weeksy wrote: ↑Wed Nov 25, 2020 10:19 am
The initial post was more regarding the day to day hi/low points, rather than clinical depression. We all have good and bad days, we all have days where we need a release, so was more along those lines of how do you get your release from it, rather than the medical depression context.
My way of dealing with it day to day has been riding a motorbike. Pre buying my first bike I had no way of dealing with it and when I started riding it was a revelation!!!
When I started doing seasons, I replaced bikes in the winter with skiing - instant smiles and happies
Dancing was another thing that I could do and randomly feel better!
Going on TRC and now here is another way!
For almost 3.5 years, biking (when I've tried it) has been painful. Enjoyable but the pain meant I couldn't relax and enjoy as I remember.
Skiing was also tough
Couldn't dance cos, well, damn, that really did hurt - and in an Aprés situation there was always the risk of being bumped into
Been tough to lose 3/4 things you use daily/weekly to make you feel better!!
inewham wrote: ↑Wed Nov 25, 2020 8:24 pm
Many work places are getting more enlightened about mental health and recommend various things, my employer has been running courses on things like mindfulness.
Sadly, I haven't found medical people here to be particularly enlightened when it comes to depression. Will keep looking!!
moth wrote: ↑Wed Nov 25, 2020 10:39 am
With depression it's not the ups and downs of everyday life, it's your ability to cope with the ups and downs of everyday life. Some people can't,
some people think they can but they can't - they're the ones that break hardest, some people need a 'crutch', be it drugs and/or therapy. Some just need to MTFU.
Unfortunately, I seem to have been one that thinks they can but can't!!
I was depressed to the point of thinking suicide almost everyday for the 25 years before I escaped to the mountains for my first season.
From my mid teens (if not before) I used to want it all to end, I'd watch the front of big trucks and buses from the pavement and contemplate - but I couldn't do that to the person driving; also had friends in all three services locally, so someone I knew would have to deal with the clear up.
The same went for considering other ways - someone I knew was always going to have to clear up. And if I wouldn't put someone I knew through it, how was it fair to put someone I didn't (in a different area!) through it. So I clung on with my fingernails trying to stay relatively sane. (My mother was great the first time I tried to talk to her about it and told me not to be so silly and 'get a grip dear'!!) In my late 20's a family member was the third car to hit a 'jumper' on the M5 - what that did to her made me know 100% I couldn't, regardless of how much I wanted to, put anyone through dealing with me 'opting out'
I kept coming back because I fell in love with the place but also because it seemed to heal my mind pretty well too!!!
The last three years I've had an awful lot of 'things' happening. Around me and to me. Right up until last week I really did think I was dealing with it quite well (even when I didn't come here for a few weeks after a post about friends with the after effects of Covid turned into anti-'fat'-female responses!! I'm a fat female and so comments of fat bashing do make me feel pretty shitty - despite the dietician at rehab being massively impressed that I am roughly the same weight now as I was just before I crashed!! She found that unusual at the least!!).
However - my physio talked to me quite strongly last week about depression. I was still in denial - I'm not suicidal, I love where I live, I'm getting the use of my shoulder/arm back - WTF would I be depressed. After spending 48 hours in tears whilst I thought about it, when I saw him again I had to say that he was right. But it is a different type of depression. Insidious and quiet and I hadn't realised until Antoine
made me think about it. I'd been home 3 weeks by then, quite isolated and a bit lonely (that's a first for me up here); I hadn't done any of the things I'd looked forward to, cooking, baking, sewing, walking out on the snow - I now realise that that is quite a big sign (for me!) and there were the other things that the physio had noticed
Luckily for me, now I'm aware that depression is back but different, I feel I can work on it on my own. I have no trust of medical personnel after my treatment by various professionals when I asked for help in my 20's. I do realise things have changed but I would have to find someone I trusted who also spoke enough English for us to communicate about something quite challenging. Antoine is keen for me to see someone but is letting me try and work on it for a while for myself. I know that if I can't improve alone he will gently nudge me to find help and probably help me find the right person (it's a bugger and a blessing when your physio also studied psychology!!
)
For now it's still weird after the realisation, but at least I have an explanation for crying at random, not remotely sad, things on the telly!! And probably for the loneliness too - I've always been just fine alone, but it's a bit of a struggle this Winter - normally loads of people arrive at the end of November so meeting up with old friends and making new ones. And also for the staying in but actually doing much!! I fill my days but am not massively productive!!
Today is the first day I've seen people for a chat other than my physio in two weeks
I've seen two couples and spent a long time chatting with both. Feels good - I'm wiped out, but happy to have chatted with good people!!
I do talk to a couple of French 'friends' - not sure they are but they are kind enough to talk French with me and 'chat' when I go get a hot chocolate or vin chaud from their restaurants!! But I'm not quite at the 'chatting' point in French. Once I am that will be much easier too!!