Thursday, September 9, 2010

Mirror mirror on the wall

How do you keep on caring what you look like when your partner doesn't seem to care?

When I've been single I've made an effort for myself. But it's different when I have a partner. Then I make the effort for them as well. And I suppose I rely on the feedback and hopefully the appreciation.

But in a relationship where there is minimal physical intimacy I've had to do a lot of work to stop myself from waiting for any sort of comment or reaction about the way I look or what I'm wearing. Compliments are less regular than a suburban train I'm afraid. It's a long and uncertain wait if you can be bothered.

At first it hurt a lot. I used to put some effort into how I dressed (not consistently I must say but that made the times when it happened more noteworthy). I would go nervously back to the mirror to see if I'd made a mistake, left my skirt tucked into my undies, was sporting Courtney-Love-style-lippy or a Janet Jackson Superbowl wardrobe malfunction.

But gradually I've learned not to expect any comment at all. I know he's not seeing me in that way; even that he's afraid any remark in that direction might falsely raise my expectations.

But it takes a lot of mental energy to sustain the effort to dress up when it's only me who cares. Not a terribly feminist stance on the surface of it.

On the other hand, I've really started not to care how I look. I'm tired, both emotionally and physically. I work outside the home and do the majority of housework as well. I look after a three year old.

Also I had only in my late 20s come to find a way to accept a love of self-adornment as part of an overall rejection of the stereotypical expectations of women.

I have never wanted to define myself by my appearance nor spend a disproportionate amount of time, energy or money on making myself "acceptable" to society in terms of the way I look.

So my idea of dressing up might involve shiny boots and red lipstick one day, even low cut dresses and boofy hair. But the choices I make might be judged harshly by those who believe that you have to be this size or that shape to wear this top or that skirt (or bikini or colours or flat heels).

So I've been quite practised at not caring what society at large might think of me. I had a sense of my self worth, a confidence in my physicality that was not dependent on mainstream depictions of beauty.

Sadly though I must admit that this confidence is eroded when the one you love seems ambivalent.

And I've followed up that self doubt by traipsing down my partner's path of disengagement with the physical self. He has his reasons and I have mine.

Flo

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Getting involved

It's one of those crazy Catch 22 things that exercise and keeping active generally really can help with depression; but when you're depressed it's like your own eyelids weigh a tonne so blinking and breathing use up pretty much all your energy and jogging, for example, is pretty remote in the solar system of possibilities.

But somehow, while J was well, he got involved in a community project that he cared about. And then it had a life of its own and sort of carried him along with it even when he was down, so he had little choice but to continue on.

I really think this has made a huge difference in his life. He's feeling effectual and useful. He can see that he's having an impact on the world around him and it's a positive one.

It's a bit like the origin of living things on this planet - a one-in-a-gazillion chance meeting of the right conditions and voila - life. That's what this feels like. Except maybe it's not one-in-a-gazillion. I'm hoping the chances are a lot greater than that. It's just a matter of waiting for those conditions to come around.

I didn't push. It had absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with me. This is 100% about him and his interests and his efforts.

Flo

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Father's Day

This is the only holiday that doesn't bring my partner down. Special occasions tend to be very stressful. There's the imperative to have a good time followed by feelings of failure that result from not being able to meet those expectations.

But Father's Day has always (well all three of them so far) been a day when J has seemed happy. I make a bit of a fuss (well, this year that involved a cup of instant coffee before I left for work) and then leave him to spend time with our son.

We all have our doubts about our effectiveness as parents sometimes and I think with depression these doubts go much deeper. I know for J he is always very anxious not to repeat his own father's abusive behaviour and this is a very significant influence on his style of parenting.

I wonder if in some ways the extreme contrast between what he experienced as a child and what he is doing as a parent actually helps him to see that in fact he is succeeding at being a good father.

The differences are so obvious that he could hardly doubt it. This is one area where he can always see very clearly that he has not failed and so it makes him feel good.

I know that's not going to be the same for everyone. What happens on these occasions for your family? How do you handle it?

Flo

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Sleepless in New York

Dear SNY,

I'm so sorry. I changed the name of this blog midway through a conversation.

I had a sickening vertiginous moment last night when my partner asked me what black dog ate my homework was about.

He'd seen it in the browsing history of our computer when looking for something else. It was followed by the words "violent alcoholic".

He asked if I had meant him. I honestly responded that it was his father I had been thinking of. And then we had a short talk about the fact that I did look for support on the net regarding his depression and its various components.

I must confess to being surprised about his encouragement in that regard. He felt it was only fair and right and promised that he would never read anything that looked private.

It was great to have that talk but I still wouldn't want him to find this site. I think it would cause him pain to read these things.

And so, in case he changed his mind about not looking a little deeper, I quickly changed the name of this blog.

I sincerely hope that you find me here again. I look forward to your comments. They are insightful, interesting and thought provoking. I am sure others gain from them too.

Flo

Bangarra

I have a feeling that a lot of parents with young kids feel devoid of energy for fun; like our engagement with music and other pursuits are in the past, a distant time when we had energy. I guess being in this particular situation with a depressed partner makes those things seem even more remote.

Lucky for me I was shaken out of that particular miserable delusion a few days ago. By chance a free ticket to see Bangarra Dance perform their new work - Earth and Sky - came my way.

I'll admit it here - I don't go to see dance or theatre very much. I feel vaguely embarrassed by the live aspect of both, by people putting themselves out in a such a vulnerable way in front of me. It's too intimate a lot of the time (particularly when it disappoints).

But I am so glad that I went. I really liked the fact that they had specific things to tell me through their dances. I was not left solely to my own interpretation of the movements on stage (afraid to be left to my own thoughts in a dark room no?).

I was amazed by the strength of feeling and clarity of understanding engendered by watching the dancers move, their costumes and sets, the music. I suppose this is why people go and see them. Now I know and I am converted. I will be saving my pennies (many hundreds of them unfortunately) to go again.

And up (a bit)

Okay, so this was a shallow dip. I'm relieved of course. Very relieved. So why do I feel so sick to the stomach?

I need to work on separating myself a lot more from his cycles. If I don't do that consciously I just fall back into it. His moods are like a whirlpool at the centre of our house. I need to constantly swim strongly, keep to my course, not be lulled into laziness by a quiet week or two or three.

Gosh, so dramatic isn't it? I'm nervous too. I think this blog may have been discovered (hence the name change).

Flo

Thursday, August 26, 2010

And down

Here we are again. I was once more getting used to things being so lovely. But of course here we are again.

And I was wondering this time just what is the point of revisiting the subject. If you're reading this you'll have been here before - up and down and up and down and up and inevitably, unfairly, (how could I allowed myself to believe that we wouldn't be here) down again.

This time the catalyst was a phone call J made to his parents. As mentioned before, his childhood was a less than happy one. And without fail any contact with his folks sends him back to a dark place.

It's not that they're awful people. They're just mired in their own problems - alcoholism and poverty being two significant ones. There's never been time for J and there isn't much time now for him or his son (a second rejection that he feels keenly).

A conversation draws him back into their world where bad luck is expected and few things go the way you want them to. Resignation is the dominant theme.

And so my happy, engaged, loving partner is once more too tired to move. His eyes are red-rimmed; the pupils tiny pinpoints in a haze of glacier blue. He's retreated somewhere far behind them where I can't reach.

I guess the point of writing about this yet again is so I can see that I have come a little way. I really do know it's not about me. So now he has at least one less self-absorbed person in his life.

Flo

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Active (not all about jogging)

One of the many terrible things about depression is that there is nothing left over, after the struggle to simply remain alive, for any other concerns. Those of us who live with a sufferer feel this keenly. It's why I write this blog. Maybe it's why you're reading it.

But there's no energy for other kinds of engagement either. One of the things that I love about J is his deep sense of social responsibility. He cares a great deal about social justice. We don't always agree on everything but I love his passion. Or I loved it until it went the way of so many other good things.

Since he's been on the up again it's been amazing to see this quality start to re-emerge. On the weekend we went to a rally to support gay marriage. I was ready to go without him (T and I are used to that).

So it was fantastic to stand side by side with J in the cause of something we believe in. It was amazing to see him with enough energy to care about a thing, to leave the house for it.

We were with friends and I wanted to say, look, there he is, this is the man I love. I know they must wonder about why our relationship still exists. I think they know a little better now.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Stand up and be counted

On an optimistic note mental health is getting quite a bit of attention during this election campaign.

There's a GetUp campaign working with Australian of the Year Patrick McGorry to draw attention to the actions that need to be taken to address mental health care needs in this country.  (If you sign petitions, this is a good one.)

There was even a candlelight vigil in Melbourne attended by hundreds of people who felt that the issue was important enough to turn up to on a cold winter's evening. There are more planned around the country too if you're interested in joining in or hosting one yourself.

Usually the things I write about in this blog tend to be, well, a bit of downer really don't they? I guess that's inevitable given the subject. So it feels good to be able to point to something and say look, there's some positive action being taken. People are talking about mental health. It's not in the shadows any more. We are not alone, sadly, not by a long shot.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Grand designs

I'll be the first to admit that I'm a schemer. Grand plans pop into my head, I obsess about them for varying lengths of time. Some come to fruition and others waft away on the breeze like dandelion seeds.

Here's one that keeps recurring.

I want to go and live overseas for six months. I want to go back to the country where I was born (warm, small, far away from here).

I want my son to learn the language and know a little of where his mother comes from. I want my partner to understand that not all of my ways are about my personality; that some of them are cultural.

It's daunting to think what packing up our lives, flying around the world, finding another house and settling into another country where he doesn't know the language will do to J. I know it will be hard for him to cope.

He can't bear talking about the future, making plans. Accapting a dinner invitation a week away is overwhelming. With regard to this idea, he can't get past what we will do with the cat while we're gone.

Don't get me wrong; I love the cat too. But I'll figure it out for her, and us.

If only I can take a breath deep enough to let the instant negativity wash over me. We won't have enough money. Six months is too long. You're not realistic. What about the cat? I don't want to talk about it. There's too much to sort out. I just want to relax for once.

On the other hand, do I want to carry around the resentment that will surely build if we don't do this? I look around and see how the people I admire are not held back. They have ideas and they try them out. Sometimes the outcome is not what was planned. Nonetheless, they are not standing still, treading water.

Which is what is happening to me, to my life. We get by. I am so sick of just getting by.

Where have your grand plans gone? Have you jumped in anyway, made them happen in spite of the limitations? Are you putting them on hold?

Flo

Monday, July 26, 2010

Mental as anything (or fun facts for federal elections)

Down here at the arse end of the world (an affectionate term from the mouth of an ex-prime minister, really truly) we're suffering through  in the midst of a federal election campaign.

I thought it might be interesting to compare mental health policies from the three main parties. (Quick summary: Labor is in power here, Liberals are currently in Opposition, the Greens are far smaller but look set to possibly hold the balance of power in the Senate which is our Parliament's house of review.)

In fact their plans all look very similar. The general idea seems to be to provide more early intervention and more support for people within the community. It all looks very good on paper. I'm looking forward to watching Insight tomorrow night (SBS) where they're focussing on how the parties are planning to tackle mental health if they win office at the end of next month.

What would really help J in terms of his depression would be subsidising what I guess you could call complementary therapies: a gym membership, massage, weekly counselling sessions (as opposed to monthly ones, covered to a point, for six months and then subject to review), Chinese medicine (which J has had much better success with than with anti-depressants).

I'm very glad that funding is going to acute mental health services. But I wish there was something out there for the stuff we live with every day. J manages to get by. He still has a roof over his head. He takes care of himself as much as is required to get by in society. He can go on like this until he dies (early) without qualifying for any help at all.

I'd be keen to know of any initiatives that look interesting to you. Or if you're not in Oz, what kinds of programs are offered in your country which you find particularly useful (or otherwise)?

Flo


PS - Here are some quotes lifted directly from the ALP, Liberal and Green Party websites.

Labor:
•the Government will provide $57 million over four years for more flexible individual care packages, supporting clinical and non-clinical care, for up to 25,000 people with severe mental illness living in the community;

•the Government will also invest new funding of $13 million for more mental health nurses to provide services in the community and support clinical care for people with severe mental illness;


•$617.5 million currently being provided for successful community-based services for people with severe mental illness and their families such as Personal Helpers and Mentors services, Support for Day to Day Living, and Mental Health Respite and Community Based projects, will be linked and coordinated with the primary health care organisations being established as part of the National Health and Hospitals Network.
 
The Government will invest new funding totalling $78 million over four years in up to 30 new youth-friendly mental health centres, extra funding for the existing 30 headspace sites, and improvements to telephone and web¬based services for young people.


This investment will support an additional 20,000 young people a year once the new sites are up and running.


A total of $25 million over four years will expand the Early Psychosis Prevention and Intervention Centre (EPPIC) model– a holistic service aimed at addressing the clinical and social support needs of people aged 15-24 with emerging psychotic disorders currently operating only in Victoria.


The Commonwealth will partner with interested states and territories to expand the model to new locations. With state and territory contributions, this will benefit up to 3500 young people through improved detection, earlier treatment and support for early psychosis.


The Government’s new $1.6 billion investment over four years in sub-acute beds will include support for more people with severe, episodic mental illness to access the care that they need.


Liberal:
For the first time, the Coalition’s Real Action Plan for Better Mental Health will provide a nationwide network of staged care to assist Australians access quality mental health services and pursue productive and fulfilling lives. This will include:

20 Early Psychosis Intervention Centres;
800 mental health beds; and
60 additional youth headspace sites. The headspace sites were established by the former Coalition Government in 2006. They provide one-stop-shops for young people aged 12 to 25 years with information and services relating to general health and wellbeing, mental health and alcohol and drug services.


The headspace sites will be supported by the Early Psychosis Intervention Centres.
 
Greens:
37. increase funding to mental health services in collaboration with states and territories, particularly to prevention models, and hospital and community-based support, assessment and suicide prevention services.
38.establish properly resourced, strategically located 24 hour community mental health services, staffed by the full range of mental health professionals.
39.expand community-based support services and agencies to enable people with chronic mental and/or physical illnesses, and their carers, to live in and participate more fully in their communities.
 
$100 million for funding of community prevention and recovery centres
• $145 million for early intervention programs
• $100 million incentive payments to provide services for the most vulnerable in our community.

"Under our proposal existing Medicare mental health schedule fees would be supplemented by incentive payments for GPs; consulting psychiatrists and psychologists working together to provide additional access and services for the most needy, vulnerable and long-term clientele working within community and NGO sector.


"Every hospital-based mental health service should be linked with a multi-disciplinary community-based sub-acute service that supports ‘stepped' prevention and recovery care. $100 million would pay for 60 community-based services with 8-12 beds per centre.


"We need a national network of one-stop shop community mental health centres accessible by public transport and centrally location, 24 hour on-duty and on-call mobile crisis teams working as part of primary health care organisations. There needs to be additional training for GPs and nurses to triage mental health appropriately, and there should be a mental health professional on 24hr call within every emergency department.

"We have already called on the government to fund early intervention mental health programs including: Communities of Youth services, early psychosis prevention and intervention services, Lifeline suicide hospital discharge and treatment plan and a new Lifeline freecall number," Senator Siewert said.



 

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Oh What a Beautiful Mornin'

And just to prove that there's no rhyme or reason to the pattern of J's depression, this morning should have been in technicolour for all its cheesy, happy, look-at-us how wonderful we are vibe going on.

Today the three of us caught the same train into town - J on his way to work and T and I to have banana bread and meet up with friends at a park.

We chatted. We talked about our visit to the Blue Mountains last year. T and J laughed a lot.

People on the train smiled (because of course my kid is incredibly irresistible but quite apart from that) because people generally smile at happy family scenes and curious articulate toddlers reminiscing like old men about the good old days in that yellow thing without wheels (cable car) and we should really do that again shouldn't we?

For a finale you couldn't have written a more touching farewell between father and son - enormous hugs, a kiss and then as we alight onto the platform, a turn, a wave and "I love you daddy".

And that's what we looked like, and indeed were this morning. A happy family. Beautiful. Even though it was wet and cold outside our mornings don't get better than this.

I have absolutely no idea how this came about, this stunningly wonderful normal looking happiness. I'm not extrapolating anything from it apart from the joy of the moment (and the memory of that joy, but no expectations certainly).

Do you have times like these? Had any lately that you can live off until the next one?

Flo

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Don't take it personally

Really, even though you're the one on the receiving end. It's not about you.

It's not about you when they ignore you or take offence at everything you've said, misrepresent your words, take them out of context, use they to prove their theory that life is indeed totally fucked and everyone hates them.

It's not you.

If you were being fired from a job or dumped by a lover, then it's a ridiculous phrase. It's a way to opt out of the arduous task of being both honest and kind. Of course it's about you.

Explanations are what people want. And they're hard to give but they're a mark of true respect.
We're letting you go because our company is cutting back and you are the highest paid employee. We're letting you go because we want people who can commit more time to the job.
I'm breaking up with you because I need someone who's more into the things I'm into. We don't have the same interests any more.
It is personal, but it narrows it down. It's not because I'm incompetent then. Or unloveable.

Depression on the other hand? The way you're being spoken to, engaged with - it's really not personal from the point of view of someone in the throes of depression. Caught up, crushed. All energies focused on the basics of existence.

It wouldn't matter who you were, how you behaved, what you wore or did or said. It still wouldn't be about you. It couldn't be.

And so I am not taking it personally. Even though it's turning me into that crazed woman in her backyard muttering profanties at the compost heap. (It's not about me. What an arsehole. Every god damn thing has to be a huge drama. I don't need this.)

Even though that's what I need to do to get through it, then I get to walk back in the house as if nothing has happened (because it hasn't, not really).

And I don't walk back in until I'm done with whatever I'm doing out there; something I can focus on totally (planting those beans that have been sitting in the shed for six months this time around).

Back inside I can be quite separate from his anger. Small price to pay.

What about you? What does "don't take it personally" meant to you, personally?

Flo

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Hot and bothered

Just when I thought I was safe, wrapped up in winter thermals, deeply unattractive socks and a thick layer of stay-at-home-housewifery, desire has managed to poke through again, like a tenacious weed through a carefully laid garden bed. (You see? I didn't have to choose those words did I?)

I thought I was truly okay with the absence of sex in my life (yes, we're back to that) but for some reason that I can't fathom, suddenly I am not. Suddenly people are sparkling with that electric possibility again. Words are laced with flirtation. And I want to come home and jump someone's bones. I really do.

But I hit a wall. How did I forget that wall? Gosh it hurts. Goodness gracious it's annoying. Maybe this is the impetus I need to take up running again.

I was half listening to an interview last week with the Archbishop of Melbourne and he was talking about celibacy. He doesn't think that physical intimacy is a "basic human need" as suggested by the interviewer.

"What I think is the important point that both of us would agree on is that we all need friendship, companionship, support," he said.


I throw myself into friendships, work, parenting. All these things benefit from a passionate aproach and are very rewarding.

But there is no equivalence for me. They are different things. I am a physical creature as much as an emotional one. And much as I find the combination of love and sex a wonderful thing, I also have no problem with the separation of the two.

So this is one big sacrifice for me, giving up sex. It's like Lent all the god damned time. Challenging enough in a relationship which does involve sex - pretty excruciating in one that does not.

And it's the middle of winter so no cold showers.

There endeth the bloody great enormous whinge.

Flo.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Lost: friend

A while ago I wrote about a friend of mine who was in a violent relationship. Tonight I lost her as a friend.

She was coming around for dinner. She asked at the last minute if he could come and I was forced to state my position at that moment; which is that I don't want him to come here, to my house. I don't feel safe around him. I don't judge her but I do judge him.

Her position is that they've worked through it. They spent the last six months working through what happened and they're moving beyond it. She says that if I can't get past it then it's my loss. And if she has to choose then she will always choose him. (Though I don't think I asked her to choose. But did I?)

It was awful. I heard the anger in her voice. And I saw her filing me with everyone else who made that decision before me.

Do I really feel that people can't change? Is it possible that this man who behaved so aggressively is capable of never doing that again? At what point are people allowed to leave their past behind and move on, as she says he has?

The truth is that my decision was not about her at all. It was about me and my family. I don't want that man in my house. I don't want him near my child. What if the situation deteriorates between them and he comes around here looking for her one day?

I don't want to be part of a world where one person can do that to another. Or at any rate, I do not want to bring any more of that world into mine than already exists. (Doubtless there are domestic situations in my sphere of acquaintances that I know nothing about.)

I admit I am afraid of allowing the possibility, the very whif of violence into my house. If this man is capable of dragging someone by the hair, slamming them up against the wall, chasing them around a house, how do I know where his limits are?

Maybe I could meet him somewhere in public, in a group of people, where I wasn't force to make conversation with him for an entire evening. I want the opportunity to do this without pressure. Although even then, how can I speak to him knowing what he's done? How can we ever be friends?

There was one thing she said to me that made feel afraid for her. Made me feel sick to hear. She said that her mistake was telling me about what had happened; that my rejection of him was her fault and she took responsibility for that.

Now I'm afraid that she won't tell anyone next time.

I feel sick and sad that I have lost this friendship. This woman was there during my labour. She was there at the very beginning of T's presence in this world. She supported me through a time of fear and pain. And I have now shut her out. I don't know how to help. I fear I've done the wrong thing and yet I am afraid to do anything different.

Flo

Friday, July 2, 2010

Now is the winter

It's bloody freezing here in Sydney. More so if you're inside our house. And I mean that in the literal sense (not being clever about being frozen out of J's thoughts while he's down).

It's had a weirdly positive effect on us. I know you're going to think we're a bunch of hippies when I tell you this, but we all sleep in the same bed. There are enough beds for everyone, it's just that we prefer to be together - or at least until one adult gets a toddler kick in the head too many. And then the adult simply shifts to the single bed at the foot of the big bed, in the same room.

Cosy isn't it? Or certainly in winter it is. We don't have heating, just a lot of doonas and body warmth. It's always like one big camp out around here.

And it kind of counters the lack of touch in my relationship with J. It's a big part of his depression, a reluctance to be touched. When he's down he flinches if I move forward suddenly or stretch out a hand towards him. Even when he's well he's still quite wary of physical contact with anyone.

But when we all sleep in the same bed it can hardly be helped. And because of the cold he seems okay with that.

How's that for putting a bright spin on things?

Flo

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Don't panic

Living with someone who has depression can feel in many ways like being in a parallel universe. Often it feels like a universe which is just slightly out of kilter with the one that everybody else lives in. It's only a fraction out so you can see each other and hear each other; but the two worlds operate in subtly different ways.

I wish I had a guide to this universe. And if I did, it would also have on the front cover in big bold print the words: DON'T PANIC. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy did its bit to get me through adolescence and its advice has proved salient many times since.

Since J started showing signs of depression again I felt like I was falling into the deep end of a very cold pool. But anyway, panic is what I did. It wasn't a daub myself in ochre and run laps around the bathroom kind of thing. (Doesn't everyone panic like that?)

It's just that my heart started to beat faster and more loudly, my breathing was more shallow.

Luckily all the reading and thinking and listening to the advice of those who have inhabited similar places for longer than I hasn't been completely wasted on me. I surprised myself by pulling back reasonably well.

And so far things haven't been too bad anyhow. He was properly down for a full day. He seemed to spring back a little the next day and was able to discuss what he was feeling. I could even suggest that he see his counsellor sooner than his next appointment if need be, to which he agreed.

Is this progress? Either way, panic is best avoided. But there's definitely a bit of a gap between what I know intellectually about how to handle this and what I know emotionally. Emotional me is running a little behind.

Flo

Sunday, June 27, 2010

It's back

Well of course it is.

I'm glad we did all the things we did while it was away; glad we had the chance to remember our relationship, do some repairs, build on it a bit.

(You know, I think I'm getting too involved in those reality house make-over shows. All my metaphors are structural.)

Do you remember a book called The Time Traveller's Wife?
Young lovers often believe themselves crossed by fate or by time, but those in Niffenegger’s spirited first novel have more reason than most. Henry suffers from Chrono-Impairment—a quasi-medical condition that catapults him, unwillingly, from one random point in time to another. Clare first meets him in 1977, when she is six and he materializes near her parents’ garden as a thirty-six-year-old from 2000; he returns regularly throughout her childhood from different times in their shared future. At last, when Clare is twenty and Henry twenty-eight, they meet in his present, and the relationship begins in earnest. But romance proves even trickier than usual when one person keeps vanishing to distant, and occasionally dangerous, times... (Read more: The New Yorker - Books briefly noted
When I first read this novel I felt like she was writing about our relationship. It's perhaps the best fictional description I've ever read about living with someone who has depression.

It's just that J was present for such an extended period this time, I really hoped (foolishly) that it might be for a very long time.

I don't know yet how long it will last. He had a bad day yesterday, all day. He still attended a social occasion though. He didn't spend the day in bed.

But the physical contact has stopped. His emotional presence in our household has diminished. He has retreated. So while he hasn't entirely disappeared I can see him fading. I can almost see through him.

So I guess now is the time to remember all of things I've learned about how to deal with this. Go over my notes. Something about giving him the space he needs yeah? Maintaining the boundaries right?

Flo

Thursday, June 24, 2010

The king is dead. Long live the queen.

Australia has its first female Prime Minister.

I happened to be sitting in a café when it happened. There were no TVs or radios or laptops about. I found out because friends had been texting during the morning, keeping each other appraised of the latest we’d heard.

I felt like I should stand up and make an announcement: People, we have a new Prime Minister. We have our first woman Prime Minister.

(I didn’t of course. I just stared about, trying to read the faces around me, wondering if they knew.)

Julia Gillard seems to be an incredibly competent person. She’s handled several portfolios at once. Her electorate seems happy with her representation. When she was acting prime minister (which was quite often) they say she got through the paperwork like nobody’s business.

She deals with the media calmly. In fact she kept them well in their place at her press conference, no easy feat, making them wait their turn to ask a question.

She communicates her intentions very clearly and her statements are informative.

Importantly she does not conform to many of our society’s conservative expectations of womanhood or of politicians.

She is not married. She does not have children. She is not religious.

I am sorry that her leadership came about this way – impatient factional powerbrokers bowing to the polls and buying a little into the Opposition’s frenetic rhetoric about an electorate who would not/ could not (sorry, that’s a bit Green Eggs and Ham) support the outgoing leader, Kevin Rudd.

I think they underestimated people’s ability to be patient. I know big things take time. I can wait to see where a leader will take us.

It’s a bit like an emergency Ceasarean section. It’s not the birth that was planned - no transition period, not a lot of choice for the main participants. But it’s the one that happened.

And now here we are. Suddenly we have our first female Prime Minister.

But she’s no innocent babe. She’s an old hand at this already. Leadership is just the next logical step, the mantle that was inevitably her due.

I'm curious to see what she will do differently; whether things will move forward with respect to matters like mental health, paid parental leave, environmental issues, genuine consultation with other parties and representatives. I'd like to think so.

Enough gushing from me now. I wanted to give an emotional response. There will be plenty of others today from more political and intellectual viewpoints, many of which I’m looking forward to reading.

Politics has a profoundly emotional impact on J and on me. It’s one of the reasons we first got together.

We both cried (yes, really) as we watched Kevin Rudd give his farewell speech. And it felt good to be standing shoulder to shoulder again.

Flo

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

In defence of repression

I wonder if I'm always going to be nervous at the first sign of a bad mood. You know, a grumpy morning, a string of swear words heard from another room. Every time J stubs his toe (and reacts in the way that anyone else would) am I going to wonder if this heralds the end of a golden era?

I'm vigilant in a fairly low key way about my own mood. Having suffered from depression in the past I know when I need to step in to stop myself from sinking. And I also know when it's an appropriate level of sadness or just an off day.

But reading someone else is another matter all together. Hypervigilance is such a big part of the prison that is living with a depressed person. I am keen to stop myself from falling into that deep dark hole.

But I'd be lying if I were to say that I can be totally relaxed about things. I am quite afraid that this won't go on for much longer. I'm worried that it might be a bit like the start of a holiday, long dreamt of, saved up for, hardly dared hope for. And then before you know it you're back at work and it's behind you.
I have this very vivid memory from when I was nine. I was on my way to the pool. I had looked forward to it all week. And as I was walking down the hall, swimmers on, the smell of chlorine already in my nostrils I suddenly thought, but soon I'll be on my way back up this same hall, on my way home, my swim in the past.

And then (because I must have been one hell of a neurotic nine-year-old) I wondered if this is what it would be like to be suddenly 80 years old. One day I'm nine with countless years ahead and a very short while later I am in fact looking back down that hall at my nine-year-old self.

I have tried hard to forget that thought so of course it's taken up residence just on the periphery of my day-to-day and every now and again, like a recurring cold sore, it replays itself, reminding me that each day brings me closer to its fulfilment.

Of course as I get older I rather hope that I'll get to 80 and that I'll still be remembering things. But for now I wish there was some kind of filing cabinet I could put it in or some device that allowed it out only when it was going to be useful rather than just make make me sweat a little, breathe a bit faster and fret needlessly.

I could of course file my current fear about J's depression returning in the same drawer. I'll stick the folder under R for repressed or N for neurosis.

Then I'll stop having administrative fantasies (it's been pretty much downhill since 1984).

Flo

Sunday, June 20, 2010

There's no place like home

Do you rent? Have you ever had the pleasure?

We've been renting our current place for two and three-quarter years (but who's counting). I've spent most of that time feeling like an outsider in this town and it's only been the possibility of actually leaving that has made me realise I am starting to belong.

We're not moving now after all. External factors are partly responsible. A new bus route means I can now easily get to my old suburb to visit friends (so thank you anonymous transport department worker).

Also after seeing some of the run-down expensive hovels in our price range our current house is looking very good indeed.

Just before we decided to forget about moving we found what I thought was the right house. It needed a lot of work. The paint was falling off the walls as if it were large sheets of butcher paper, tacked on many years ago and then forgotten, left blank. It flopped dismally, almost reaching the carpet which if possible was in an even sadder state.

But it was relatively cheap. Sydney is an expensive city whichever way you look at it. You either spend your money on rent or on transport getting in and out of the city.

Anyway, we were willing to do the work so we applied. Which is not like saying we applied for a credit card (though admittedly that kind of application comes already filled out, in my mailbox, with a toll free number to ring to activate my pre-approved billion dollar limit). It's not even like applying for a job which requires some hard work and not a small amount of anxiety.

No, applying for a rental property involves revealing several pages of private financial details, copies of no less than eight payslips (and I'm sorry, but what gives a real estate agent* the right to see exactly what I earn, my employee number, sick days, annual leave etc. Are they priests now, or doctors? Lawyers?)

Then they want personal and professional references from current and past jobs, past addresses, emergency contact details and my relationship with the person listed. (Stasi files anyone?)

I need to provide copies of several forms of ID. If I want to fill this information out online I have the option of paying a private company some money so that the application is sent faster. Or else I can painstakingly type out or write out all of this information for every application.

Oh, and they want to know if I'm applying for other properties too. Why? Does this disqualify me? Is it a monogamy thing now?

And then you are rejected. And they don't tell you why. Even though you've spent a couple of hours on this thing they won't spend a minute to tell you why (except once a few years ago when they told us that it was because someone else had offered more money.)

Wow, I didn't realise how angry I still am. (I can tell I'm getting hysterical when I put words in bold.)

I realised after that though that I wasn't ready to throw myself back into the pool, offer myself up for rejection, waste my Saturdays at inevitably disappointing viewings, jostling 10 or 20 other people along narrow and dirty hallways, trying to imagine this place as home, and then going too far and actually hoping it might be.

And I'm not even the one suffering from depression. J tried very hard to cope but it very quickly got him down (so we were synchronised then).

He said, "We don't have to do this." And I took a deep breath and had a cry and realised he was right. I'm fine where I am, really. I will give this place another go because it's infinitely better than going through that process over and over again.

We talked together about what we would do. He was utterly reasonable, acknowledging my need for independence, for eventual security about where we live. But he made me see that I didn't need to panic and up stakes and run for it like I have a tendency to do.

So the deal is that we are working together to save up as much cash as we can and then decide where to go in a year. We want to do it before T starts school so we're in a place where we'll be happy to stay for six or seven years.

It feels amazing to be in a partnership like this, where I don't feel the need to temper my emotions in case they're too much for someone and where I don't have to figure it out on my own.

So I spent a day reorganising my bookshelves and doing a bit of a spring clean. The boxes are going to some other poor sod for now. I hope that's not you, though if it is you can be assured of some sympathy from me.

Flo

*See also: vacuous, over-inflated, self aggrandising, judgmental, "I was only doing my job I didn't know it was the Hitler Youth", never paid a day's rent in my life. Apologies to anyone out there who is one. Maybe you're the one in a million that's different.

Friday, June 18, 2010

A bit of a breather

I've started to write a few posts over the last few weeks but just couldn't finish them. I'd lost the impetus you see, the drive to put things into words. I was about to write "on paper" and the fact that it's not just on paper also made the exercise more wearying.

I no longer wanted to spend so much time with the screen. I didn't want that white light seeping through my eyelids, or to enter another password or verification code, or wait a few seconds for the computer to boot and then a few more while it ran an absolutely urgent update. All these piddling inconsequential seconds amounted to something that was enough to sap my will to live (or my will to post at any rate).

So a day or two off became a week and then several. Really it was a good thing. I continued to read other people's work but less often, and I didn't engage online. I wanted to live only in the physical world for a little bit.There was time to stop and evaluate what I was doing with this blog, why I was writing it, who I was writing it for.

Circumstances have changed. My partner's depression has for the timebeing  lifted. I hardly dare to think that possibility and writing it feels so daring (and maybe even foolish) but it also feels so very, very good, however long it lasts.

While he's been well we've been spending time together, making joint decisions about things and getting things done. I have been sleeping well again. I have energy.

And for a few weeks I didn't want to think about depression at all. I wanted to focus entirely on every moment of this normal life. Every small thing was a marvellous rediscovery. We had breakfast together. We talked about what was in the paper. He touched me in passing, as if our bodies touching was no big deal.

Not that everything is swell. He still has a bad day now and again. He still has his habit of saying no to everything, but then he smiles and says, "just kidding, of course I mean yes."

It's been like, I don't know, winning the lotto.(A reasonable amount - enough for a house deposit and maybe a holiday, not millions, but life changing.)

For example, I had a medical appointment this morning; nothing serious just something I wasn't looking forward to. (Why am I being so circumspect? I discuss my most frightening doubts and emptiness here, my most intimate thoughts, and yet I can't say pap smear?)

Anyway, he's just called to see how I am, check that it went well and tell me to take it easy and enjoy the day, take some time out for myself. "Don't go and do any housework," he said. "We can do it together tomorrow when I'm home."

I know you will understand the significance of these things. You will know how remote the possibility is of being on the receiving end of such warm, loving concern and thoughtfulness.

When J is depressed there is no room for me in his throughts. He would not have called. My day off work would only have been a reminder of the fact that he has his nose to the grindstone, as usual. Perhaps he might have felt guilty for not being able to offer support.

Instead I am living in a relative paradise. This must be what spring is like after a long winter in somewhere like Norway. (And the possibility - please don't make me say probability just yet - of it being seasonal hasn't escaped me. I just don't want to think about it right now.)

I've also realised that I do want and need to keep writing. I want to see where this leads me. I want to know what happens when I don't have to just concentrate on surviving each day.

Flo

Friday, May 7, 2010

Do you see what I see?

We've joined the throng of rental seekers. On Saturday mornings we go forth, bathed (yes even), provisioned with victuals and armed to the teeth with enough identification documents and references to get into the inner sanctum of the Vatican should we so desire (yeah verily).

Not that we've had cause to deploy this hefty arsenal. Well once only, and we were unsuccessful because I felt compelled to be honest about our cat. Our beloved neurotic cat who, although she is afraid of a cockroach's shadow (not really earning her keep) might still have been a threat to the flock of native birds who had made their home in the garden of this prospective home. I could not bring myself to omit the truth of the cat and thereby possibly be responsible for the death of one of these birds.

So onward we go. Mostly it's a bit of a sticky-beak really. I mean I'm hardly going to allow my child to live in most of the filth we're shown. Be warned if the picture used in the ad is of the view from the kitchen window (the best part of the place is outside of it).

Also beware the fish-lens photos. I don't know who they think is going to be fooled by the stretched out pictures. Who has a toilet that wide? Is the place built for squat hobbit-like people, short and wide? (Well that kind of describes me but I doubt landlords are going to be quite that solicitous.)

Also lately I've noticed an extremely reprimanding tone in the posting of viewing times - 11am SHARP. (Their capitalisation.) I've waited for at least 10 minutes at each sharply advertised viewing time. In my head I compose numerous letters viciously deriding the real estate industry for its lack of common and professional courtesy. And in my head they stay. Who wants to be on a real estate blacklist after all?

I suppose I feel a little bit better about the experience this time around. I've certainly been desperate in the past; particularly at 7 1/2 months pregnant, bawling outside yet another hideous dirty how-can-these-slum-lords-live-with-themselves place also being viewed by 30 others. (Feeling terribly Nativity scene.)

Now I am toting around an utterly adorable and charming child. He loves house hunting. He's very positive about most places too. I guess he's scoping out where his transformers will be sitting and if he can skid on socks from one end of the hall to the other.

But it means that I'm not in direct competition with those who are younger, hipper, more childless. The agent either wants children in the place or they don't. We can pay as well as anyone else. Our references are just as good. So I suppose it will come down to that. Out of my hands really, and what a relief that is.

In the meantime we plough on, the tense short&wide woman, the dazzlingly beautiful (it's my blog after all) cherubic boy and the sullen male with the cap pulled low over his eyes, walking two steps behind and glowering at competitors. Surely any landlord would have us? (Oh and did I mention a cat?)

Flo

Sunday, May 2, 2010

On Melancholy

Depression isn't ever going to lift like a curtain. No matter how the chemicals might change, J will always think a certain way about things. I'm starting to think that's the truth of it. Unless he re-learns how to think, how to stop himself in his tracks and think differently every moment of every day, he is always going to behave in a depressed way. The outcomes will always be the same.

Does anybody ever really end up where they thought they were going to? Does anyone imagine they'll grow up to spend endless hours arranging the smallest of details, over and over again?

Fantasies tend to be sketchy on details. In your dreams it's the beach you see (not the bluebottles and the sunscreen, the sand in your swimmers).

But I can cope with the details. I can even enjoy them, particularly when there's a beach involved (less so the bluebottle stings).

In my mind there sticks a snippet of a Keats poem studied in school:

She dwells with Beauty - Beauty that must die;
And Joy, whose hand is ever at his lips
Bidding adieu; and aching Pleasure nigh,
Turning to poison while the bee-mouth sips;
Ay, in the very temple of delight
Veiled Melancholy has her sovran shrine,
Though seen of none save him whose strenuous tongue
Can burst Joy's grape against his palate fine;
His soul shall taste the sadness of her might,
And be among her cloudy trophies hung.


I don't need to add much more to these words which perfectly express the interlocked nature of joy and sorrow; except to say that I am not overwhelmed by Melancholy. I know that what is good must end, but equally that other good things will come.

The happiness in my everyday life is sharpened by, prodded into existence even by the not so pleasant stings that inevitably occur.

Flo

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Coming down

I actually wrote this post a few days ago. I carry a little notebook around with me and write my posts on buses and trains - in those very rare moments alone.

Then of course I have to find a time when I can punch them into the computer (I sound like such a luddite) without anyone watching. As a consequence posts which are of the moment tend to lose their truth a little bit.

But I'm going to post this anyhow because of a comment to my last post about going to see Henry Rollins. In her comment Sleepless in New York expressed beautifully how I feel quite a lot of the time:
"Lately, I find myself fantasizing about what it would be like to be with a nondepressed, more optimistic and life-loving partner. ... I fantasize about an optimistic lover the way other women might fantasize about a good-looking lover."


It's like that for me too. Perhaps there's a market here for optimist porn (which sounds awfully like the name of a Transformer or something, but that's what happens when you spend most of your time with a 3-year-old boy).

Sleepless in New York asked me how I felt when I got home, after the rush of optimism I'd experienced. And what happened is that I crashed terribly. I went home and the contrast was stark and painful.

So without further ado, here was the come down, the Henry Rollins fallout:

I can feel it happening again. I am tired early but can't stay asleep. Tears make an appearance with little provocation. I cry on public transport. (Well, I live in New South Wales so perhaps that counts as extreme provocation).

Everything defeats me - the housework most of all. So I've just given up on it. Clothes lie abandoned wherever they happen to fall. Laundry hangs on the line for days. Dishes. Dust. Stovetop. Compost bin. Towels. Bathroom. Weeds.

My paid work is the easiest, more comforting part of my life at the moment. One foot in front of the other. No choice but to do it.

I am relying on playdates to keep my son engaged and happy. Less time alone together means less effort on my part. And I'm too spent to feel (very) guilty about that. Every hour to fill feels like a day.

I just want to sleep for a few days. I don't care where or how.

Flo

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Rollins (better than a dose of Vitamin B)

I went to see Henry Rollins speak as part fo the Sydney Comedy Festival this week.

He talks (and talks and talks) about his thoughts and experiences which are often funny in themselves and certainly his observations highlight what is funny in a situation if it's there.

Henry Rollins sees many things wrong with the world but he is not crushed by that; he is driven by it.

I don't go to see motivational speakers. I don't like most self-help books. I have a deep, unsheakeable mistrust of people who proclaim to have answers to the so-called big questions.

I like discussions not sermons. How shall we live? Well let's talk about it, let's figure it out, let's reach our own conclusions.

I think I'm also a little bit afraid of my tendency to get carried away by charisma, wit, charm, intelligence. (Do you see what I mean?)

As a younger lass I was much taken by Rollins' music and strident delivery of very personal lyrics. I still am. Yes it's possible to like Rollins Band and Simon and Garfunkle. Mr Rollins admitted to liking Cat Stevens/Yusuf Islam. But here I am getting swept away by admiration again.

I think what hit me so hard about the performance this time around was the optimism. It's not a passive everything will be alright optimism. It's a forceful, active, driving, Super Jumbo A380 optimism. You stand there as it's taking off and the momentum lifts you right off the tarmac.

It's not an ingnorance is bliss thing either. He is well informed of what's going on. He's on top of the media and travels all over the world to see for himself.

Life is hard and many terrible things happen. But he thinks change is possible and it's in our capacity to effect it.

For me it was an incredibly refreshing experience. Like opening all the windows and breathing in deeply. And I was surrounded by a theatre full of people who looked as if they too had just expanded their lungs.

Flo

Monday, April 19, 2010

The Heart of the Matter

In Graham Greene's The Heart of the Matter I came across the following lines:

"If I could just arrange for her happiness first, he thought, and in the confusing night he forgot for the while what experience had taught him - that no human being can really undestand another, and no one can arrange another's happiness."

In the confusing night I also forget even though I too have been learning it for many years.

I wonder what makes some of us feel this mistaken responsibility and others not. Is it something we learn as children? A combination of factors from our childhoods?

For instance I am the eldest of three. I was charged with looking after my siblings, particuarly as migrants in a country where they didn't speak the language (I was six years old and so the only one old enough to have learned before arriving).

My mother was shy and didn't like to make phone calls or interact too much with people. She was very unhappy, isolated, having left her warm, southern European home for a cold climate without the comfort of friends or family.

Maybe I learned early that it was in my power to make their lives easier through my efforts; that it was my duty to do so.

I don't think that responsibility for others is a bad thing. I lean more towards community than individualism. I value support networks. I have benefited greatly from the care of others and have not felt like my contribution has been out of balance until now.

But there is a line which some people see clearly. On one side of that line you can interact meaningfully. Less a line than a kind of common zone, a Checkpoint Charlie (without the uniforms and, hopefully, the weaponry).

Beyond it is the unkown other; that foreign land which is another person. Bureaucracies of the mind that baffle outsiders, laws of obscure etymology, subject to change without notice.

What an arrogance to presume that I can navigate that territory without an insider (and there's only one) to guide me, or worse still without permission.

But the border isn't obvious to me. I'd go as far as to say that we're all actively encouraged to forget about it, to feel that we can get inside the skin of a loved one, become one with them; that it's our duty to know someone inside out before being able to claim that we love them.

Maybe it's a confusion of aloneness with loneliness.

I feel like my whole life has been a process of learning to see what's in front of me. (And forgetting again and learning again.)

Flo

Thursday, April 15, 2010

The road to hell...

I think his intentions are good. Then again, maybe not.

That's the thing with being around mental illness, whether your own or someone else's. It makes you second guess yourself. It makes you wonder if you've missed something that happened or if you've imagined something happened when it didn't.

Did I really forget to mention that I was doing an 8am shift tomorrow? Was I hallucinating when I saw that lip curl? Did it mean something?

Lately he's been making quite an effort to communicate. Perhaps it's because I've disengaged to such an extent. (Or because he's afraid that he's losing control of me and he's reeling me back in.) He's made an appointment to see a therapist on Monday. (But will he actually go or is this just a way to look as if he's trying?)

He's making an effort to interact with the world again; to be part of things that interest him. (So why is there not enough energy to deal with my requests? Why am I still doing all the housework?)

Just as things look like they might be getting better I find myself to be more cynical than ever.

Or maybe it's just a tired Thursday night, a long day at work, a tempermental, weary toddler. Maybe I'm just too tired to care. I wonder if there's an easter egg left over somewhere. That and a glass of vermouth and a good lie down might just tide me over until tomorrow.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

What's yours is yours

Sometimes when my vision has become so blinkered, so focussed on how this illness is affecting me, what I have to do to work around it, hussle this way and that; I get a chance to remember exactly whose illness it is.
Yesterday I had an email from J. I wish I could post it here but I feel that's one step too far (an anonymous blog about my thoughts is one thing but that's quite another).

J expresses himself far better in writing than he does face-to-face. He explained how lonely he feels; how he misses his old circle of friends who have dispersed across the country. He talked about how trapped he feels by this downward drive, the inability to act and to feel happiness.

He apologised for his angry outbursts. He admitted that he was jealous of my happiness, of my social network and most of all of the fact that I seem "find my joy elsewhere these days."

I could taste his pain (a metalic taste, acidic). And this time I knew that I couldn't do anything about it. I didn't feel like I ought to or needed to change anything about my behaviour in an attempt to ameliorate his suffering. I know now that nothing I can do will really help. And I also know that making sacrifices will hurt me and probably end the relationship.

In my response I expressed love and sympathy. I told him how much I would like him to be by my side in enjoying life.

I also framed his suffering (succinctly, without too much feeling) in the context of a treatable illness. I wasn't glib about the difficulties of medication or therapy, but I suggested them as the only way to address these matters.

I didn't discuss at all my socialising; didn't address any specific circumstance. I don't need to justify or explain my actions. I've done it many times before.

I didn't mention his apologies. It's not worth remarking on intentions any more.

Flo

Saturday, April 10, 2010

A practical question

The question of freedom and independence is pivotal. The survival of my relationship with J depends largely on whether I can be with him and still feel free to enjoy my life in ways that don't mean compromising who I am. I am a social being. I love to be around people, to go out and see music and film. I need time with other people outside the house.

I saw old friend last weekend who recently came out of a 10-year marriage with a man who has depression. He was very controlling and I hardly saw her for the last few years.

And she said to me, "I was starting to worry that you're doing a lot of tip-toeing around. You're always trying not to rock the boat. You seem afraid all the time."

It was quite a shock to hear that's how others see me. I guess she knows just what it's like to be in that situation so she can easily recognise it when she sees it.

Still, I thought I had it together a bit better than that. Although when I look carefully I can also see how carefully laid most of my plans are - how controlling I am to the last detail of how things will proceed.

So here's a procedural question I guess.

If I plan to go out and J is depressed, what do I do about my son? Do I leave him at home with a sick man? Someone who doesn't need the work of looking after a feisty, tempestuous, contrary 3-year old? Do I leave T in what is surely an unhappy environment? How can I possibly enjoy myself in those circumstances?

Or do I organise for baby-sitting with someone else? I can't know ahead of time how J will feel on the night. If he's well that's a lot of wasted effort and credit used up for nothing. (You'll know what I mean by credit if you've ever asked anyone to look after a toddler who doesn't sit down from dawn 'til dusk - it's like there's guarana in his veins. I can only call in the favour so many times.)

It just feels like so many details. No wonder I'm a control freak. What do you guys out there do? Any suggestions?

Flo

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Optimist frayed

Today is a low tide kind of day. Nothing terrible, just low on energy, tired. The kind of day where my walls are down a little, not so sure of myself.

To be fair he said that he wasn't referring to me when he talked about "mindless optimists".

The conversation went mostly like this:
Me: I'm having lunch with Cathy tomorrow. I really like being around her. She's very funny.
 J: I like her too. I like her cynicism. She's very aware of how things work and what goes on around the place. She's not a mindless optimist about things.
I am an optimist. I am a ridiculous Doris-Day kind of optimist a lot of the time. Some of that is just the way I like to be generally but some of it I feel I've been pushed into as a foil for the constant negativity that comes from J.

I looked out the window for a while. I was hurt because I thought he was referring to me. He asked what was wrong. I said, "I think you're referring to me" (no more mincing words round these here parts).
J:  I'm a bit pissed off that you think I meant you. I wasn't talking about you and your thinking that I am is not very nice at all.
Flo (not so optimistic now)

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

It's not easy being green (or Deadly Sin 6)

Like I needed another reminder of how small minded I can be; how my better nature lives cheek by jowl with my less-than-stellar twin.

Has anyone ever watched Peep Show? The comedy treats us to the world of Mark and Jeremy through the lens of their thoughts - mean spirited, self serving, arrogant pricks that they are. Not that I'm all of those things at once (or indeed at all) but I have my own little pantheon of a character flaws that must never be revealed. (And so now I will proceed to reveal one because that is one of the joys of anonymous blogging.)

My friend recently had a baby. Her husband refuses to allow her to cook or do any housework at all when he isn't at work. He encourages her to sleep between feeds while he takes the baby out for walks. And the baby is now three months old.

And is my initial reaction one of joy for my friend? No dear readers. My first reaction is straight-from-the-gut envy. I am sad for myself that it wasn't that way. It's tears and an acid in my stomach not unlike the aftermath of a rich curry that precede the warm happy feelings which follow shortly thereafter (I am not a monster after all).

I don't devote too much time to these thoughts, but I would love to disown them. I wish they weren't me. Now here they are live on the web. Perhaps it's an exorcism of sorts that will leave room for better things.

Flo