Wednesday, December 23, 2015

The Oxygen Mask

Dear Chelsea, 

How do you support a depressed partner? How can I support myself when I am losing the support I would normally get from my husband? We thought it was just exhaustion from the new baby, but as the dust finally settles it's looking like it's more than that. 


I feel terrible that I didn't recognize it earlier (I think it's been going on almost a year now), but the needs of the kids have kind of dwarfed everything. We don't have any family nearby and our friends also all have small children. Although we have a good community, there's no one who can really step in to help out more. And really what I need is my husband back, someone to laugh with and cry with. He's still a wonderful father and husband, but I can see he's just going through the motions so much of the time. He's looking into starting talk therapy but is understandably reluctant, the same with taking any medication. 


I just don't know how to support him emotionally when at the end of the day I'm pretty wrung out from caring for the baby and an emotionally high-needs older child as well. As it is, we just play on our phones and go to bed early. It's not enough.


***

Dear Reader,

Here is what I keep coming back to: You know how airplane safety guidelines state that if there is a loss of cabin pressure, you are supposed to put on your own oxygen mask before helping others? I think this an oxygen mask moment. Because you can't support others for very long if you can't breathe.

So, before we get to how to support a depressed partner, put on your own oxygen mask.

First, try to let go of the guilt you feel for not recognizing your husband's depression earlier. You did the best you could in the circumstances you were in, right? And even if you think you could have done better, you don't have a time machine to go back and fix it.

In addition, please hire a babysitter to help you with childcare on as regular a basis as possible, not just as a treat. In the absence of family and friends who will work for free, you hire someone. Make it a priority because your sanity is a priority.  And instead of going on a pricey date night, I suggest that you treat yourselves to a stay-cation by sending the kids to the park or the playroom while you and your husband sleep in and veg out on a weekend morning. (Trading babysitting with your other friends with kids could be an option too.)

You also need to find other sources of support for yourself in addition to your husband, since the depression means he can't do as much for you as he would like right now. Schedule a friend-date, either in person or on the phone. In the evenings, spend time on something more fulfilling than your phone. For example, you could pick out a new book at the library to read. You could get an adult coloring book. You could make a "TV show club" with your husband (or friends) where you watch a show together and then discuss. You could cook or bake for fun. Whatever you choose, after it's over you should be able to say, yes, I feel better for having done that. I doubt you can say that about your phone.

I have spent so long emphasizing self-care because supporting a depressed partner takes patience and empathy. For the most part, it just means being there, without judgment. It means accepting the validity of how he feels and the constraints that that puts on what he is able to do right now. Things will get better, but it will take time. Taking care of yourself will give you more fuel to guard against impatience and resentment at him not being how he usually is.

As for your husband's reluctance to seek treatment, discuss this with him: Imagine yourself in a happy future, looking back to now to say, "I'm so glad you never got any treatment when you were depressed. We thought something was maybe wrong but it was the right choice to suffer through without any help."

Does that make the idea of being "understandably reluctant" seem a little less understandable? Please do your best to put the reluctance aside and reach out for professional assistance. Friends and hobbies would help your husband too, but he may not be ready to pursue them until he's farther down the road.

I also suggest that you institute a family walk. Exercise and fresh air are good for the body and the mind. If it is hard for your husband to talk face-to-face with you or a therapist, talking side-by-side while enjoying the outdoors may help him.

Also try to get more sun (such as during the walk), which may be at a low since it's winter and most of us work indoors. For example, this study recently found results for remission from depression (not just seasonal affective disorder) from 30 minutes a day of light therapy, with the greatest response from light therapy in combination with medication.

This is a long road to travel. Many small supports can buoy you up. Please both of you be kind to yourselves in the days ahead. 

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

The Fear of Drowning

Dear Chelsea,

My father is currently residing in a nursing home and will probably live out the remainder of his life there. Before we moved him there, my mother and I, along with my siblings, found out some really bad information about my father. Not only did he put my mother into thousands upon thousands of dollars of debt, but we found out he is a compulsive liar and has been accused of sexual abuse (no authorities were ever notified). Without going into intricate details, I found out about the sexual abuse from several family members. These family members do not interact with each other and have never met. It's not like they got together to collaborate on stories.


I have my own troubled past with him (not sexual abuse related), and I have absolutely no desire to visit him, talk with him, or interact with him. I have only done so because of my mom. I don't think my mom knows the severity of these accusations ... to be honest, I don't think she understands what it means, and may even possibly be in denial about it. She keeps pushing me to forgive my father for his monetary indiscretions and wants me to interact with him more, despite the fact that I grew up with physical and mental abuse from him.


I think she feels guilty that he's in the nursing home, even though none of us can take care of him because of his medical issues. My son has only met him a handful of times, and he's never been alone with him. He'll never be alone with him.


I don't know how to handle this without pushing my mom away, who I love with every fiber of my being. Telling her the truth about why I feel so angry/hurt/upset will cause a huge fight within my family, and I don't think I can handle everything crumbling around me.


Do I just fulfill my daughterly obligation and have limited contact until he's gone? Please help!



Dear Reader,

There are so many ways this might turn out---more, I think, than just the two you offered of submitting to daughterly obligation or sticking to your guns at the price of sacrificing your good relationship with your mother.

No matter what path you choose, I do not think you should attempt to educate your mother as to the true scope of your father's transgressions. Right now she knows a more tempered version of the truth---and it would appear that she is rationalizing, denying, or having trouble apprehending even that limited knowledge. Imagine you tell her everything---what do you realistically think she would do? In addition to the huge fight that might ensue, knowing more might entrench her further in her current viewpoint, leaving you even further from your desired outcome. Her identity is wrapped up in your father and you, and the drive for her to preserve a sense of intact family I am sure is very strong.

The problem you described sounds like a boundaries problem to me.

Your mother is overstepping her boundaries by pressuring you to forgive your father and include him in your life. She may not know everything about what has happened, but it sounds like she knows more than enough to understand why you feel the way you do. She just thinks that she is more right than you are about what you should do with the information you know.

And I think maybe you are not enforcing your own boundaries enough. Do you think you are taking on responsibility for meeting her needs? Do you fear that if you "fulfill your daughterly obligations," they will increase? Give your mother an inch and she'll abdicate her crown to make you the ruler of her own guilt and unhappiness? That if you increase how often you see your father to appease her now, she will only then decide that she wants more from you later?

It's the fear of drowning.

Instead, you need to carefully examine what you can bear and stick to that. Can you bear visiting your father for the sake of your mother, or not? Could you go visit him together with your mother and look at it as accompanying her and supporting her, rather than as visiting your father for yourself? How often? Once a month? Four times a year? Major holidays and birthdays? Never again? Ironing out clear expectations for how you will interact (or not) with your father going forward is key to ensuring that you feel like you are standing on stable ground and not quicksand.

When you tell her what you've decided on, be calm and offer minimal explanation. If you let her engage you on the finer details, she will attempt to dismantle your argument piece by piece. It is enough to say something like "Dad really hurt me and I am not comfortable visiting him in the nursing home [or comfortable visiting only under these circumstances]. Please respect my right to make the choice that is right for me." When she inevitably brings up the subject again, reiterate your position and change the topic. Don't submit to a dismantling unless you think you might change your mind. Otherwise you are just leading her on, not helping her.

The other part of drawing the boundary for yourself is acknowledging that on the other side of the line your mother gets to make her own decisions about how she feels about your father and how she interacts with him. You'll have to respect that she has chosen forgiveness, or denial, or some combination of the two, as the general way in which she wants to regard your father at this stage of life. Stop trying to fight that fight for her, or being angry on her behalf.

Although without knowing the details it's hard to say for sure, in a way his being in the nursing home is sort of like him being in jail---his chance to perpetuate harm on society is greatly reduced. I can see how that would mitigate the pain he's caused in your mother's eyes---whereas for you, perhaps it means that you are finally free of him. I can understand why you wouldn't want to ever go back.

If your mother is always pushing for you to do more, whatever boundary you choose to enforce---even if it is relatively generous---will probably upset her, because she is not used to having a fence in her yard. So you will have to find other ways to support her. I am certain these ways exist. Listen to her talk. Encourage her to pursue her interests so that you have more to talk about than just your family. Help her find other ways to enrich your dad's life. Does he have other friends who would visit? Perhaps he would enjoy a pet therapist?

And if she rails against you and says mean things about how much you have hurt her, let her feel that way for as long as she needs to, but don't engage it. Her words are her story, and they are about her feelings, not you. If you can keep calm amid them, eventually it will all cool off.

I have this vision of you, exuding love, and the love wears down the adversity with time. I am certain your mother loves you very much, and if you stay strong and firm and kind, she will find a way to live with a new reality, as you will too.

Monday, December 14, 2015

The Beginning

Hello, friends, and welcome.

When I was a little girl I made a list of potential professions for when I grew up. That list included writer, dancer, hair dresser, and advice columnist.

Here's the current standings on how that turned out: I write and edit for a living, I swing dance passionately as a hobby, and several friends have put their locks at the mercy of my scissors and gone out the next day without bags over their heads ... but still no advice columnist job has materialized.

I waited, and wanted it, and alternately considered it a terrible idea and a great idea I was just afraid to go for. (Sometimes it is tough to tell the difference.)

So, why keep waiting. Here is my advice blog. There aren't any posts yet, because it's just started and you haven't written me yet.

You can write me about anything you like, but I recommend that you ask about relationships. Friends and family, loved ones and loathed ones, the people who you need to deal with better and you just can't quite figure out what to do. Or write me about yourself, and tell me about your journey on which maybe you are lost or wandering, and maybe I can help you figure out where to go next.

Many advice columnists will tell you how they lack any professional credentials, but I won't, because I actually have some. I have degrees in psychology in counseling, but strangely enough I don't think they necessarily count for much when it comes to advice-giving. Many people have degrees in these subjects and you certainly wouldn't ask their opinion on what to have for dinner, let alone your life.

What should matter to you is that I pay attention, and I try hard to understand how people work, and I will do my best to help you.

I can't promise I will always be right, or that you will necessarily even want to take my advice, but I can promise that I will do my best, and I hope that you will allow your story to be shared.

You can reach me at heliotropeinspring@gmail.com