Given my recent sorrows, and
the kind enquiries of several, I've decided to write a blog.
The reasons:
1) To update those kind
enquirers as to what is happening with me.
2) To unravel the knot of
thoughts that tangle around my brain and stop it functioning at its full 18%.
3) To keep my hobby (and
dream career) of writing simmering along.
4) To give me something to
focus on, other than my dark thoughts.
5) To climb out of the
slump I find myself in, refreshed, reborn and ready for the life I want to
live.
I had a brief foray into
this sort of thing about two years ago, when I was receiving chemotherapy for
Hodgkin Lymphoma, an ass that I well and truly kicked. It helped me at the time
to bang on about having cancer and stuff, though I had to abandon the scrawling
due to nausea brought on by the drugs. I couldn't even read over what I had
written without wanting to spew. I hope my followers weren't similarly
affected! If you were among them, then I apologise for leaving you hanging:
Yes, I got better. Remission declared on 4th September 2012 . If I make it to 4th September 2014 with the all-clear from my haematologist, then
it's unlikely that Mr H will ever be back.
So I kicked The Big C's
big A - why should I be blue? Well, it would seem that the life I promised
myself as I lay incapable on the mattress is not the life I lead. I fought
to remain alive. What I am doing now does not justify that fight. This is not
living - this is existing, and I'm getting fed up of it. When people say
"Lizzie! How are you?" I like to answer honestly. When I was ill, it
was "Well, there's a question..." Earlier this year, my reply would
have been "Fantastically well, thank you!" This morning it was
"Hanging in there..."
I am not happy, not even
content. Sadness sits on my shoulders like a sopping turd, enveloping me in its
crud until everything stinks. I've moved to the next letter in The Big
alphabet. This is letter D. Deplorable. Disgusting. Depression.
I know the signs. I've had
it before, see. I think most people get it in degrees from time to time, and
how it affects them is different. This is a mild dose, but it's not going to go
away without a bit of attention. Blogs didn't exist when I had my first
encounter with the Black Dog. They do now, and I'm going to see if I can use
this to my advantage. It really helped with the cancer. I think that's a fight
that people find easier to support. Many of us - yes, me included - back off
from mind-based health probs 'cos, let's face it, you don't know where you are
with someone who has them. Are we going to wave a carrot at you and claim it's
Elvis? (No.) Are we going to pause mid-conversation to fling our clothes off
and run down the street, swearing in Latin? (Probably not.) Are we going to -
spoiler alert - burst into tears at having to take our duvet to the laundrette? Or are we going to bore you to tears banging on about how pathetic
and miserable our lives are? Maybe you'd prefer the Latin?
How Pathetic and
Miserable My Life Is:
Where I am today:
Sitting on a rented sofa
in a rented house where I live alone. Nothing about that last sentence pleases
me.
How did I get here?
The result, I imagine, of
a bunch of crappy choices that I made. I think that is all you need to know. I
was living in a beautiful, big house, in the countryside, that made me happier
than any of the previous twenty-three addresses I have lived at. (Yup,
twenty-three.) My partner of seven years (and subsequently ex-partner of
fifteen months) was living with me. Though we split back in December 2012, we
maintain an excellent relationship. He (X) is tremendously supportive and
continues to be so. But the time had come for me to move out as neither of us
could move on with our lives. I looked on the internet for houses, and this was
the first one that I deemed even remotely suitable. I snapped it up. True, it's
not really where I wanted to live and the rent is going to be a squeeze, but I
did it. Another crappy choice? Watch this space.
So, in summary:
1) Cancer. Fought it, beat
it, but life turned upside-down. Body is not the same. Fighting to deal with
that and work out what I can still do.
2) Became single. Fighting
it, but gradually succumbing. It's tough - pushing forty, never been married.
Never been engaged. Never been with someone for longer than 7 years. Actually
I've had three relationships: Nearly 3 years, nearly 4 years, nearly 8 years.
The first two chaps went on to marry the next girl they got together with. What
does that tell me, eh?
3) Moved house.
Reluctantly. Living somewhere I might not have picked if I'd had more time to
look. Fighting to settle in.
And wait, there's more.
Call Nigel Kennedy, we need violins:
4) Due to said life
changes, need to find more work, lots more work to pay the rent and the bills.
I am coming to terms with the fact that I probably won't own a house in my
lifetime. It may not be all it is cracked up to be, but it was what I wanted.
Everyone has a dream. That was (one of) mine. Fighting to keep my head above
the financial waters.
5) X is dating a new
person. The pain that accompanies this wrenches my soul apart. Loneliness is,
ironically, my companion. I go for days without hugs - I love hugs! I fall
asleep clutching my Zippy doll as if my life depends on it. I am fighting it
too.
Now before you tut your
"Oh POOR Lizzie! Doing what every other bugger in the world has to do. Suck
it up, girl." Or even "Really? There are so many people in the world
worse off than this!" along with me (because I too berate myself for being
so rubbish, with similar lines), bear in mind that this is all a lot harder to
take with the mental state I find myself in. Even the work I already have is
nigh on impossible. I have to nail my concentration down to a chair and
threaten it with ice water. As I understand it, we have chemicals in our brains
that move from one place to another to indicate that we are happy, or at least
content. Some days demand more of it than others to keep us going. If we make
enough of the stuff, we can manage OK through those times. But some of us only
have a trickle of this magic dust. We're fine when the going is good, but when
the chips are down, the trickle dries up and we can't handle it. Me, I'm a
trickler.
http://www.blackdoginstitute.org.au/public/Depression/depressionexplained/index.cfm
and http://www.nhs.uk/conditions/depression/Pages/Introduction.aspx explain the
symptoms very well. In fact, reading that link in order to add it to the blog
has just given me another moment of realisation. I've been ticking off items on
that list for months, and I had no idea. A little enlightenment this evening -
a bit of a "Eureka " moment for me, and I've shared it with you.
I'm definitely Black Dogging it. (Which is definitely not as fun as it might sound.)
Realisation aside, I
didn't suspect it was back until the day when I possibly had to take my
duvet to the laundrette as a result of the flea infestation in the house (boy,
have I some tales to tell you...) My inner monologue, punctuated by escalating
hysterics, went like this:
"Where's the laundrette?
You mean I'll have to get into the car with my washing? I don't know where I'm
going, I've only just moved in! What if they're closed? What if I can't park?
I'll have to drag my duvet down the street for nothing? How much is it going to
cost? I can't afford it! I don't want to sit in the laundrette with people. I
want to stay here and hide under my potentially flea-infested duvet and
cryyyyyyyy." I was absolutely helpless. There was no way that I could work
out what I had to do. In the end, I called X who managed to calm me down get me
pursuing the first steps of a plan - calling the Pest Control guy, who said that
the washing of the duvet was not necessary, just the bedding. That was easily
bundled in the car and transported, along with a still-sobbing me, to X's house
and my old machine. The ability to respond rationally to a simple situation had
abandoned me in a way that I hadn't experienced for a good decade. That was
over a month ago. There have been several more incidents like that since then.
I wouldn't blame you for being scared. It frightens the crap outta me.
Last week I finally faced
facts - the only way forward for me is medical intervention. I've never had a
lot of fun with anti-depressants. Reading the list of side effects is often
more depressing that the original illness. I last popped one back in 2004, I
think. Never mind the dizziness or the dopiness, the biggest issue (literally)
was my dress size. It magically expanded, as did I, over the 3-year period I
was medicated. Slimming World saved me from the 17st 9lb girl-mountain I became,
but that too is another story. With fantastic before and after photos, which I
shall no doubt share at some point.
Being overweight is not
going to cheer me up, especially given my marital status. Since the chemo, I'm
iffy about putting stuff into my bod that it doesn't want. (Er yes, that would
include potential suitors. ANOTHER STORY.) I read somewhere that exercise is an
excellent treatment, and the doctor (who was lovely, by the way - really
sympathetic, just what I needed) agreed with me. She "prescribed" me the
Healthy Lifestyle Scheme, taking place at the local pool and leisure centre.
"You get gym sessions at a discount, and a personal trainer to help you at
the start." Being Lizzie involves avoiding people where possible. A
depressed Lizzie would slide under buses in order to avoid people, especially
strangers, and especially especially in any sort of sweaty, half-dressed
scenario. (Yup, the speed dating is off.) And yet today I set myself a target -
walk to the leisure centre and bloody well sign up for this. Put your head down
and DO IT. I did it. My initial consultation is next Wednesday. I had to hold
back tears when the receptionist smiled at me at the completion of the
transaction, but I walked back in the sunshine, satisfied and hopeful. Even if
I loathe it, I shall be looking at it as medicine. It's only for 12 weeks -
half the length of my chemo - and, if it works, I shall be feeling better as I
near the end of the treatment. I am using the fighting spirit that I summoned
up to kick Mr H's butt into the middle of last century. I'm relieved to see
that I still have it, though it is buried under a lot of crud. As for the doc,
I'm to go back to her in a fortnight if I don't feel any different, and we
shall discuss tablets. There's an element of suspense for you, right there.
You know something? This
writing lark is already working. I feel weights starting to shift: not lift
yet, but moving to slightly less uncomfortable positions. All
I ask of you reader, (and dare I say, friend) is that you bear with me. It is
going to be a rollercoaster. I will do my best to laugh at myself, as always
seems to be the path of choice. I will aim for as much honesty as possible. I'm
its number one fan, and when I can't employ it, it brings about the blackest
clouds.
I must add that I will
endeavour not to mention anything that I think may upset individuals who may
get caught in the story, but I am only too aware that I can't please all of
the people all of the time. So if you see something that makes you unhappy, or
you think might affect someone else, I would appreciate a direct email to me
citing the problem. I am very sensitive to upsetting people. I am always
mortified, and retreat into my shell a little more when it occurs. I wouldn't
make a very good UKIP MP. Thank goodness that is not a career path that I have
my heart set on trotting down!
And if you happen to see
me irl (in real life, non web-wise ones), just act as you usually would. Just
know that I may cry at harsh words. I may also cry at kind words. Come to think
of it, I may cry at pretty much anything, like a blackbird singing in the
garden, or pretty music, or hearing about your holiday plans and remembering
that I don't have any, nor money to pay for a holiday, nor a chap to plan a
holiday with. Tears and self-pity flow freely, for which I am sorry, which is
another reason why you might not see much of me. For a while, at least.
This old boot is
rebooting, baby. Rising like a phoenix from the fading light - not like a
bearded transvestite, but just as dramatically I expect. And I'm going to let
you watch. Fantastic.
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