure this type of
life for the rest of my existence, surely didn’t make it any easier. Goodness,
I still hated not my life specifically, but life in general. I still HATED it.
Even with the exclusions, I was only happy when I was in the midst of associations.
It grew harder to be alone, though at times I served it. My monologue tore at
me and my mind grew to frustration, anxiousness, sadness, and increased
hopelessness. With my equivocal thoughts
at present, I would try my hardest to brainstorm during this time. I needed an
answer…fast.
I began seeing a counselor for my depression. Regardless of my two close friends being
aware of my depression issue, I thought perhaps a “professional listener” may do
the trick. I would visit her weekly,
sometimes twice. I noticed upon leaving, I felt relieved! I thought, “Maybe this is all I need!!” A couple months passed and I realized I only felt better during my counseling sessions and for the few hours proceeding. Smh, it was hopeless. For once in my life, I actually considered anti-depressants. Still though, I was too afraid of
prescription meds that were created to alter my mind. Smh, I was fond of my
mind; I was lost and confused, unhappy—something I didn’t feel medication could
fix. The issue of this felt like it was beyond my mind, beyond the serotonin,
beyond my hardships, and regrets. Medication could not fill this hollowness.
But the day came, I gave in. Out of complete desperation, I agreed to
natural antidepressants. Sure, they
weren’t prescription, but through research I learned the only variance of prescription
vs. over the counter antidepressants
were, less side-effects—all while still encompassing the identical mind-altering
chemicals that were known to increase feelings of happiness. “Wonderful!!!” I
thought. At the time of check-out, there was not a second wasted of getting
that pill into my system. In my eyes, that pill determined my present
existence. This was the end for me, this works or I don’t anymore…Period. In
that small capsule, a small bit of hope still lived. I fervently searched for
my water bottle, anything that could ease the object down which was to directly save my life.
I was told, I would not be able to notice the effects until
approximately one week; that I had to
wait for the medication to build up in my body.
I guess what they meant was, “it has to build up past You!” Needless to say, I remained positive. I knew in a week’s time I should be feeling
better. For that next week, I kept extra busy, just really wanted to keep my
mind elsewhere. I still cried a lot
during that week, but I told myself, “Just 7 more days…just 5 more days…just 3
more days Anna, you can make it!
Eight days passed, Wow, I felt at ease! These pills were miraculous!! I did it, I
beat this!
Four weeks passed, it was
back. Smh……you
can imagine my disappointment. Here I was, on medication, with still no success.
…There I lie, on my bedroom floor, crying, crying hysterically; the type of crying
where your face and fists are clenched. The abundant tears ran down my cheeks
and saturated the carpet. I hurt so badly. Describing that pain is still
impossible. There I lay and remained. I had tried everything. I COULD NOT DO
THIS. There would be no more me. No more tears of mine would fall, no more
sorrow of Anna’s would exist. No more anxiousness would fill her. I would be…no more.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteIt's funny how many people who take anti-depressants are still depressed or even need more medication. The US, by far, leads the world in anti-depressant use. That's one area I'd rather us NOT be #1.
ReplyDelete