Growing up with
 a depressed parent was normal. Does that make sense? I didn’t know any 
difference. I thought every parent cried themselves to sleep. That all 
mothers ended up in the psych ward at least 5 times a year. That most 
parents had addiction issues and thus slip ups happened every now and 
then. Because that was my normal. Depression was our family’s normal. We
 didn’t live by days of the week so much or special events; I measured 
time in the dark and light bouts of her illness
My normal was 
doctors and meds being prescribed to her; her lazy Susan of pills that 
sat upon our microwave. The AA and NAA meetings that I sat and coloured 
through as a child. My normal was a mother who sat in her room for hours
 and hours on end. Alone and weeping. Zero laughter. Very little 
excitement or enthusiasm for life. And almost no physical touch during 
the dark moments. Almost as if the zest of anything had been squeezed 
out with such violence that only a shadow of a person prepared meals and
 drove me places.
I thought everyone at 14 had mothers who cut their faces in a fit of 
rage within their depression. Then I visited my “best friend” and 
realized that wasn’t true. So I didn’t say anything. Because talking 
about it only deepened the realization that depression not only consumed
 our household; but stalked me in my mind. Always pretending things were
 better then they were. Never sharing the intensity behind the abuse 
that came with this mental illness. This illness that I despised. That I
 hated. It wouldn’t ever touch me. 
So forgive me. I
 didn’t understand depression. I wanted to. I really did. It missed me 
in the the passing of genes and I’ve never experienced it myself. I have
 lived with it though. I’ve been a one woman audience to the chaos it 
brings. But the actual all knowing feeling isn’t something I am 
intimately in tune with. Just like I can’t comprehend not being able to 
take care of your children. Or cutting your wrists because the pain is 
so bad. Or requiring your child to parent you through another psych ward
 intake as you beg the doctors to admit her because you can’t do another
 night of suicide watch. It doesn’t make sense to me. And if that comes 
across critical please know that’s not the purpose. I genuinely cannot 
psychically fathom those feelings and emotions. I don’t think I ever 
will. But I have dug deep; done the first hand research of this disease.
 For most of my life I had zero empathy for my mother and her “issues.” 
Why couldn’t she snap out of it?  Often in her darkest days I would 
scream and scream for her to figure herself out. Get her act together 
and move on. Why did it haunt her day in and out. It looked like such a 
weakness to me. Until the depression killed her and she committed 
suicide. And then something clicked.
I’m embarrassed
 to say for many years I judged. Full-on gavel in hand judged. And I am 
sorry. So sorry. Because I was without empathy. And THAT is the worst 
thing you can withhold from someone suffering. Maybe it was because I 
was so full of rage that even as an adult I struggled to have empathy 
for friends with depression. I always had sympathy; but never empathy. 
And that’s not the same at all. Brene Brown describes the difference as:
 “sympathy being the pity we feel for someone else’s hardships whereas 
empathy is the “me too”, the act of putting yourself in their shoes.” I 
cringe at the thoughts that once ran through my mind. How high on my 
horse I sat. Because in my head if I judged it, twisted it, or mocked it
 - the “it” didn’t have any weight, or value. Which meant they were just
 “sad”. And anyone can stop being sad.
Depression 
isn’t sad. It isn’t a sappy movie that triggers some tears or a really 
good cry. It’s not Adele on a rainy day with a glass of wine. It’s not 
the weepy feeling we get when our monthly cycle comes, or the tears we 
weep when miss our best friend. 
It’s torture. 
Absolute pure and utter torture. And I am not using that word lightly at
 all. It attacks the brain in ways in which those of us who aren’t 
struggling can’t imagine; and then we expect you to snap out of it and 
make dinner. As if you have any control over this all encompassing pain 
that you can’t shake off. It enters your soul and refuses to leave. Or 
allow you to get out of bed. Or pick up your crying child, or have a 
shower. 
Imagine an open
 sore. On your arm or leg. One that was cut long ago. It oozes and weeps
 through whatever bandage you place on it. Sometimes the pain is more 
then you can handle and you just have to lay there, while other times 
you can still move but only in a fog because the throbbing is still 
there. It’s always there. And yet you carry on. You try to wake up, get 
dressed and smile. Mostly pretending. Always pretending. That is 
depression. The sore that may scab, hopefully scar; but always there.
Here’s what I 
know to be true now. About my mother who suffered and about my friends 
who are suffering. They aren’t sad. It’s not just a rainy cloud day. And
 I’m sorry I ever thought that. I’m sorry if I ever pushed you to “just 
smile” I wish now I hadn’t pushed so hard with my mother; as a child I 
didn’t comprehend it but as an adult I think she could have used some 
empathy. Some “me too” in my words and actions.
So as National 
Suicide Prevention week begins I’m humbled. Humbled to be able to walk 
alongside my friends who are suffering and honoured that they would 
willingly share their story and allow me to love them where they are at.
 So if your struggling and crying out for help; let me hold your hand.
If you or someone you know needs help, call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. Outside of the U.S., please visit the International Association for Suicide Prevention for a database of resources.
 
 
 
 
 
 

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