Making It

Sometimes I think I’m imagining it. That the tears and the over-reactions and the oh-my-god-I-can’t-breathe moments are all part of… something else.

Sometimes I read others’ stories, stories of sick children, lost children, unimaginable things happening to children and their families. Things that no one should have to go through. Things I probably couldn’t bear.

So I wonder – am I making this up? Something feels…desperately wrong not quite right, so do I blow things out of proportion to justify my feelings?

In moments of calm, I feel mostly okay. Okay but anxious – anxious about how this will be resolved. When it will be resolved.

When the waves come I can’t imagine that this will ever be better. I can’t see what I need to do. I worry that my husband will say, “Enough.”

I know I’ve got to make it work.

When I feel like staying in bed I force myself to get up and do something.

When I feel like I’m about to drown I tell someone and they throw me a rope.

When I feel like running away I question whether that would really help anything.

So far I’m making it. Even if it feels like I’m making it up as I go along.

Reach Toward Light by Damien Share

On the Move: Guest Posting at EllieAdorn

Hey, check me out – I’m guest posting at EllieAdorn! It’s actually my post from yesterday, which I agreed to let Cristi re-post on her blog.We connected because I read and commented on her post An Email from Inside PPD, which is about her experience with postpartum depression.

Even if you read my Four Weeks post please go over and have a look at Cristi’s blog. She’s got lots of great stuff on there and I love that one of the reasons she started the blog was to help people dealing with similar types of issues.

Go on, click!

A Glimmer of Hot Pink and Hope

She was dressed all in black, by coincidence more than intent, but it seemed to make a statement.

The black tank – the one she’d slept in – stood out against her pale shoulders. The dark-as-ink yoga pants, plucked off the drying rack, were at least clean.

A quick look in the mirror confirmed her suspicion: it was obvious she hadn’t showered, but a black ball cap quickly fixed that. Where she was going, the rest – the lack of make-up, the unruly eyebrows – didn’t matter.

As she walked, the trail was peaceful and the sunshine bright. The sun had brought her out while the head-to-toe black allowed her to feel hidden.

Her canine companion paused. Looking back over her shoulder as she waited for him to catch up, she caught a glimpse of hot pink. Just a glimmer, but it was significant. A sign that underneath the darkness there is light, and life, and colour.

 

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Notes:

  1. I’m not sure what the point of this post is, but this silly fact filtered through to my anxiety-ridden brain today. It seemed only fair to pay it proper attention by posting about it.
  2. With thanks to Jessica from It’s My Life for the “glimmer” concept. I read it in her post from Friday, Choosing Happiness, and it stuck with me.

You’re a Firework

This post is not about me. It’s about Kim. And so is this one and this one and this one. Because when life beats on one of our PPD mamas, the rest of us rally around her.

Kim, I know you’re hurting. I know what that’s like – to not want to fight anymore. To feel like you can’t fight anymore. I’ve been there. Very, very recently. I know it sucks. I know all the stuff you have going on right now feels like it’s just too much for one person to bear. And it is. If the rest of us could split up all that pain we’d each take a part of it for you. In a heartbeat.

The best way we can do that right now is to be here. To announce to the world through this series of blog posts that you are loved. That you are strong. That you will win.

Because, baby, you’re a firework. This one’s for you, with love.

Escape, Part 2

[See part 1 of this story here.]

Checking into a hotel is normally a fairly simple process. Except when your brain has had a spaz and screws you over in the process.

This night in a hotel was courtesy a gift card I got for Christmas 2009 and hadn’t used yet. (I know, dumb. You’re welcome to slap me.) I looked at two websites in trying to find the hotel’s reservation number – the first was a hotel booking site and the second – the one I wanted – was the hotel’s site. I found the number and called to book the room, giving the friendly man on the other end of the line my credit card number when he asked for it to hold the room. At no time during this conversation did he say he was going to charge the card or that it was non-refundable. <Insert ominous music here>

I discovered my brain spaz when I told the woman at reception I’d be paying with the gift card. She informed me the room was prepaid through another company so I couldn’t use it.

I distinctly remember looking at the hotel booking site and discarding it. I distinctly remember looking at the hotel’s site – the branding, the hotel features, the drop-down menu with the property I was looking for. I have no idea how I screwed it up but this was absolutely the last thing I needed. I didn’t want to have to argue about it. I didn’t want to have to sort it out. And I didn’t want to suck it up and just pay for the room and use the gift card later.

I called the company and informed them I didn’t realize I was booking through another company, that I never agreed to have my card charged and that I certainly didn’t agree to – in fact, wasn’t informed about – a non-refundable booking. The oh-so-helpful response? “But it’s non-refundable.”

Force down panic, repeat story. Demonstrate full will of a mama struggling to hold her shit together instead of completely losing it in a hotel lobby:  “I DON’T CARE. FIX IT NOW.”

Last weekend was just too much. What was originally intended to be a nice break had become, truly, an escape. I need to go somewhere and close the door behind me and not talk to anyone. I need to figure out what’s going on in my head that’s allowing these waves to keep crashing over me, totally unexpectedly. I need him to fix it.

He fixes it.

The woman at reception must sense I’m on the edge, because she upgrades me to a room with a king bed and a harbour view. And then, embarrassingly, I do start to cry.

Once I get into the room things are better. I drink Coke with ice in a wine glass and that alone makes me feel like I’m somewhere else. I read a bit, write a bit, breathe a bit. I listen to music. When I’m feeling more calm, I throw on my workout gear and get sweaty. I pull up one workout on my computer and when that’s done I do another one. Exercise is a sure thing, every time, and when I’m done I feel like me again.

The rest of the night was heaven – a carpet picnic, a hot shower, pajamas and cozy socks. A conversation with a dear friend who called to make sure I was okay on my own. A delicious chocolate dessert while I sat at the desk looking out at the lights coming on around the harbour. A solid sleep in a bed with fluffy covers and puffy pillows.

I am grateful for this. I am. I can afford to do this for a night and I have a husband who is not only supportive, he tells me to go. I have a laptop I can take so I can read and write and stay connected.

I sat there that night and took deep breaths and felt that gratitude wash over me. But behind it the usual tension was still there – a tightness in my shoulders, a twitchy foot and a brow that remained furrowed so that in the morning I woke up with what appeared to be a permanent crease in my forehead.

The events of Saturday, including a call to the psychiatrist at 10 at night, led me to what I sincerely hope is rock bottom. Things cannot continue like this – it’s been over two years. Almost three. I’ve taken so many steps that seem like the right ones and it doesn’t feel like it’s getting better.

Maybe this new medication will kick in (please oh please) and things will start to improve. But it’s clear to me now that I need to take charge of this. I need to do something different. I need to do something more.

So that’s what I’m going to do. As of this morning, the wheels are in motion. Stay tuned.