Every morning when Juliana went to school or when Kevin took the
girls somewhere, I would wave goodbyes and wonder if they would die
before I saw them again. I didn’t obsess about it or feel paralyzed
with fear; it was just a daily, automatic thought. “Goodbye, hope
you don’t die before you come back!”
My
sister and I recently had a conversation about worrying that people
will die. That was when I realized I had stopped wondering if my
family would die every time they left home. It had been a daily
thought for such a long time, I had failed to recognize that perhaps
it wasn’t entirely “normal.” When I told Kevin about it he
looked at me very strangely and said, “Really? That’s terrible!”
Depression
is my primary nemesis, but depression and anxiety often like to
tag-team. I don’t talk about anxiety as much because I find it
harder to figure out. I recently read Wil Wheaton describing his chronic anxiety and depression. Even though I have years of
experience with these illnesses, it was reassuring to realize
someone else understands what is going on inside your head. I have
also realized that I can say, “I struggle with depression and
anxiety,” but those words might not mean a lot to people who
haven’t experienced it before.
So I
will attempt to give a picture of what anxiety has meant for me, knowing that each person’s experience is different. Anxiety
is a normal part of life, but generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
makes you feel anxious about things that don’t even make sense. As
I thought back on some of the things that have caused me anxiety over
the years, here are some examples:
-
Pale yellow paint: The doors in my first apartment in Yangzhou were
covered with peeling yellow paint that reminded me of a 1960’s
mental institution. It was very disturbing.
-
Marshes: All that innocent looking grass covering up sinister water.
-
Certain patterns: It’s hard to explain, but some repeating patterns
look like disease or tiny eyes or are just trying to make your eyes go crazy.
Why would they do this?? |
Creepy, right? |
-
Furniture pretending to be decapitated humans: My sister says this
would be anxiety producing for most people, so maybe I’m totally
normal for feeling like legs should stay attached to humans.
This lovely piece of work was in the neurologist waiting room. Do you think they are trying to mess with people's minds? |
You
can see why it is hard to explain anxiety. When you say, “Yellow
paint is upsetting to me,” people who struggle with anxiety
understand. But other people look at you like they wonder if
you were ever abducted by aliens.
The
problem with anxiety and other mental illness is that the illness
itself skews your perception of life. I have a hard time wrapping my
mind around anxiety because it is just not rational. Depression
feels almost logical. Your mind says life hopeless and everything is
only getting worse, so naturally you feel depressed. But anxiety
makes you feel crazy, like you are literally losing your mind.
Because honestly, who is afraid of 80’s décor??
Of
course there is something behind the crazy, even when you can’t
explain it. These irrelevant things bother you because something
about them is not right. You get that creepy feeling like
when you are in a dark parking garage (I also hate parking garages)
all alone and someone is following you. For some reason 80’s décor
looks like the scene from a horror movie. A part of your mind cannot
get over the fact that human legs should be attached to bodies not
furniture. So your mind screams, “Danger! Something is off here!
Pay attention to this sinister feeling!” Because your brain refuses to believe that tissue boxes are not threatening.
During
my first year in China at 22, I went through periods of
unintentionally waking up at 4am. I would head out on solitary bike
rides at 5am, when only the street cleaners were out. I did not have
a cell phone and nobody knew where I was, but I wasn’t worried
about that; I was more afraid of being in my apartment alone. I was
confident enough to travel all the way to China, but I suffered an
unshakable dread of making copies in the little copy shop. I was
living on my own in a foreign country, but I was terrified of the
dark. I knew there were no monsters under the bed; what I feared was
much more sinister and oppressive.
Sometimes
the subject of anxiety is logical, it is just obsessive. Every day I
carried Nadia down the stairs from our 5th floor
apartment, I pictured myself tripping and dropping her on those hard,
concrete steps. I continually calculated how likely my children were
to die in a particular situation. When Juliana sat on her bunkbed, I
pictured her falling off head first. When I took Adalyn outside, I
pictured her running out in the road and getting hit by a car. I lay
awake at night thinking how I would save my children in a fire.
These were somewhat reasonable worries, but I could not get them out
of my head.
My
worst period of anxiety was the year Kevin and I returned to the US
for a year to get married. I decided that the middle of a bunch of
life-altering transitions would be a good time to stop taking my
antidepressants. In hindsight, it was clearly a bad decision. My
depression had improved, but I didn’t realize that the medicine was
also helping my anxiety. I didn’t even realize I had
anxiety.
I
nearly had a nervous breakdown the summer before the wedding, but I
thought it was just all the adjustment. After we were married, I was
upset whenever Kevin had to leave me. Sweet newlywed stuff, right?
Except I also dreaded going to work each day. I dreaded hanging out
with friends. I was exhausted all the time. I hated driving on the
freeway at night because all the lights and movement made me feel out
of control. I wanted to stay safely inside our little apartment,
until the walls started closing in and I couldn’t breathe.
I
curled up in bed, a crushing weight on my chest keeping me from
getting enough air. My heart pounded and the world spun out of
control. I was completely alone. Even when Kevin was with me, we
may as well have been in two parallel universes: Kevin sitting on
the bed in our apartment, me being sucked into a formless black hole,
all noise and darkness and chaos. It was my first experience with
panic attacks.
The
panic attacks became more regular and I realized this anxiety was
becoming crippling. I finally saw a doctor and started back on
medication. The anxiety and panic attacks decreased, and eventually
a solitary session of EMDR therapy stopped them completely.
My
anxiety has ebbed and flowed over the years. Lately it has been a
lot better, but the triggers are unpredictable. Anyone who struggles
with anxiety can tell you it is tough. It is exhausting. It is
confusing. But it can get better. One day, hopefully, you will be
surprised to find you no longer wonder every day if your children are
going to die. You are not losing your mind. Or maybe you are, but
at least you are not alone.
And
in case you are wondering, it’s not your mental illness:
decapitated human legs pretending to be furniture is not
normal.