Beyond Blue

Beyond Blue

The First Blog Post: My Story So Far

posted by Beyond Blue | 5:00am Thursday December 18, 2008

Although I’ve suffered from depression and anxiety from the moment I was induced from my mother’s womb, I officially joined the elite club in 1989, my freshman year at Saint Mary’s College in Notre Dame, Indiana, when I went by the Counseling and Career Development Center to inquire about local support groups (I was a just few months sober). One of the therapists politely invited me back.

A few months later she rattled off a few diagnoses: obsessive-compulsive disorder, eating disorder, anxiety disorder, and depression. She strongly suggested antidepressants, but I resisted.

“They are happy pills that will compromise your sobriety,” some hard-core 12-steppers said. “The world needs God, not Valium,” preached a priest in his homily. Meds were the easy way out. And at the time, I was all about feeling the pain so that I could transform into a more spiritual person.

“Life doesn’t have to be this hard,” my counselor told me and gave me a copy of Colette Dowling’s book, “You Mean I Don’t Have to Feel This Way?” A year and a half later, when I was experiencing suicidal thoughts, I finally cried uncle, clinging to the lifeboat (or prescription) God sent me. After a few trial and error experiments, my doctor and I stumbled on the combination of Prozac and Zoloft, which allowed me to concentrate enough to study and pray, yet relax enough to tell a joke here and there.

Then I got married, in 1996, and had kids (David and Katherine are 5 and 3 now). After I had them, though, my hormones huddled together to ask each other what the heck they were supposed to be doing now that no baby was in the womb or at the breast. My neurotransmitters (responsible for feelings of well-being) scattered for good, and I had an honest-to-goodness mental breakdown. I lost twenty pounds because I had no appetite, I contracted one urinary tract infection after another because my immune system was breaking down, I breathed into a paper bag every morning during a panic attack, and I trembled and flailed like Linda Blair in the “Exorcist” because my anxiety was so acute. Oh, and let’s not forget the endless sobbing: at the grocery, at my son’s soccer practice, at preschool fieldtrips, in church, and everywhere else.

It took two trips to the psych ward, six different psychiatrists, and 23 different medication combinations over a year and a half’s time to get me well again. In other words, I upgraded to the platinum membership in Club D. As an authentic manic-depressive with Bipolar II disorder, I graduated beyond the my-primary-care-physician-can-give-me-my-meds, to the regular check-ins with doctors specializing in mental health.

Although I have many times cussed out God and asked what he was thinking when he designed my brain, I agree with Kay Redfield Jamison, author of “An Unquiet Mind,” that “tumultuousness, if coupled with discipline and a cool mind, is not such a bad sort of thing. In other words, unless one wants to live a stunningly boring life, one ought to be on good terms with one’s darker side and one’s darker energies.”

My real faith, the engine that propels me to love better and be better, was born in my dark night. Blindfolded, I felt my way through the woods to the campfire, where a crowd of fellow depressives welcomed me. They taught me which voices to listen to (Go for it!), which to ignore (You’re a failure.), and how to get out of bed the days your sickness has attacked every muscle in your body.

A friend and fellow depressive once told me that illness and anxiety are helping hands to help people tell their stories. I guess that’s what I hope to do here.



Previous Posts

Rewire Your Brain For Love: An Interview with Marsha Lucas, Ph.D.
In the spirit of Valentine's Day, I thought I’d feature an interview with a very cool licensed psychologist and neuropsychologist that I was lucky enough to meet in person at a book signing back in September. Marsha Lucas, Ph.D., has been practicing psychotherapy and studying the brain-behavior re

posted 6:00:56am Feb. 14, 2012 | read full post »

Love Deeply ...
Valentine's Day is a good time to remember all the ways we can be loving, not just to the guy/gal sitting across from you at the kitchen table, but also your boss, your mother, your boss's mother, and her mother. One of my very favorite reflections from Henri Nouwen is "Love Deeply," found in hi

posted 6:00:28am Feb. 13, 2012 | read full post »

Therapy Thursday: Sweat
I have decided to dedicate a post on Thursday to therapy, and offer you the many tips I have learned on the couch. They will be a good reminder for me, as well, of something small I can concentrate on. Many of them are published in my book, "The Pocket Therapist: An Emotional Survival Kit." Work

posted 6:01:57am Feb. 09, 2012 | read full post »

Scrupulosity: What It Is and Why It's Dangerous
If you sprinkle a hefty dose of Catholic (or Jewish) guilt unto a fragile biochemistry headed toward a severe mood disorder, you usually arrive at some kind of a religious nut. Not that there’s anything wrong with that! For I am one. I have said many places that growing up Catholic, for me, was

posted 6:17:35am Feb. 07, 2012 | read full post »

The Treasures of Darkness
We often equate darkness with sorrow, misery, get-me-the-hell-out-of-here reaction. At least I do. That’s why I keep a mammoth Happy Lite on my smallish cubicle at work. But darkness can also be a treasure. Say what? J. R. Miller writes this in “From Streams in the Desert” by L. B. C

posted 6:06:40am Feb. 06, 2012 | read full post »

Advertisement
Comments read comments(8)
post a comment
dark to dawn

posted December 18, 2006 at 11:24 pm


Welcome back. I ran across your blog just before you took a break and while in the midst of a relapse into Major Depression. Your honesty is encouraging and I look forward to your posts and responses of others.



report abuse
 

Lisa

posted December 19, 2006 at 7:05 pm


So glad to have you back Therese! Looking forward to future visits! Lisa



report abuse
 

lynnrene

posted December 19, 2006 at 10:00 pm


I have the exact same experience you do with depression into Bipolar. I still deal with my dark side every day and try to keep from peeling the paint off the walls by praying and keeping the faith. Information about knowing one’s triggers for mania and my awareness has been most helpful for me to manage the illness, but mostly I’m a mess.



report abuse
 

Julie

posted December 22, 2006 at 2:04 am


Thank-you. I don’t feel so completely alone now, but I am. I have fought “getting help” for years. I am on Wellbuterin and Prozac, but it doesn’t seem to help much. Anyone out there have any words of wisdom for me before I crack completely? I’ve never been this depressed before and am getting really scared of/for myself. I don’t want to ruin my life. I’d give anything to be able to smile again and go just one day without crying. My depression is pretty bad, and I am wondering if there is any med or med combination that has seemed to really work for any of you out there, PLEASE. For me and my kids, any input would be GREATLY APPRECIATED! Thanks.



report abuse
 

Bill Chatfield

posted December 22, 2006 at 3:36 pm


Turn to God. Confess your sins. Ask him for help. Wait for him. Jesus never refused to heal any that came to him to receive it, but it often doesn’t happen over night. Healing takes time. I take Effexor. It mostly works for me. Wellbutrin works on all three neurotransmitters, although not very strongly. Prozac mostly works on Seretonin. Effexor works strongly on both Seretonin and Norepinepherine. Lexapro doesn’t work well for me because, like Prozac, it mostly works on Seretonin. I seem to need the Norephinephrine that only Effexor does a good job of providing. Use light therapy. It’s supposed to help as well as antidepressants.http://www.lightsourcecompany.com I pray that you will find the peace you need.



report abuse
 

M

posted December 27, 2006 at 6:18 pm


Oh Julie, my heart breaks for you. It sounds like you were where I was a year ago. I was on Effexor (300 mg)at the time and had tried the other drugs mentioned above in combination with it, but I was drowning. I went to a new doc. He got me off the Effexor and put me on Cymbalta (which has the Norephinephrine). He then added Wellbutrin to the Cymbalta. I am a new person. “He reached down from on high and took hold of me; He drew me out of deep waters.” Psalm 18:16 Hold on Julie, hold on. Please write again.



report abuse
 

ulchg

posted December 3, 2007 at 4:33 am


[*03-12-07.txt]



report abuse
 

socket 370 tualatin adapter laptop

posted May 19, 2010 at 7:39 pm


Somewhat the volume is designed and the pageant-eve on the demand required.



report abuse
 

Post a Comment

By submitting these comments, I agree to the beliefnet.com terms of service, rules of conduct and privacy policy (the "agreements"). I understand and agree that any content I post is licensed to beliefnet.com and may be used by beliefnet.com in accordance with the agreements.

Share this story


About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Help

Media Kit

Subscribe

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

Report as Inappropriate

You are reporting this content because it violates the Terms of Service.

All reported content is logged for investigation.