Showing posts with label PostPartum Depression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PostPartum Depression. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 April 2009

The Way It Was. The Way It Is. (Part 3)

A Parable of Grace


This is the third in a series of posts on my walk through clinical depression.  You can find part one here, and part two here.  If you have not read them yet, I'd be pleased if you would start with them.


For the kingdom of heaven is like a marriage...

A certain young man took to himself a wife and they loved each other and lived together several years and had a child together.

One day the wife was no longer able to look after the things that had always been her responsibility.  She could barely get out of bed in the morning to look after their precious little girl, although she did.  She couldn't prepare meals, she didn't do laundry, and she certainly wasn't vacuuming, dusting, or cleaning toilets.  She couldn't converse about her husband's work with him when he came home after a long day and a long commute.  There was no physical intimacy.  He was doing all the tasks at home that weren't being done during the day, and he was getting worn down.

A short time before, the wife had watched another couple's marriage collapse as they went through a similar time.  And the wife of our story began to fear.  She said to herself, "What is my husband getting from our marriage?  I'm not filling any of his needs; I offer him nothing except free child care, and it's possible that he'd be better off having someone else look after My Girl."  And the hole she was living in grew deeper, the clouds surrounding her grew darker and heavier, and the veil in front of her eyes that kept her from seeing colour and light grew thicker.

So the woman said to her husband, "Why do you stay?  Why don't you go somewhere where you can go on with life without this additional burden."

And he said to her, "Because, even though this is terrible for me, too, years ago I promised to be your husband until we were parted in death.  I didn't know what would come, but I made that promise knowing that there could be things that neither of us expected.  I don't love you because of what you do for me, nor because you love me.  I love you and I stay because I promised before God, and there is no way that I will ever walk away from you or that promise."

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I have since come to learn that, in a small way, that is a picture of the Lord's love for me, for all of us.  We really have nothing to offer Him.  Even the things that we think we can do are so imperfect that it's shameful to think that we offer them to God Of The Universe.  But He loves us.  Not because of what we do.  Not because of how we look, or act.  And not even because of our deep spirituality.  He loves us because we are His and He made a promise to us to be faithful to us, even when we have nothing at all to offer Him.

And so my life has been, and still is, and always will be, a parable.

Thursday, 16 April 2009

The Way It Was. The Way It Is. (Part 2)

This is the second in a series of posts on my walk through clinical depression. If you are just joining me here at PeaceLedge, please start with the first post.


I had wanted all my life to be a mother. When I was growing up, if anyone asked me what I wanted to be, my answer would be one of two things: a mother or a teacher. Now here I was, with my hopes for my life fulfilled: I'd been a teacher, in both Canada and Russia, and now I was a mother.

So why wasn't I joyful? Where was the thrill that I'd heard would come when I held my little girl? Intellectually I knew that I loved my daughter, and there was nothing I wouldn't do for her, but the feelings I'd expected weren't there.

My life was reduced to going through the motions. I talked to My Girl as I changed her diaper and dressed her, I nuzzled her tummy, cuddled, and played. But it was all external. These were things I did because I knew that I needed to do them. There was no internal drive pressing me toward My Girl, only a knowledge, coming from years of studying child development, of what she would need to thrive and a determination that I would give her that if it was all I could give her.

On the outside, apparently, things looked pretty good. I was what my doctor referred to as "a high functioning depressive". (Maybe somewhat perversely I was a bit proud of that.) I attended church and weekly Bible study, and I took great care to look nice for those things. I didn't realize then the impact all my subconscious masking was having.

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People I knew, friends, acquaintances from church, would hold My Girl and coo at her, admire her, tell me how lucky I was, how blessed. And I knew it was true.

All around me there were people whose hearts were breaking: friends who had been married years longer than we had been, longing for a child of their own, but unable to conceive; a friend who longed to be a wife and mother, but was unable to find the man who would see her beauty and potential; acquaintances from church who had, one year earlier, lost their two year old daughter in a drowning accident; family members whose first child had been desperately ill for his first two years of life and was still struggling. Compared to that, we were walking an easy road: a loving marriage, good careers, health, and now a beautiful, healthy, content baby girl. Why wasn't I happy. Why was I sad all the time? Why couldn't I enjoy these blessings? Why wasn't I thankful? Why couldn't I smile and laugh anymore?


And so the guilt began. Guilt over being 'ungrateful' for this little one. Guilt over having so much when others were suffering so deeply. Guilt over not being joyful with what I had. Guilt for not loving motherhood. Guilt over not measuring up to my expectations of what a mother should be.

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Wednesday, 15 April 2009

The Way It Was. The Way It Is.

In person I'm quite open about this part of my life, but I have hesitated to write much about it here, mainly because of not always knowing who exactly my audience is. But recently it has become clear to me that PeaceLedge is for me, mostly, a place to write and process, a place to share what I choose with those who choose to listen. And I've also come to realize that there are others who might benefit from hearing about this, even while I'm still in process.

I've always been a bit proud of my brain. I was raised to be a thinker, to analyse and discern. Mathematics came easily; I excelled at the academics of school. I was one of those children who thrive in an environment of clear expectations and affirmation for conformity, the kind of setting that is found in a typical public school.

But more than that alone, I was also a person who desperately needed affirmation, and the most likely source for that was through my academic achievements. I didn't believe that there was anything special about me, anything of value, and so I thought that if I could get high grades, awards, and scholastic recognition, if I could always be 'good', I would be worthwhile to those who I cared about, would have succeeded at what they respected, and would finally be . . . lovable. So I developed my intellect, my scholastic skills. And in doing that, I invested even more into my brain.

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When I was 27, after 6 years of marriage, completing my B.Ed., teaching in a Christian school, and serving as a missionary in Russia with my husband, I gave birth to our first child. We were so amazed at this little person who had joined us, at this little life that flowed out of our very own lives. But the birth process itself was traumatic for me, physically and emotionally. And so began a downward spiral that has shaped the rest of my life.

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I have some very clear mental images of the early months of my daughter's life. Some are beautiful: My Girl's sweet, nearly-bald head nestled in my arms as she nursed; her early and ever-present smile, offered to anyone who would receive it. Some are not so lovely: walking into my bedroom and dropping across the bed, falling into an immediate sleep after My Girl went down for a nap, the house uncleaned, dinner unprepared, unthought of, even; getting ready for church on Sunday morning and having a smile for those I met, then coming home and weeping for hours, complete puzzlement on the face of Dear Man; walking away from a conversation with a kind man, knowing that I had nodded and responded at all the right places, but having no clue what that moments-ago conversation had been about, even while we were conversing.

But images of that time, whether lovely or ugly, are very few. While it is common to go through early baby days in a blur, this time for me was more like a complete black-out. As I write this I'm still surprised at how very little I recall of those early months. In fact, my memory doesn't really kick-in in earnest until My Girl was about nine months old.

This was more than the typical exhaustion of a new baby, more than the forgetfulness of a mind slightly numbed by lack of sleep and major change, although I didn't know it at the time. My family doctor began monitoring me weekly soon after My Girl was born, but I didn't realize that was not typical. She mentioned to me occasionally that, while being blue after a baby is born is normal, I wasn't pulling out of it like she would expect, and that maybe I needed to consider that there was something more serious going on. But I didn't realize that it was as serious as it turned out to be. I thought she was suggesting possibilities, not stating facts. And so I kept on for months, thinking things would change, that I would become more energetic again.

It wasn't just energy, though, that was out of kilter. It was emotion. It was response. It was everything. I knew I loved my dear daughter, but there was no joy in my days. I interacted with her constantly because I knew what was needed for infant development, but I did it with a haze about me, a dark fog that never lifted. It was like I was a distant observer to someone else playing with My Girl.

Then came the day that my doctor told me I really needed to consider treatment for depression. Can I even begin to express the shock that I felt at that? I thought I was doing alright, that I was coping, that I was in control. Can you guess why I thought that? It was because I had learned all I could about post-partum depression since my doctor first mentioned it to me. I had signed out every possible book at the library and read them all cover to cover. I KNEW about post-partum depression. I was trusting in my brain, the intellect that I had nurtured through life. I understood it. I had it under control.

But now my brain had betrayed me.

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Shortcut to Part 3
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This is the first in a series about my walk through clinical depression. It is a continuing walk, not over yet. Please join me in praying for others who are walking this walk and are feeling alone. I pray, too, that while you read my story, you will realize that everyone 'does their depression differently'. The road is not the same for all of us, the depth of the darkness varies from person to person, from day to day. Do not underestimate the pain of one walking this road because it doesn't look like you think it 'should'. My story is not the same as anyone else's, and while there are many things I am thankful for in hindsight, I still wouldn't wish it on anyone.
And, thanks to you, for reading this far.