Home Menu

Menu


Reply
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old Sep 27, 2013, 11:31 PM
glucas glucas is offline
Junior Member
 
Member Since: Sep 2013
Location: Austin Texas
Posts: 14
I have been battling depression most of my adult life. I started Paxil about a year ago after trying just about everything else available without success. Aside from the sexual side effects of no libido, I cope. I still have lows that come on for no reason, but I never really experience true joy -- I exist.

This is living? There are myriad reasons: from my conservative southern religious upbringing, to life choices I have made, to things that I probably unaware and never will be. I accept that -- some things I am responsible for, some not.

While neither here nor there, I am also gay. This is not an issue for me and never was. My relationships have brought me, for the most part, love, joy and stability to my life. I have been with my current partner for nearly eighteen years and prior to that my first partner for seven years. Commitment is not the issue here.

I digress.

My current partner was diagnosed Bipolar about 5 years ago. I saw the early signs -- the mood swings -- the psychosis that grew increasingly frequent and severe. Two months ago, he came home more morose than usual, took a half-bottle of Ambien and woke up three days later in intensive care.

This changed everything.

I felt betrayed, abandoned, perplexed, insulted, slapped, hurt, (stabbed)... the list goes on. I've spent the last two months putting 'humpty dumpty' back together again and now I am just -- hollow inside.

Thankfully, he has finally engaged after many weeks of disinterest in helping himself and the medication is working (for now) and for all intents and purposes he seems, and our relationship seems, perfectly normal. It isn't. His psychiatrist has lessened his dose of anti-psychotics and the stupor has given way to a new illusion of reality.

When he touches me affectionately I jump -- he startles me. When he speaks joyfully, I am suspicious -- is it mania? Is it real? I feel completely disconnected, on guard from him, emotionally and physically. He has gained a lot of weight in the past few years partly due to his diabetes. He has often said I must be disgusted by him; sadly, I hate to admit that I am.

I am not blameless. In the past month I have been unfaithful to him on several occasions, but not in the prior eighteen years. I justify my sordid behavior in my own contorted mind as defensible since, had things gone differently I would not be nursing an emotional invalid, I would be widowed and moving on with my life. I am not proud of that fact. But I long happiness, tenderness, hope -- something new and unpredictable -- a fresh start.

Make no mistake, I don't regret calling 911. I am truly glad he didn't succeed and that he is not dead, but in a way he is dead. He has changed. I have changed. Everything has changed.

It is like living with a ghost. The ghost of Derek past (or should it be passed?). A ghost with little memory of his psychosis, a ghost that feigns sorrow for the hell he put me through, but I cannot for the life of me find perspective, connectedness or forgiveness.

Since 2008, we've lost everything except perhaps ourselves: my job, our home, our savings. Now it seems that fate will not be sated without our souls. Who am I to hold court. With my chronic depression I know I have been part of the problem these past years with my worsening mood; the void I could not complete until god gave me that little blue pill (would that I could imagine such nonsense -- I came to terms with my aloneness in this world a long time ago).

I see my therapist of five years every week since 'the incident.' I am mostly angry during my sessions with Neil -- fifty minutes of solace, release, and reflection. In earlier times I would see him monthly or every few weeks depending on life's beligerent beguilements.

My psychiatrist, I see less often as he feels my depression is well managed. Derek sees his psychiatrist (coincidentally the same doctor; their are not many psychiatrist in our health plan in our town) His therapist, Chad, however, I have not met and likely never will as Derek made it clear he had not signed a release as he did with our psychiatrist. Doesn't that sound odd, 'our psychiatrist', that life has come to this?

We don't speak of our outside negotiations with sanity except for cryptic messages to ourselves on the bathroom mirror: 'Be positive,' 'Recognize, Reattribute, Refocus, Review,' '98-percent of what we imagine, never happens.'

His therapist has suggested he not make any decisions about our relationship for three months -- the clock is ticking. I am waiting.

Well, you get the idea?

advertisement
  #2  
Old Sep 28, 2013, 04:18 PM
Rohag's Avatar
Rohag Rohag is offline
Legendary
 
Member Since: Feb 2009
Posts: 10,045
Hello & Welcome, Glucas.
Quote:
Originally Posted by glucas View Post
My psychiatrist, I see less often as he feels my depression is well managed.
Have you (singular) seen your mutual (!) psychiatrist since the incident? How badly have recent events affected your formerly well managed depression? (No need to answer; I hope you can remain as stable/safe as possible in the midst of this.)
__________________
My dog mastered the "fetch" command. He would communicate he wanted something, and I would fetch it.
  #3  
Old Sep 28, 2013, 04:54 PM
glucas glucas is offline
Junior Member
 
Member Since: Sep 2013
Location: Austin Texas
Posts: 14
Yes, I have seen him and he has been exceptionally attentive to how I am coping. Which is not typical of him. He's not a very therapeutic psychiatrist. I usually see him for less than five minutes (seriously). But since the incident, he spends as much time as I need which is usually 20-30 minutes. He does a balanced job of validating what I am going through while keeping my partners privacy in check which has to be a professional challenge. Thus far, he hasn't seen the need to adjust my meds. Not that it is necessarily relevant, but I took the sanity quiz on this site and scored 154 which is quite high; little wonder my life feels like a runaway train.

Two answer your second question, I am coping with my depression (mostly). Some days if I don't sleep well or have other stressors, I dip noticeably, but it hasn't lasted more than a day at most, but I am never really 'up.'

It is just so damn difficult to find perspective and balance.
Thanks for this!
Rohag
  #4  
Old Sep 29, 2013, 12:21 PM
Rohag's Avatar
Rohag Rohag is offline
Legendary
 
Member Since: Feb 2009
Posts: 10,045
I'm glad your psychiatrist has changed his approach in view of the situation.
Quote:
Originally Posted by glucas View Post
It is just so damn difficult to find perspective and balance.
Finding perspective and balance may have to wait.
__________________
My dog mastered the "fetch" command. He would communicate he wanted something, and I would fetch it.
  #5  
Old Oct 02, 2013, 08:46 AM
glucas glucas is offline
Junior Member
 
Member Since: Sep 2013
Location: Austin Texas
Posts: 14
I see my therapist today with the prevailing question; 'why haven't I snapped? What keeps me from a psychotic break of my own? Not that I would want that, but with a sanity score of 154 I am clearly on the brink.
Reply
Views: 626

attentionThis is an old thread. You probably should not post your reply to it, as the original poster is unlikely to see it.




All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:09 PM.
Powered by vBulletin® — Copyright © 2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.




 

My Support Forums

My Support Forums is the online community that was originally begun as the Psych Central Forums in 2001. It now runs as an independent self-help support group community for mental health, personality, and psychological issues and is overseen by a group of dedicated, caring volunteers from around the world.

 

Helplines and Lifelines

The material on this site is for informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment provided by a qualified health care provider.

Always consult your doctor or mental health professional before trying anything you read here.