Monday, July 9, 2012

The State of Your Mental: 7 Signs You May Not Be as "Okay" as You Think

I'm just coming out of a depression. This came as quite a surprise to me because I had no idea that I was actually in a depression. As I think about what I am about to write here, I'm not certain why it's such a big a surprise given my life over the past few months. First, I found a lump under my armpit. While I knew that to be a sign of lymphoma/leukemia, for me, it actually turned out to be nothing. Praise God. But the stress of knowing it was there until I found out it was nothing was almost unbearable. The day before I found out my lump was nothing, my mother died of uterine cancer (a huge, aggressive uterine tumor), just six weeks after I found out she was ill, and the day before her appointment to get scheduled to have a hysterectomy and have it removed. The day after I returned from my mother's funeral I found out that I too had uterine tumors and would need to have a hysterectomy—a similar issue that had just killed my mother. Yep. This was my life inside of about one week.

Yes, I was sadder than sad. Afraid. A bit panicked. But I had no idea I was depressed even though I should have expected it. To me, I was just "okay."

Everyday, I got up and went to work. I took care of my son. I continued trying to write novels, although found it a little more difficult to concentrate. I social networked, although maybe curtailed it a bit. This was my view of my life. Overall everything seemed relatively normal to me. And every time someone would ask me how I was doing, I would say, "I'm okay."

 My dad knew better.

He's been keeping an ultra eagle eye on me through all of this, especially since I began my post-surgery recovery, and I couldn't figure out why. When he'd ask how I was doing and I would tell him "I'm okay," he would say, "No, really, how are you doing?" I now realize he saw in me what I didn't.

If depression can happen to me it can happen to anyone. And the thing is, you don't always know you're in that dark place until you return to the the light again. But as I look back on this period in my life, these are a few signs that I should have realized signaled something wasn't quite right with the state of my mental.

1. Insomnia. If you can't sleep, even with a sleep aid, you might be depressed. I had problems sleeping. Even taking Percocet!I went to bed exhausted. Woke up in the middle of the night. Sat up for hours. And usually fell asleep right before my natural body clock was preparing to wake me up. The lack of sleep was really the first part of the depression cycle for me...everything else kind of went downhill from there.

2. Lack of energy. If you don't have the energy to go about your usual day, you might be depressed. For me, every day was a slog. I thought I was just exhausted from the lack of sleep but now I realize that my lack of energy was probably part of the whole avalanche effect that comes with depression. You're depressed so you can't sleep. You can't sleep so you have no energy and the couch becomes your best and worst friend.

3. Emotionally Withdrawn. If you don't want to socialize or talk to people (and you usually do), you might be depressed. My friends and family would call to check on me and I couldn't talk. Not wouldn't talk, couldn't talk. The thing was I thought I couldn’t talk because I was tired and had no energy from the lack of sleep. No, mentally I was just in a dark place and didn't want to have to tell people I was "okay" when somewhere inside I felt like a hundred pounds of hot diarrhea. Bleck.

4. Over-eating or Under-eating. If you don't want food or want too much of it, you might be depressed. I'm an emotional eater anyway. So when I came out of surgery wanting to scarf down everything in front of me then I should have known something was off, especially with all the pain and medication. When I came home, I didn't want to eat at all. If my dad didn't come and prepare my meals, I probably wouldn't have eaten much of anything for the first few weeks. Didn't want food.

5. Irritable. If you're cranky with the ones you love you might be depressed. I was a big time cranky pants, snapping for no apparent reason. And I'm usually way more even-tempered...nice even. But between the pain from the surgery, the sleeplessness and the lack of energy, I thought a little crankiness was to be expected but as I come out of my slump I realize, no, I was really depressed.

6. Emotional Meltdown. When you overreact emotionally to something you'd normally take in stride, you might be depressed. Okay so the power went out in the house last week due to a freak storm. When the power came back on, I only had power in half the house. I'd never heard of such. So, immediately I thought the problem must be with my electrical system. And all I could think about was the thousands of dollars it would cost to hire an electrician and get the stuff replaced. When it rains it pours, and boy did I let it pour. I cried and cried and cried. But as I laugh about it today, I realize now I wasn't really crying about the electrical. It was the first time I had really good cry (even with my diagnosis) since my mother's funeral and the surgery.

7. Loss of focus/concentration. When I'm down in the dumps, I usually write my way out of it. Well, because of the above I couldn't focus well enough to do the one thing I love more than anything else I could do in this world. At that point, I should've known something was really wrong. Me not writing? Unheard of. In two years I haven't started. Thankfully my mojo is coming back--and you have this blog to prove it.

Experiencing one of these symptoms at a time may be tolerable. But experiencing most or all of them at the same time is a huge red flag. My cousin Mary Lou described depression as being "sneaky" and she is so right. It crept up on me without my even being aware. If you get a cut you bleed. Depression is not that clear cut. You have to be aware of your body’s warnings. If someone had told me (as my father tried to), that I was in a depression, I would've said "no, I'm okay." I wanted to share this blog because it might help someone else who is in the State of Denial on the State of their Mental. When we are dealing with stressful lives and traumatic situations, we have to be mindful of how we "really" feel. We may not be as "okay" as we think!

The Good News: I’m coming back
!
What Doesn’t Kill You Will Only Make You Stronger!




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Saturday, May 12, 2012

Mind Tricks Aren't Just For Jedis - Top 4 Ways to Dump Your Mate without Dumping Your Mate


Resistance is futile. You're at the end of your rope. The relationship has drawn to an unsatisfying end. Despite five screaming matches, four silent treatments, three nasty emails, two doors slammed, and a prayer that your partner would fall off the edge of a round Earth, they refuse to let go. Refuse to stop calling. Refuse to stop stalking your house. They didn't try this hard to keep you in their lives while you were happy so why in the heck are they trying to hold on when you're miserable and ready for the big break?

Long answer short? Ego.


Truth is they probably don't want to be with you either. They want to leave. They just don't want you to want to leave them first--or more. Confusing? Let me explain. Your break up starts out swimmingly. You're both sufficiently angry and spiteful to end the travesty cleanly when out of no where comes that darn ego. It enters on a hush. At first it says, "You don't need her! You were always too good for her!" [Insert "him" as appropriate]. Then the self doubt kicks in, and his ego shifts to offensive mode. "Well, if I'm too good for her, why is HE trying to leave me ME!"

Let the stalking commence. 

Mind you nothing's changed except the shift in ego that has taken your partner from exasperation to desperation. In order to get out of the relationship in peace, you'll need to learn the ego-friendly Jedi mind trick. The key is to stick and move. Push your ego aside so you can knock the last wind out of the relationship.

When you need to dump your partner without them actually feeling dumped--which takes skill, prowess, and a lot of lying your butt off--follow use one (or all) of these four tips and you too can free yourself of their ego, your pain, and move on with your new life.

1. "It's not you, it's me." While it may be a bit trite in this day and time, the principle is still highly effective. Nothing feeds an ego better than when your partner watches you starve your own. Admitting your own faults and flaws, however insincere, will shift the ego back into first gear. You know, the "He doesn't deserve me, I'm too good for him mode." Be careful though. Pouring it on too thick might have the unintended affect of making your partner defend you and say, "You weren't that bad. We can work it out."

2. "I value you too much as a person to stay in a relationship in which I can't give you what you need and deserve." Sounds damn good doesn't it? Talk about feeding an ego. In essence, you're saying, "I value you so much more than I value myself that I'm willing to let you go...but not without angst." It's beautiful. It's perfect. So much so you don't want to diddle with this one too much.

3. "I need to work on myself so I can be a better person for you. But I need to do it on my own." Ooh. Good isn't it? It's best to use this one on the run. Change your phone number, address, and disappear never to be heard from again. Or pray really hard they find someone else before they even consider a reconciliation. If you stick around too long, someone may just be desperate enough to wait you out.

4. "We can stay together, but I think we should stop sleeping together until ALL of our problems are resolved." This one's especially effective for the ladies. Can you say skid marks? No partner who isn't deeply in love with and committed to you (and even one who is) isn't going to stick around for too long if you're not giving up the cookies. Add to that the fact that there's a snowball's chance in hell you will ever resolve ALL of your problems. You could be together 100 years and never accomplish that feat. This tip is highly effective as long as you stick to your guns, keep your panties/boxers up and your dress down (or pants up). 

K.L. Brady is the award-winning author of the hilarious relationship-centric romantic comedies The Bum Magnet and Got a Right to Be Wrong published by Simon & Schuster Gallery/Pocket. Visit her blog at www.thebummagnet.blogspot.com.



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