About Me

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Welcome! I'm Kim. I have lots of creative and entertaining ideas I can't wait to share with you, but my personal story will have to be shared a little at a time. In addition to blogging about upscale entertaining on a budget, I want to share my experience living with major depressive disorder. Entertaining and creating beautiful things while fighting hopelessness and despair should make for some interesting reading, don't you think?
Showing posts with label getting old. Show all posts
Showing posts with label getting old. Show all posts

Monday, August 10, 2015

Happy Birthday to ME ... continued ...

So the thing about chronic depression is ...

Even if you have it "under control," it can cause an accomplished, highly functioning person (like me) to experience periodic "episodes." 


Depression is not the same for every person who suffers from it. Unfortunately for me, my depression never completely goes away and occasionally it returns in what I call a depressive "episode." Although my life may be going along relatively well, an episode or relapse of major depression occasionally brings my life to a screeching halt.

A relapse can be caused by many different events, or by no event at all.  This one was definitely caused by the fact that my 60th birthday was upon me.


 

 Trigger Warning: Depression


 

 A depressive episode, at least in my case, prevents me from functioning in the world and a really bad episode prevents me from functioning at all. This was a really bad episode. That is why I have posted nothing since July 20th. I literally could not. Depression saps the strength from my body to such a degree that I could not raise my arms and type.
 
It also affects my thinking to such an extent that I probably could not have written a coherent sentence. And if I could, I would probably have been sorry because I have little or no control over my own thoughts.
 
 I took vacation time off from work and spent most of my time just curled up in a ball sobbing. (I will discuss handling severe depression in the workplace in a later post.)
 
In my last post I explained that I was having a difficult time coping with this birthday. It's not so much the actual age of 60 that was bothering me. It's the fact that I expected to have accomplished much more than I have by this age, that most of my dreams are no longer  within my reach, and that everything that I have lived for no longer exists.

 

"It's not that I want to die.

 It's that I want something to live for.

And everything that I have lived for either no longer exists,

 or is out of my reach."




I have learned to survive serious depressive episodes by reminding  myself that I have experienced despair before and that it will eventually go away. Although my problems are real, I try to remember that once this hopelessness subsides, I will be able to deal with them.
 
 
These episodes are what were once called "nervous breakdowns," I guess. And it is no easy task to live through them. I have lost friends, husbands, jobs and family relationships because I have an illness.
 
I have much more to share with you, but I can only do it in small increments.
 
Next post: I'll have to wait to see if I need to talk more about depression, or if I can get my life back on track and focus on fun things.


queenisms.com






Monday, July 20, 2015

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!

Hello, Upscale Party Readers.

In a few short days, it will be my

Add capthttp://birthday.artmaven.com/clipart
As I explained in my profile, this blog will not only cover party planning and decorating, but will also explore living with major depressive disorder.


TRIGGER WARNING: SERIOUS DEPRESSION

Age has not been much of an issue with me until now. But I am having a really hard time with this birthday. Sixty is very decidedly NOT YOUNG. It's not even middle-aged.  I am turning OLD. 
http://www.keepcalm-o-matic.co.uk



Of course, 60 is nothing like it used to be. I am well aware that Baby Boomers, most of whom have already turned 60, have redefined age and that we can be active and vibrant for many years to come. Many, many blogs and books explain all the wonderful things about being 60. At the very least, they say, "It's better than the alternative!" The alternative, of course, being death.

But when you have suffered most of your life from very serious clinical depression, and when you are in "remission" from the serious stuff, you still suffer from dysthymia (a mild but never ending depression), you're not really sure that this is better than the alternative.
 

It's not that I want to die. It's that I want something to live for.

And everything that I have lived for either no longer exists,

 or is out of my reach.


I will explain in my next post.



Queenisms.com