Strollers in the Street

The initial bend in the S-shaped street was behind us, meaning we were about halfway into our walk, but before we got to the next curve she was there, walking toward us, then paused beside us, rocking her stroller lightly.

She had stopped so I stopped, but she initiated the small talk. The how-old-is-your-baby and do-you-live-near-here questions.

My responses were short but polite. Friendly but not encouraging. Her baby – several months younger than my then 9-month-old – was asleep peacefully in the stroller. Mine was asleep as well, but looking at him gave me no feelings of peace. I knew enough to know that if we were stopped much longer he’d wake up, and that would be bad. I glared at the dog, willing him not to make any noises – the kind guaranteed to wake my child – indicating he wanted to keep walking.

So I kept the conversation light and short, then bade her farewell with a mention that I needed to keep walking so he’d keep sleeping.

What I didn’t tell her was that I needed him to keep sleeping. That we walked every day at this time because he refused to sleep otherwise and I had tried everything and getting him to sleep in his stroller was the only thing that was keeping me remotely sane. That sometimes, if he kept sleeping, I walked for hours, playing chicken with the line where a good nap turns into a nap that messes with bedtime.

I couldn’t tell her all this because at the time I thought I was the only one who panicked like that. Who would do anything to keep that stroller moving so he’d stay asleep and not wake up and start to fuss and flood my being with despair.

It’s been over three years since we met on the road that day. I never saw her again, but the other day I walked down that same stretch of road. I was with dog, but without stroller. Life has changed a lot since then, and yet some of those same feelings still remain in me. I also now know a lot more about how many women experience a rough start to motherhood. As I walked, I wondered if she was one of them.

I mentioned this to my husband, and questioned whether I would have uncovered something – something she needed, some sort of help, companionship, or even just an adult conversation – had my protective shield not been so firmly in place that day.

Maybe she saw something in you, he said. Maybe she sensed that you needed help.

Maybe.

There’s no way to know, so in that moment during my recent walk I just paused and thought of her – a sincere “sorry” if she were someone I could have helped had I known, and a dose of good thoughts for wherever her path along motherhood has taken her since.

Wisdom in Six Words

Today I’m joining Melissa from Making Things Up for Six Word Fridays on the topic of wisdom.

Lately all the pieces of my path are weaving together into something – I can see where it’s going, but not how I’m going to get there. I understand what this journey might look like, but can’t yet articulate it.

What I can do is express some of what I’ve learned lately, so here’s what wisdom I have in six-word increments:

Time to think is so valuable.

Ask for help when it’s needed.

Accept help when it is offered.

Friends are family, family are friends.

What you are feeling is okay.

Some days are better than others.

It’s true – everyone struggles with something.

Being painfully honest can help others.

If you’re open, there are signs.

You’re loved more than you know.

Hello Inspiration – Signs of Support

Since yesterday was Mother’s Day, I’m moving Hello, Inspiration to Monday this week. Hopefully that won’t throw you all off, since I’ve been doing this a whole two weeks now.

I had a variety of sources of inspiration this week, some more easy to describe than others.

It Gets Better

One of them was a video. Most people have probably heard of the It Gets Better Project, which I think is a great thing, but I saw this ad on TV and I think it’s amazing. It’s well done, but it’s a message that can apply in so many situations. Maybe that’s why it stuck with me.

[Update: Damn, sorry, they removed the video.]

Dreaming Big

I’ve always been a bit of a dreamer, and there are a lot of things I want to accomplish in my life. There are some things that are not on my life list but now may need to be. Or maybe it’s more than that. I think I have a new Definite Chief Aim – my most important goals in life. As part of exploring what that might be – or perhaps how it might come to be – I’ve signed up for Mondo Beyondo’s Dreaming Big online class.

I gave my mom one of their courses for Mother’s Day last year, and she really liked it. Here’s the description for this one:

This five week online class complete with inspiring lessons, real life stories, secret missions, audio interviews and hands-on activities will help you take your dreams from the realm of wishing into everyday motion.

I’m not generally shy about going after what I want to do, but a little inspiration and insight from others along the way can’t hurt.

The course starts May 16 and costs $99 US and right now they’re offering a 2 for 1 deal. If you want to learn more, click the image below. (Full disclosure: that’s an affiliate link so if you happen to register I get a little something. And you get a cool class and some good karma.)

Signs and the Rock of Friendship

My last source of inspiration is harder to describe. It’s a you-had-to-be-there sort of thing, but it’s worth adding to this list because it’s connected to the concepts behind both of the above and to this roller coaster of a journey I’m on.

On Friday night, two very good friends and I went to stay at a beach resort a couple of hours from here. It started as a casual, girls’ getaway suggestion and turned into something we realized we needed to do because we all needed to talk about some stuff.

“Be kind. Everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.”
– Ralph Waldo Emerson

I’ve seen this quote before, but it keeps coming across my path. I’m more aware of this after the last four months than I ever have been before, and I’m so grateful for being able to sit down with friends and talk about our hard battles, even the parts we haven’t told many – or any – people before.

On our way home, we were looking for a group of shops we’d heard about and wanted to check out. We found them, went in, and at first it was overwhelming. The first was a house – an actual house that hadn’t really been modified – and things were displayed on every surface, every wall, every floor. Normally those sorts of places are way too stimulating for me, but the things were so beautiful so I started to walk around. And then a funny thing happened.

I have two symbols that are meaningful to me – one that goes back to when I was pregnant that I’ve since associated with becoming a mother, and one that has come to represent what I hope to do with what I’ve learned from this PPD journey – and as I walked around these shops I saw these symbols everywhere. They were on jewelry, mugs, stickers, tea towels, bags and more. It was as though I was being told I’m on the right path.

While I was tempted to buy every item in the store, I managed to select a few things that will remind me of the power of that weekend, the power of believing things will get better, and the power of dreaming big.

I Know, Right Now You Can’t Tell

“I feel like a fraud.”

Two friends, on the same day, during separate conversations, making the same statement. Two moms struggling with postpartum depression and questioning whether their struggle is real. Whether doing something to get help is valid.

I get this. Had, in fact, just written about it. That post didn’t even end up articulating what I meant when I started writing it. My question to myself and, by posting it, to others, was: Am I making this up?

We all have good days. On those days, we question why it’s so hard at other times. We wonder if perhaps it’s all in our heads. It is, in a way, at least from a biochemical standpoint, but it’s the nature of the depression demons to make you lose sight of things.

When I am okay, I can’t really remember what it’s like to feel not okay.

When I am not okay, I really can’t imagine ever feeling good again.

It’s not like this is something I could put on a calendar and prepare for, like this:

  • Monday will be a good day, and you should prepare to go to work and not worry about whether you are going to be forcing down anxiety attacks in the middle of meetings.
  • Tuesday will not be a good day. You will not feel able to go to work, but you will have to so pack your happy mask and pretend you are all right.
  • By Wednesday, things will be on the upswing again and you’ll feel better, saner, calmer. But in the back of your mind you will know that you are still on this roller coaster and it’s going to be a while after you get off before you really know you’re not on it anymore.

If you’ve been following along, you’ll know that I’m not working right now. I took four weeks of leave, which has turned into longer than that (more on that in another post). When I went into work to talk to my boss about taking leave during what was initially a vacation week, I threw on jeans and a t-shirt and a ball cap and prayed there wouldn’t be very many people in the office. I had stuffed my pockets with Kleenex just in case and would have given anything to teleport in and out of his office so no one else would see me.

If I had gone in today, I would have been showered and dressed and looking mostly normal. If someone would have asked me how I am, I would have said “okay”. That would have been true and they probably wouldn’t have been able to tell that I’m a bit loopy from medication. But on Friday I was also okay – pretty good, actually – and then late that night I got some bad news. That slope is awfully slippery, and Saturday was one of those days where I spent the day crying and wishing I could die.

In the ratio of bad days to good over the past few weeks while I’ve been off work, the bad days are holding a solid lead. But that’s slowly shifting as each and every day I’m learning more about what I need to do to ensure the good days start to outnumber the bad, and so that eventually the bad will be few and far between. But for now, I still have really bad days and I know the process I have to go through to get past those is not an easy or a fast one, so when the good days come I try to feel grateful and not like a fraud.

Given the choice, I would actually be happy for it all to be in my head. One day it will be, but only as a memory.

 

Post dedicated to my friends T and T, who are not frauds, and to D, who was listening to “Unwell” by Matchbox Twenty with me. He had the same light bulb moment when we heard the chorus (below) and correctly guessed it would turn into a post.

“Hold on
I’m feeling like I’m headed for a
Breakdown
I don’t know why

I’m not crazy, I’m just a little unwell
I know, right now you can’t tell
But stay awhile and maybe then you’ll see
A different side of me

I’m not crazy, I’m just a little impaired
I know, right now you don’t care
But soon enough you’re gonna think of me
And how I used to be”

(YouTube won’t let me embed this video, but I’ll give you this image as a link. Because Rob Thomas is cute.)

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!