Archives for April 2011

Party Like an Introvert

I first came across 5 Minutes for Mom when someone tweeted a link to this article about how to get your email inbox under control. It’s pretty much the best thing I’ve ever read. I use it at work and it’s been worth the cost for the sanity it’s given me (especially because it was free).

So I’ve followed along a bit and lo and behold I discovered that 5 Minutes for Mom is hosting a party. The best kind of party – the kind I can attend in my pajamas (like I’m doing right now!). I don’t even have to leave my house. It’s Ultimate Blog Party 2011 and it’s taking place from April 1 to 8.

Like most introverts, I’m a little late to this party but I’m here. For those of you who have wandered over from the main party room to the corner in the kitchen to join me, here’s a brief peek inside what my blog and I are about:

I’m a working mom with a son who’s almost 3 and a fantastic husband. I’m Canadian. I’m a chocoholic. I like to run (sometimes) and I love to write. I also had undiagnosed postpartum depression after my son was born and it was 18 months or more before I finally got help. I’m still very much on the road to recovery, and this blog is part of that. I’m honest about my experience in hopes that it will help others, because PPD is so much more common than most people realize, and it’s not all about “depression”. Being a mom is hard enough – we shouldn’t have to top it off with something that makes it even harder.

So that’s me. Tell me about you!

Ultimate Blog Party 2011

I’ve moved!

I moved this blog to a self-hosted WordPress platform at the end of February and based on some questions lately I gather not everyone caught on. I tried to get in touch with those of you who subscribed but apparently I either missed a few or it didn’t go through. Mea culpa.

If you wish to still follow along, I’d love to have you join me at http://farewellstranger.com.

[Apologies to those of you already here – just making sure everyone else finds their way.]

Escape, Part 1

He knows I’m leaving. And what’s worse, he knows something’s wrong even though he hasn’t seen the meltdowns. And he’s not going to let me just pack my things and leave.

He pulls cotton balls out of my cosmetic case and when I take them back he reaches into my drawer and tries to grab a handful of Q-tips. He’s got that runner’s stance – feet planted, knees bent, ready to take off as soon as his chubby little hands have a firm grasp on the paper sticks.

“Please, honey, be helpful. I’m trying to pack.”

I can actually see him prepare to crank the defiance up a notch.

“Why don’t you go see Daddy for a minute?”

Please. PLEASE. I need to leave. It’s just for one night and I need to leave because yesterday was awful and I’m crashing and I just…need to leave. Please.

“I don’t want to see Daddy! I want Mummy!”

Tears stream down his sweet baby cheeks. His arms stretch up towards me.

I pick him up and he hugs me tight. His head is tucked snugly into me and he’s holding on like a baby monkey whose survival depends on staying close to his mother. I pause, overwhelmed with love for him, and wonder how something so beautiful could have turned my whole world inside out over the last couple of years.

Having heard his wailing, my husband comes in.

“Why don’t you go with Daddy?”

“I DON’T WANT DADDY!”

He’s breaking my heart, but Daddy, ever resourceful, can fix this.

“Why don’t we go have a peanut butter snack?”

He agrees and I hand my baby monkey to his daddy. I take a deep breath and finish packing, all the things I need for a night in a hotel. Alone. I’ve got workout gear and cozy socks. Healthy snacks and Coke. A decadent, completely self-indulgent dessert. I intend to do nothing. Not go out for dinner, not walk along the harbour, not go to a movie by myself. I intend to lock myself in the hotel room and never come out think. Write. Figure out what to do next. I can’t get there fast enough.

With my bags in my car I head down the highway. The hotel isn’t far – maybe 15 minutes from where we live. The Sunday afternoon traffic is light, but every car is an obstacle. I keep missing lights – they change from green to yellow, taunting me. You’re not free yet.

A white van is plodding along at 10 kilometres an hour below the speed limit. Come ON! I change lanes and pass him.

Just two more blocks, across the bridge and I’ll be there. And then I see it. A sign, its yellow lights flashing: “Lights flash when bridge is up.”

You’ve got to be kidding me.

I round the bend and see that the railway side of the bridge is going up, but the vehicle lane is still open. Maybe I’ll make it.

The light goes red.

I can feel every nerve in my body twitching with the need to get into a quiet room with a door that locks behind me. I can see the hotel from here – mere metres from the end of the bridge. It’s so close. I’m so close. But I wait. I have no choice.

So close

I manage to breathe long enough to realize I’ve never actually been this close to the bridge as it’s going up, even in over 30 years of living here. It’s interesting to watch, actually.

And luckily it’s fast. Bridge goes up, boat goes through, bridge comes down.

About 300 metres past the bridge is the entrance to the hotel property. The lane curves left through a narrow driveway that’s surrounded by cherry trees in full bloom. I see lights wrapped around the trees trunks and wonder if it’s a de-Christmas-ing oversight or twinkle lights for nightly ambiance. Probably the latter.

I made it. All I have to do is park my car and talk to another human long enough to hand over a card in exchange for a room key. A simple conversation that will lead me to the silence and solitude I long for.

Unfortunately the conversation isn’t so simple after all, and I have another, potentially challenging, hurdle to jump before I find peace.

To be continued…

The Economics of Milk

Milk is like currency in our house, and I spend it liberally.

It buys me extra time in bed on weekend mornings, like this morning when C woke up at 6 a.m. Does he not know it’s the weekend? And I’m on vacation this week? 6 a.m. is not acceptable. So I bartered – a bottle of milk for quiet time in bed.

It buys a nap – usually – which is something that’s very, very valuable. We’ve been known to offer a free refill if it’s required to finalize the transaction, too.

For a long time, milk was the ticket to a little bit of peace at the 4 pm witching hour. We’ve decided to save our dairy dollars, though, in an effort to get him to actually eat something at dinner. Hey, you’ve got to be fiscally prudent sometimes.

Milk at bedtime has become a habit – something that was always part of the parent-infant deal making. It’s now a stable part of our Gross National Sanity, but I think the exchange rate must have gone up significantly because we don’t get nearly as much for it as we used to. One bottle used to be worth a relatively quiet bedtime, but no more. Maybe we need to renegotiate with our banker.

Yes, that banker happens to be almost 3. And yes, he still gets milk in a bottle sometimes. The sanity of the kingdom’s rulers depends on it.

Labels and Lightbulbs

[Warning: some pieces of this post might be triggers for some people. Good idea not to read if that might be the case for you.]

The vocabulary associated with postpartum depression is vast. There are so many facets to this illness I never knew about, even after I accepted this as what I was dealing with and started to learn more.

As I came across many of these issues I thought, “That doesn’t apply to me.”

Anxiety

When I was a teenager, our house was broken into. Whoever it was came in through the garage and, as I remember it, only rummaged around the lower floor. Took a few things they came across and some stuff, including a small amount of cash, from my brother’s bedroom.

It freaked me out.

My room at the time was on the top floor of our house, and my bed was positioned under a window. Lying on my pillow, I could look straight up and see the window behind my curtains. Each night for months (years?) I lay there for a long time before falling asleep, breath held, staring at that window expecting someone to climb through it. (One night my cat came in the window on the other side of my room. Between the time I saw the curtains move and the moment her padded feet hit the floor, I think I just about overdosed from panic-induced adrenaline.)

A couple of months ago, when talking about medication because what I was on wasn’t working, my counsellor warned that one of the other options is typically associated with an increase in anxiety.

“That’s fine. Anxiety is not a problem for me,” I said.

The lightbulb hadn’t come on yet.

Intrusive thoughts

We moved into our current house eight years ago. As soon as you walk in the door there’s a staircase leading to the upper floor. More nights than I can count I’ve lain in bed, paralyzed with fear that someone would come up the stairs and kill us. I can picture it – a dark shape, illuminated by the street lights from outside, walking quietly up the stairs. In my head I can actually picture this happening.

These thoughts got worse after Connor was born because his room is the first you come to at the top of the stairs. Anyone coming up the stairs would get to him before us. When he first started sleeping with us at night, I breathed more easily knowing he was at least somewhere I could see him.

I recently read a post at The Lorix Chronicles about intrusive thoughts. I sat in front of my computer in stunned silence.

Oh.

OCD

I’m not a neat freak by anyone’s standards, but I like to putter. It calms me. When the house is filled with noisy, bouncy toddler and my brain is filled with, “I can’t do this. It’s too much. I’m not cut out for this. It’s never going to get better,” I vacuum. Methodically, back and forth, the vacuum forming faint lines in the carpet.

I don’t know if this can actually be categorized as OCD. It’s not an obsession that’s relieved by a compulsion – something repetitive and, to a degree, uncontrollable. But it is about control. The stuff I can’t control takes over my brain and I fight back by tackling something I can control, even if that something is crumbs.

Depression

I’ve never struggled with depression.

Except… Oh wait. There was that time in the last semester of my first year of university when I spent a lot of time in bed. A LOT. I stayed there and didn’t want to get up, though I didn’t think much of it at the time.

Then when I was in my 20s, I got sick of feeling sad and hopeless all the time and started logging things. What I ate, exercise, weather – you name it, I put it into a carefully crafted spreadsheet, and it was all mapped against my mood. Eventually the sum of the things that made me feel better – getting enough exercise, sunlight, eating well – led me to feel better overall.

Until I sought help for PPD I’d never been diagnosed with depression. Never even had a conversation with a doctor about it. I always hated that label. Oddly, though, I remember being asked to fill out a self-identification form for a previous job. “Are you a visible minority?” No. “Are you Aboriginal?” No. “Do you have a disability?” A very small voice in my head piped up. “Does depression count?” I knew it was there, though I was never willing to admit it. (I checked no.)

The light bulb about anxiety and OCD-like tendencies switched on a couple of weeks ago in the middle of a meltdown. I told my husband it’s dawned on me that I’ve been dealing with this stuff almost as long as I can remember.

His response: “No shit.”

He’s always considered me sort of OCD, apparently. Well. How do you like that? I wish someone had told me.

I’ve recently started to acknowledge my past episodes of depression in conversations with doctors and counsellors, but it wasn’t until I talked about it with the psychiatrist a couple of weeks ago that I really began to accept this as a part of who I am.

The realization about intrusive thoughts was a lightning bolt that just hit me last weekend.

My counsellor and I spent most of my session this week talking about all this and she gave me some resources to deal with it. Only a few days later, I can now catch these thoughts. “Why are you thinking that? Do you think that’s true?” The answers aren’t right yet: “I don’t know. No, I guess not, not really. But what if… And maybe it is true. And I’m just not good at… I CAN’T TAKE THE CRUMBS ANYMORE!” It’s a work in progress.

One thing that helps is that I’ve named these things now. I’ve allowed themselves to attach them to me. No, better – I’ve attached them to myself.

I don’t know what it means, exactly, but it feels like a step in the right direction.