Friday, October 5, 2007
an experiment
I have two pills left. I have been taking Wellbutrin, an antidepressant, for the past six months (has it been that long already?), and in two days I will stop taking it. I think. I’m nervous about going off the meds, even if I feel ready. I don’t really have a sense of how they are affecting me, and so I don’t know how I will feel when they are out of my system. I don’t even know if I was actually depressed before, but I guess that’s part of the whole conundrum. It’s not a black-or-white thing.
But wait a minute. Yes. Now that I think about it, I was depressed. I was experiencing a darkness I had not previously known, but the sense of darkness was accompanied by numbness, so everything, even the memory of it now, seems muted.
I did not make the decision to take an antidepressant lightly. It was one of those things I thought I would never do. I believed that antidepressants were taken in situations where there was a vague, free-floating kind of heaviness with no identifiable cause. I felt as if I could point to specific things in my life that I knew were causing me pain. The answer, then, was to “fix” the problems. If I took a drug to make the pain go away, I might forget I had problems and would be tricked into thinking they were gone. I was afraid I’d be a Stepford Wife.
But the medication did what my therapist at the time said they might: gave me some perspective, lifted me out of a deep pit of darkness. I feel more clear now than I have in a while. I’m still aware of the issues in my life and feel the pain of them but I do not feel hopeless and despairing over them.
I do not feel depressed.
Sometimes I feel like I didn’t really “do” anything to feel better and so my current state of more-happy was not fully earned or deserved or is somehow not real. I might only feel this way because of the medication. I guess we’ll find out.
I’m also not sure if I’m going off of them the “right” way. When I started taking them, the doctor gave me three days of a half-dose to take before the full dose began. Now I’m just stopping. I’m also not sure if it’s wise to go off them now, during this cleanse of sorts, given that the carb withdrawal has sent me reeling through dramatic shifts in mood and energy level. I guess we’ll find out.
I know it might be best if I was under the care of a physician at the moment, but I don’t feel like it. I’m not sure if I’m being childish about that or if I’m listening to some inner wisdom that tells me everything will be okay. I guess we’ll find out.
Meanwhile, I am working on being present, remembering to choose happiness, and accepting the parts of myself that butt in and keep me from doing that. I am open to being sad. I’m afraid of not being able to not be sad. I want to learn to let myself fully feel and express my sadness so that I can let it go. I’m not sure what will happen now. I guess we’ll find out.
I’ve been thinking about Karen’s posts over the past few days, about happiness and how we think about happiness. And wouldn’t you know it, just today I happen to open a book to this poem:
The Happiest Day
by Linda Pastan
It was early May, I think
a moment of lilac or dogwood
when so many promises are made
it hardly matters if a few are broken.
My mother and father still hovered
in the background, part of the scenery
like the houses I had grown up in,
and if they would be torn down later
that was something I knew
but didn’t believe. Our children were asleep
or playing, the younest as new
as the new smell of the lilacs,
and how could I have guessed
their roots were shallow
and would be easily transplanted.
I didn’t even guess that I was happy.
The small irritations that are like salt
on melon were what I dwelt on,
though in truth they simply
made the fruit taste sweeter.
So we sat on the porch
in the cool morning, sipping
hot coffee. Behind the news of the day –
strikes and small wars, a fire somewhere –
I could see the top of your dark head
and thought not of public conflagrations
but of how it would feel on my bare shoulder.
If someone could stop the camera then . . .
If someone could only stop the camera
and ask me: are you happy?
perhaps I would have noticed
how the morning shone in the reflected
color of lilac. Yes, I might have said
and offered a steaming cup of coffee.
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2 comments:
Absolutely stunning. In my own case, years ago, when I was depressed and getting counseling, I told myself that I had never been happy. (We have a way of remembering everything as "chronic.") My therapist suggested I look at photos of myself as a child. I was shocked to see that I was a happy girl. A happy girl. He reacquainted me with myself!
And as for your experiment: you'll know, and you'll know what to do. You can respond appropriately according to what you find.
I love your choice of words: experiment. It opens up curiosity and non-judgment. Just experimenting. I'll remember this for my own self. :)
and I'm with Karen, I think you'll what you need to do. And you'll know when to do things too, which is not always when we first "know".
I think you're brave.
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