Part I – Recognising Depression

 

– By Kazza K

I’m posting two blogs on depression – Depression Part 1, Recognising It. Then I will post over the next few days Depression Part 2, Some Helpful Strategies and Ideas to Cope. This is all done within the frame of a friendly blog. I truly dislike depression and I know the stats are around 1 in 5 people at any point in time is suffering from depression. We were talking about it on FaceBook recently and I felt like sharing my thoughts and feelings. I’ve worked with depressed clients, I’ve helped depressed friends, and I’ve suffered depression.

 

Without rattling on too much about my experience I feel it’s important to state that I have suffered depression. I don’t mind people knowing, it’s nothing to be ashamed of, just for the record. I had the most shocking Post Natal Depression. Basically, it was Post Natal Psychosis. I won’t go into all the details, because there are too many things to cover, and it was awful, but let’s just say I couldn’t cope after my son’s birth, at all. I couldn’t perform the most basic of everyday activities – like make up formula, feed my child, look after my 7 year old, cook dinner, pull myself together much to stop crying or panicking. I also felt like I wanted to run away – where to I could never say – but my husband caught me trying to escape through the back gate on a number of occasions. I also couldn’t sleep, I was lucky to have three hours sleep a night which, of course, compounds things. I also kept battling inner voices telling me to “just drop your son” or for me to “stand behind the car” as my husband reversed out of the garage. There was more, but I don’t wish to elaborate. I didn’t fill my husband in on these horrific, frightening thoughts until I was more lucid, which was quite a few months down the track. My husband knew what a state I was in by and large, and would not leave me alone, at all. We were lucky to be self employed so he could do this for me and for our family. My husband’s family were scattered to the four winds, so they couldn’t help and my family are best not discussed. After I recovered from the initial loss of total control and inability to function, I felt like my life amounted to not much more than trying to crawl out of a big black hole, with no footholds anywhere to be seen. Obviously my life got better, I’m a therapist and I’ve worked with plenty of clients, post my own major depressive episode, but it took years for me to get properly back on my feet again. I’m still prone to depressive bouts, not a lot but they do occur. If you have a severe depressive episode it sometimes has a hangover effect of smaller/occasional bouts of depression after, but please don’t think this is true of everyone; I had a particularly severe psychotic episode. What exacerbates this for me is that I cannot handle any anti-depressants, which, well, sucks, because AD’s can be incredibly helpful for people suffering depression, particularly for those with more moderate to severe depression.

 

Yes, there are degrees of severity of depression, just as there is with anxiety. Together with your therapist and/or doctor you will be able to work out how severe your depression is and what should be done to help you through. Of course, family members are invaluable at knowing how bad things may be for you as they love you and notice details that you maybe too close to to analyse clearly. So below I have a checklist included for you to peruse, this is not meant to replace talking to a professional and it’s not all encompassing. People have some different experiences, for example when I had my PND/P I couldn’t guage temperature of water or weather, my doctor had not heard of this before. So this list is not to be used as a be all and end all, just a guide if you or someone you know needs it. I’m putting it on this book reviews and therapy blog as a talking point, an assistance not to replace actual professional help –

 

Depression Checklist

 

(Just answer yes or no to the following)

 

 

For more than TWO WEEKS have you   –

 

1) Felt sad, down, miserable or irritable most of the time?

 

2) Lost interest or pleasure in all or nearly all your usual activities?

 

 

If you answered YES to EITHER of these questions then look at the checklist below –

 

 

Behaviours

Stopped going out

 

Not getting things done at school/work/home

 

Withdrawing from family

 

Withdrawing from regular friends

 

Stopped doing things you’ve enjoyed

 

Unable to concentrate

 

More forgetful (than usual)

 

 

Thoughts

  

“I’m a failure”

 

“It’s all my fault”

 

“Nothing good ever happens to me”

 

“I’m worthless”

 

“Life is not worth living”

 

“I just want to run away”

 

“Everyone is better than me”

 

Feelings

Overwhelmed

 

Unhappy, sad

 

Irritable

 

Frustrated

 

No confidence

 

Guilty

 

Indecisive

 

Physical

Tired all of the time/a lot of the time

 

Sick & run down

 

Headaches

 

Muscle pains

 

Upset stomach/Diarrhea

 

Chest pain/pain down the arm (on left side)

 

Can’t sleep/Trouble falling asleep

 

Waking in the middle of the night then unable to get back to sleep

 

Can’t get out of bed

 

Poor appetite/weight loss

 

As I said before, there are other things that you may be feeling. For me, I just constantly felt like a complete failure as a mother, amongst harsher thoughts. Everybody else seemed to be cruising along and I was falling apart. I had a lovely baby boy, a wonderful daughter, and a terrific husband, but I was a mess. I also felt like I was watching a movie go by. One day I sat in our car, with my daughter, while my husband took our baby boy to quickly go buy groceries, and I just fell apart as I felt like I wasn’t part of the world outside the car. It was like a movie, a horror movie starring me. Also, what can start as poor to no appetite can change into cravings for sweet things. I love music but when I’m depressed I don’t listen to it, nor do I sing and I pretty much always sing. So, there are other personal, specific things not on this checklist, but please use it as a general guide.

 

In the next sheet, Depression Part 2, Some Helpful Ideas to Cope, I will write about some positives,  things to think about, ideas. Remember, with depression you project into the future based on how you feel now. That is a false projection based on your current mood. How you feel now will not always be the way your life will be. This is something I know personally, something I tell my friends and clients –

 

You start off having mostly bad days, then some good days, then more good days than bad days, then good days rule. This is what happens. You will not always feel depressed. Life will get better.