Before the year 2000, I never thought about Depression. I knew folks suffered from it. I watched both of my parents deal with it as they approached the end of their run on the planet. Before 2000, I had not yet felt the crush of the dark pit as it wrapped itself around me.
It was in 2001 or 2002, I was talked into being part of the first run of Interferon based therapy for Hepatitis. The regimen called for a year of many painful self injections and pills that made me feel about as shitty as a human can feel. It was pure unadulterated misery for me. I lasted a couple of months.
Seems of all the nasty side affects, down at the bottom of the list in print so small, I had to read it with a magnifying glass; there it was. 11% of the trial patients experienced suicidal ideation. Of course, I did not find this out until I had already attempted suicide. Of course, being a rookie, a NooB, an inexperienced suicide hobbyist, I failed. Half ass attempt for sure, but it certainly scared the shit out of me. I dropped out of the program.
Ever since my run in with those bad pharmaceuticals prescribed for my hepatitis, I have had to deal with on again, off again bouts of depression. Thinking back, I was probably depressive to a degree before the medicine, it was only after taking the meds, the depression magnified and now dealing with it is a constant concern. I wake up many mornings and wonder if today is the start of another depression bender.
The up side........ yeah, there is actually an upside I think .............. The upside is that now, as if to balance out my life's biorhythms, the low notes are offset by wonderful high notes. I get to experience the joy of mania. Up is often really up; I'm flying, thoughts move so quickly I have trouble getting a handle on them. But when I am able to grab one, my focus is impressive. I guess even bad medicine can have a silver lining.
A friend asked me a few years back what did Depression feel like. I am sure everyone has their own notion of what it is or isn't. But I told him that for me it was like existing as nothing, or maybe a kind of non-existence with my eyes open. Nothing matters. Nobody cares, least of all me. The out there world is a fantasy land that is maybe or maybe not just a figment of my imagination.
Seems of all the nasty side affects, down at the bottom of the list in print so small, I had to read it with a magnifying glass; there it was. 11% of the trial patients experienced suicidal ideation. Of course, I did not find this out until I had already attempted suicide. Of course, being a rookie, a NooB, an inexperienced suicide hobbyist, I failed. Half ass attempt for sure, but it certainly scared the shit out of me. I dropped out of the program.
Ever since my run in with those bad pharmaceuticals prescribed for my hepatitis, I have had to deal with on again, off again bouts of depression. Thinking back, I was probably depressive to a degree before the medicine, it was only after taking the meds, the depression magnified and now dealing with it is a constant concern. I wake up many mornings and wonder if today is the start of another depression bender.
The up side........ yeah, there is actually an upside I think .............. The upside is that now, as if to balance out my life's biorhythms, the low notes are offset by wonderful high notes. I get to experience the joy of mania. Up is often really up; I'm flying, thoughts move so quickly I have trouble getting a handle on them. But when I am able to grab one, my focus is impressive. I guess even bad medicine can have a silver lining.
A friend asked me a few years back what did Depression feel like. I am sure everyone has their own notion of what it is or isn't. But I told him that for me it was like existing as nothing, or maybe a kind of non-existence with my eyes open. Nothing matters. Nobody cares, least of all me. The out there world is a fantasy land that is maybe or maybe not just a figment of my imagination.
Hmm .........
And that brings up an entirely new subject. Is Reality nothing but a group figment of our imaginations?
Keep it 'tween the ditches ...............................................................
_________________________
A song I have always felt was about what I called "being low" when I was younger was "Paint it Black" by the Rolling Stones. When I looked it up with google, they agreed. So enjoy this tune from the mid 1960's.
2 comments:
The going up was worth the coming down
https://youtu.be/TV8KmNoLd2g
I read about that 11% when I had considered taking it..said fuck that..I've never had depression and knew enough about it not to fuck with it..sorry you had to go thru that..
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