depression as a heavy coat

when writing about pain, emotional pain specifically, it can be especially challenging to articulate the experience without sounding trite, vague, or both.

as i sit with the experience of depression in my body today, the analogy of feeling weighed down by a heavy coat comes to mind.

as someone who’s lived with chronic “mild” depression, or melancholy as an old therapist referred to it, the feeling is both familiar and oppressive.

today, it began with sleeping a lot and not feeling rested. it was the sense, upon waking, that i could fall back asleep for another 10 to 12 hours.

it is the inexplicable fatigue that makes just moving my body from one place to another a challenge.

i was listening to Tarot for the End of Times with Sarah Cargill today as she discussed the Temperance card:

this is a card i hadn’t previously had much of a relationship with, so my assessment of it was quite shallow. the traditional concept of temperance, of refraining from indulgence, is not one that resonates with me as someone in recovery from toxic Christian views that encourage denial of the body.

but Sarah Cargill’s approach was much different from the conventional encouragement of moderation. instead, she approaches the card from a perspective of the healing.

she speaks to pain as a “symptom of dis-integration.” and she also speaks to her own healing journey with chronic pain and physical distress, and her resonance with “alternative” healing modalities, such as Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM).

inspired by her story and analysis, i googled TCM’s view of depression and came across this assessment:

“According to TCM, depression is caused by stagnation, or blockages in the Qi (life force energy). It is usually related to stagnant energy in the liver, spleen, heart or kidneys. Liver Qi stagnation can cause strong feelings of frustration, stomach pain and digestive trouble, heartburn or tightness in the chest, and headaches. Heart or Spleen Deficiency patterns cause worrying, trouble sleeping, and poor appetite. Chronic cases of depression with anxiety are often related to Yin deficiency, which causes irritability, restlessness, poor sleep, and back pain. An acupuncturist looks at all of these symptoms and treats the appropriate pattern with acupuncture and herbs.” (source)

depression as blocked life force energy rings true to me, because that’s what it feels like — like something is standing in the way between me and experiencing my life fully.

i think about the experience of taking a walk earlier with a beloved, and how simply getting out into the world and moving my body seemed to work to move this stagnant energy.

but now that i’m back in a apartment, laying in bed, writing this post, it finds me again, that sense of deep tiredness residing in my muscles, blood, bones.

if i’m being completely honest, despite dealing with depression for as long as i can remember, it continues to scare me. i remain afraid of its potential to swallow me whole, for hours, days, weeks, months.

i’ve been practicing somatic mindfulness/embodiment, which involves getting still and sitting with what’s present in my body. and i’m consistently shocked by how often the experience sitting just below the surface is one of fear. often this fear is vague, not taking on any specific form. it seems as though merely existing in this world is fear-inducing.

i cried today, held by a beloved, and when asked what i was sad about, i couldn’t help but think, everything. “i cried today, held by a beloved, and when asked what i was sad about, i couldn’t help but think: “everything.”

the world is a scary place, being alive is hella intimidating, and grappling with the existential crisis of humans potentially going extinct sooner than later is freaking heavy.

i think about my craving for justice and healing, and through that lens, depression seems like a logical and valid response. that’s an aspect of depression that i find generally lacking from discussion of it — its validity.

there is always enough tragedy, whether personally or collectively, in this world to justify being debilitated by it. but on the other side of this equation is joy, which is equally valid. there are always reasons with which to be filled with a powerful sense of aliveness.

this reminds me of a story from Viktor E. Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning:

“The story of the young woman whose death I witnessed in a concentration camp. It is a simple story. There is little to tell and it may sound as if I had invented it; but to me it seems like a poem. This young woman knew that she would die in the next few days. But when I talked to her she was cheerful in spite of this knowledge. “I am grateful that fate has hit me so hard,” she told me. “In my former life I was spoiled and did not take spiritual accomplishments seriously.”

Pointing through the window of the hut, she said, “This tree here is the only friend I have in my loneliness.” Through that window she could see just one branch of a chestnut tree, and on the branch were two blossoms. “I often talk to this tree,” she said to me. I was startled and didn’t quite know how to take her words. Was she delirious? Did she have occasional hallucinations? Anxiously I asked her if the tree replied. “Yes.” What did it say to her? She answered, “It said to me, ‘I am here-I am here-I am life, eternal life.” (source)

what gets lost in the experience of depression is a sense of wholeness. i wish i could go back in time and tell my younger self, “it is not that your depression is wrong, it is that it is incomplete.”

a sense of despair and hopelessness is as much as a part of this experience of being alive as hope and optimism. but when experienced in excess, it creates a confirmation bias loop, seeking out all that validates its beliefs and ignoring the rest.

my depression, for much of my life, has made feeling joy seemingly impossible at times. this is largely why i’ve self-medicated with substances as a desperate desire to know what it feels like to feel good.

so how do we move through the internal blocks of depression? i’m very much still learning the answer to this. the most coherent one i have is the need to disrupt the experience, to agitate it. to seek out experiences that remind me what it’s like to feel alive, such as going on a walk in a busy city on a nice fall day.

Sarah Cargill refers to tears as the salt that’s needed to bring out the full flavor of our souls. so i’d say the release of crying is also a part of it.

i remind myself that hope is a practice (or a “discipline,” as Mariame Kaba puts it). and when i’m depressed, practicing hope can feel like trying to lift a car off the ground. so many times it is an exerting of effort that seemingly has little impact. which is where trust comes in — a belief that it’s all valuable, that progress is happening even when we cannot yet see it.

i’m reminded that external manifestation is often the final stage of healing and change, which helps me to nurture patience.

there is nothing easy about healing, or the irony that things often get worse before they get better. all i can do is trust, believe, practice. and when all else fails, i dig deep inside myself to find compassion for the hardship of this lived experience.

❤ ❤ ❤

a word from Fariha Róisín — bodies in revolt

excerpt from Who Is Wellness For? [annotations by me]

Finally understanding that I had to give words to all these things and let them sit in my system, giving my cells the lifeblood they had been starved of for so long, allowing myself to claim the space that I had never been given, was a difficult point to arrive at, and I wonder if it’s a place of constant arrival. Every day I gain further clarity of myself and my body’s alchemy–all its mysteries and wonders–understanding that healing or wellness is not a stagnant state. For some of us with bodies in revolt, it is a state of unraveling that’s necessary for the rebraiding to occur and reoccur.

Life is an upward motion dance, and along with that, I’ve realized, wellness is, too. I used to get so upset by the slowness of my path, at how difficult it is to be in my body after all these years of trying. The work is glacial; it’s punishing, too. The only thing that has taught me any calm is to surrender. To embrace all of it and let it unfold as it must.

what does healing look like?

i’ve spent the morning deep diving into the book, You Were Born for This: Astrology for Radical Self-Acceptance by Chani Nicholas.

i took out a journal, got my highlighter and pen, and worked my way through the beginning, taking notes and feeling nostalgic for my days of consistent learning and studying. i initially had the thought: i miss school. but then i paused, reflected more intentionally and thought: no, i miss learning and studying.

there’s a rush of excitement that comes when a new topic/area of interest captivates me. the most depressing moments of my life are ones where i’ve lost my curiosity, my sense of wonder about life — when it feels like there’s nothing worthwhile to be discovered, explored, engaged with.

in the past couple of years, my spiritual interests began with tarot and have now evolved to include astrology.

like a lot of westerners, especially those of us who consider ourselves “intellectuals” and have prided ourselves on our reason and logic, i spent much of my teen and young adult life not taking any of these things seriously. i dismissed astrology as vague and generalized ramblings, and due to growing up in a certain flavor of Christian family, grew up associating tarot with the devil.

so, coming to these practices has been a journey, one that still feels very fresh and new.

as i progress through the book, taking notes on planets, signs, aspects, houses, etc., i have waves of doubt and insecurity. and a voice creeps in that says: how silly to believe that the position of planets and stars have a direct impact on your personal experience of life.

this voice is familiar, has creeped up with every spiritual practice i’ve adopted, and it’s not always wrong. there are times when my intuition confirms the suspicion that maybe a practice or person isn’t to be trusted with my vulnerability.

there are times when i do a tarot reading or read astrology, and it seems completely unrelated to anything going on in my life. and that’s okay. because whether or not there’s truly a Spirit guiding me, the practices remain nurturing, comforting, and clarifying.

as Chani says in her book, as we deepen our understanding of what’s at play for us astrologically and how that is reflected in our life, we in-turn cultivate more compassion for ourselves and our struggle.

both the tarot and astrology are in conversation with ancient wisdom, universal truths, and the enigmatic nature of life. which, to me, means they are much more about learning how to live the questions of life as opposed to receiving answers on how to live.

plus, when it comes to healing, i believe in each person’s intuitive knowing of what they need to heal. and so spiritual tools are not about seeking external knowledge but instead are guides helping us to better engage with our own internal wisdom and knowing.

another element of both astrology and tarot is that they speak in what Chani refers to as an archetypal language, featuring often grand and wondrous characters and ideas. they offer us a fantastical and magical perspective of reality. which pushes us beyond our limited perspective to weave a view of life that’s much bigger, interconnected and significant.

and my romantic sage side LOVES it. because even when life is mundane, it’s still grand and magical. i mean, our existence is inherently magic made reality (lol you might be eye rolling rn & that’s okay). and when i navigate life with a sense of something bigger and deeper, things feel much more manageable, and even the challenges and hardships of life start to take on meaning. ❤