Bear Traps and My Urgent Need for Hobbies
There are so few words in me right now and they are so mangled that I am struggling to make conversations much less coherent sentences. Let me state for the record- the record that is really just for my sake so I can point something out that I am not willing to deny- that I am doing better than I have been in a long while. Just today I saw my doctor and we spoke of my many improvements and the signs that prove I am fortunate enough to be moving forward- away from the depression, the instability and lack of will. Among other good developments I have even quit one medicine and lowered two. I am more willing to meet people, keep up with things I enjoy and things I don’t but that are necessary. I am even working on new projects. To the point I go-
Just now my DVR disrupted the recording of a show I wanted to watch. A repeat, one that I may have even seen already but I wanted to record in case I hadn’t. When I asked my husband to fix it there came an escalation, or maybe a de-escalation. How should I describe me swearing horribly at my husband, twisting the remote as if I could break it with bare hands and breathing more quickly than a racehorse at the end of the Kentucky Derby? It got worse. There was twisting and turning, begging and pleading. Things I won’t put to page because I am not yet that brave. All of it a showing of vulnerability I despise.
Because of TV? An electrical malfunction? Why is TV so important- this is my second post that highlights its place in my life? I’m beginning to understand why people worry so much about the television as babysitter. I’m 32 and I pay it every month to keep me busy. I must make a note to watch less TV and pick up macramé or perhaps a weekly bridge group. I digress. Boy, do I digress.
I know better than to believe that I should blame the silver box beneath the flat screen. I already mentioned the medicine changes, although I stand behind them as being the right moves. Last week I wrote about my overwhelming fatigue and of course that can play into a flash of panic and irrational anger. Of course there is the ankle sprain and twisted knee that I sustained on Sunday during the extreme sport of apple picking. There are also the other chronic pain conditions I have that cause me to be on a separate cocktail favored by pharmaceutical reps.
And so I write somewhat briefly and definitely without my best skill right now to say that sometimes even when things are okay I cannot, must not forget the undercurrents of the diseases that are rooted in my brain. I cannot ignore the pangs that go through my stomach or the quick, double breaths I occasionally take. So many things make me, us, anybody and everybody, vulnerable to falling into a bear trap.
I am tired. It hurts right there. How come I forgot to do that thing? He/She is being ridiculous. Stop tailgating. Is the bank wrong or am I? I just need two more inches of space. I only wanted to watch the one damn show and then I will go to bed. I am thirsty.
Little things, big things, the size in this case simply does not matter in the least. Vulnerable is vulnerable and for someone with depression, anxiety, mania, PTSD, you name it- the smallest of bear traps can be the most deadly. I am lucky that tonight I was not alone and I had enough wits to want to hold it together and want help even when I pushed it away and I think even called it names. My bear trap of an anxiety attack and outburst of anger came equipped with a ladder: my husband and his steady hands and clear mind. They should all be that easy.
I am saddened to read backwards and see that I have developed a view of panic, terror, helplessness, fits and rage as being able to be called “easy” even once. However, I recognize that if I didn’t do this, I wouldn’t be able to get up most mornings and take my two kids to my son’s school where I make pleasant conversation with people who have no idea that this is my life. I do not know their lives either. I can only hope that this is a moment in time that will be lost as the minutes tick away. I also hope that if even one of the people I make eye contact with in a day finds themselves surprised by a bear trap that they can reach a ladder or at least summon the courage to scream until they are heard.
I’m listening for them and will resolve to hone my ladder building skills. It seems like a better past time than TV and is far less likely to be effected by electrical failures.
September 20th, 2009 at 9:42 am
“The smallest of bear traps can be the most deadly” – Yes, yes, and again, yes.