Today, my brain feels pretty functional and I feel calm despite the fact that I still have a number of unknowns in my life including the results of my MRI from last Friday. I spent a good 2-3 weeks up until last Friday on a roller coaster of anxiety. I can’t remember if it was Wednesday or Thursday of last week but on one of those days I was a mess for a few hours. I was so worried about my MRI and the prospect of going through cancer treatment all over again. I have had plenty of sadness and fear. This was different than in times past. As I have written, I have felt storms of emotion at different times during the past 1 1/2 years. But at my core there was a sense of peace and calm.
How was my core different this time? In addition to the stress around the MRI being scheduled, then cancelled, then rescheduled (I hate that kind of stuff), about a week or two into that whole mess, my energy dipped precipitously. I was really really fatigued. Like everyone else, I have a low energy day every once in awhile. But I had several in a row. And the fatigue felt different to me, it was the kind that can pull me down into very sad places. This scared me. Anxiety followed by prolonged fatigue is how my depression has started in the past. And I have had periods of time, especially in the winter when I experience this fatigue and although I can never be certain, it feels like the start of a depressive episode that never happens because I am able to fight it off with my medication and cognitive therapy techniques.
I have not had clinical depression in over 10 years but it has been a strong concern of mine that I would have a recurrence due to the stress of being a cancer patient. So I was really scared last week and although I talked to a few people about the fears I had about cancer recurrence, I told no one, not even my husband, about my fear of being depressed again. I felt isolated, lonely and guilty about being a very needy person. I was still able to work and behave with a semblance of normalcy when it was very important that I did so.
By Thursday night, I started feeling significantly less stressed. I had gotten the core of peace and serenity back even though I was still distressed. But I wasn’t entirely back to whatever “normal” is these days. My emotional states change so much more frequently and intensely than they used to and I understand why they do. I can live with the “normal crazy” of cancer treatment. I am still myself but in technicolor. When I am depressed I am not myself. There are some people who have persistent depression, which tends to be a steady, low level misery.
In contrast, when I’ve gotten depressed, it has been acute and more severe. I fell into a very scary, powerless, and hopeless chasm, into a world where I could act like myself for some periods of time but it was acting. And I didn’t feel like myself at all. The first time it happened, I kept thinking that if I just kept problem solving, it would go away. So I let my untreated depression go on for some time. The second time it happened, I recognized it within a week or two and thought, “Oh no, we’re not doing this again” and got myself back to see a psychologist and my internist within a week and my symptoms started subsiding very quickly, within a couple of weeks.
Now that I’m writing this, I am realizing that I handled that last episode pretty well. And I am also still seeing a psychologist every month, not to mention all of the healthy things I do that are good for both physical and mental health. Depression, you are not welcome, but if you come anyway, I can deal with you, too.
Thinking of you…
Thanks so very much!
dear Elizabeth,
this was a powerful and insightful post, and I think it took a great deal of courage to write. I am happy for you that you figured out what was going on, that you have triumphed and are okay. I send you many warm hugs and will hold you close to my heart as you wait for your MRI results.
much love and light,
Karen, TC
Thanks so much Karen!
I can’t tell you how much this post resonated in me. After going through 5 biopsies, a lumpectomy, then chemo with Herceptin and getting ready for radiation, it came to light that there was an area the staff forgot to biopsy months before. I became depressed and “not myself”, thinking all this treatment was for nothing…..
Thanks for writing-
You are very welcome. I am so sorry that you had to go through all of that. I hope you are well.
Impressive post.
I am sending you something to lift your spirits. Hugs, love & prayers.
The rest I will send via e-mail. Feel free to delete it.
Mom, my spirits are much better. No worries.
A HUGE merci for that, dear Elizabeth.
Thanks so much, Agnes!
Excellent post. Thanks for writing it.
I recently had a time of clinical depression and started taking antidepressants. (Although, as with all medicines that are suggested to me, I fought the idea for far too long before finally agreeing.) I feel mostly better now, but I’m keeping up the meds. There’s is something depressing about metastatic cancer. (Imagine that!)
There is also something depressing about being in remission but knowing that the threat of a recurrence is always there. You are admirable (in yet another way) for being aware of the possibility of depression and taking lifestyle measures to prevent it, as well as having a plant to deal if it should could.
One more reason to love you.
Sweetie, I love you, too! I wish you the very best. I am sorry that you have struggled with depression because it is so yucky. I am glad that you have gotten help and are feeling better. One thing that may have been helpful for me to mention in my post is that I have never gotten depressed while on medication. My last recurrence happened a year after I took myself off of Zoloft. At the time, I figured that the depression was due to situational factors that had changed. But based on later understanding of depression, exogenous depression can stimulate subsequent endogenous depressive episodes and that is what appeared to happen for me with the second episode. Not to underemphasize the impact of cognitive behavioral therapy but I appear to need both types of strategies to avoid recurrence.
Good for you, Elizabeth-life isn’t an easy journey…but you are one brave warrier!
Thanks so much, Meredyth!
[…] was somewhat surprised with the intensity of the positive comments I received about my recent post, I can deal. And this is one of the reasons I write about my own experience with depression. Depression is […]