Your mental and physical health resource for northern NJ and beyond

Month: June 2021

Guest blog post: Riding Out Your Partner’s Depressive Episode

by Amy’s Husband

I can’t fix this.

These 4 words became my mantra, my way back to clarity when I felt desperate to “do something” to get Amy out of the depressed mood that has been straining our relationship. This realization brings a sadness; it’s like the acceptance phase in the process of loss.

couple having a misunderstanding
Photo by cottonbro on Pexels.com

Yet, I was able to commit to this reality with a new-found sense of self-compassion. Adding 3 more words helps: “I can’t fix this. No partner could.” This realization, repeated in my mind, cools off the tendency to criticize myself for not having cured a stubborn, nearly lifelong case of chronic, recurring depression. I’ve read that 80% of cases of depression get better with treatment. My wife is in the other 20%.

With a chronic case of depression like hers, a romantic partner like me often experiences depression fallout. For me, this means feeling emotionally wrung out from being the “safe target” for the anger that arises from Amy’s depressive irritability. Importantly, it also shows up as the heartache of hearing your beloved wife berate herself over her looks, her competence as a mother and her age. When we’re in such a crisis, the self-torture takes up nearly all her emotional and mental bandwidth and leaves me on the outside looking in, feeling sorry for her and for myself.

Partners in other couples have reported far worse cases of depression fallout: situations where the depression sufferer denies his/her condition and refuses treatment. In these extreme cases, partners with depression build an even higher emotional wall to keep their partners out, even initiating divorce procedures and cheating on the relationship. Depressed partners may even self-medicate with alcohol or drug abuse.

Fortunately, Amy is aware and honest enough about her situation, enough so to create and maintain this blog. Her clarity and compliance give us the best possible chance her stubborn case of depression will allow to shorten and reduce the intensity of her episodes.

As Amy’s partner, I’ve changed my goal from trying to fix her depression to trying to ride out the depressive episodes. I’m relieved to say that at the moment, a long, difficult episode appears to be lifting, as Amy and her psychiatrist appear to have found the medicine adjustment that has turned the tide…for now.

In the past few weeks of this episode, Amy has taken our marriage counselor’s advice more to heart. She has chosen repeatedly to experience her angry moments without compounding them — without turning them into fights with me or fights with our daughter. I know when she’s angry, but I also know that she’s working to ride out the waves of anger and then discuss what brought on the feeling in a far more rational way when the angry wave has receded.

In using these techniques, Amy has helped lower the emotional temperature in our home and given us space to heal from the damage in our relationship. By practicing self-compassion, I’ve been able to lay aside toxic self criticism and an inflated sense of what I “should” accomplish for our marriage. This too has lowered the pressure and contributed toward healing.

I’ve learned the most direct way to give myself compassion is to gently place my hand on my heart. This simple act nonverbally communicates that my mind, body and spirit are on the same team, that my mind will consciously act as an ally to my heart, not as the bully or saboteur so many of us experience, especially when we’re under sustained periods of stress.

The depression isn’t gone; it still has its moments, but the creeping crisis of the past few months has largely receded. I look forward to however much time we get between depressive episodes. And when the next one comes, I will ride it out, knowing no partner can fix it.

In summary, these two practices helped me ride out a tough case of Amy’s depression:

  • Re-affirming “I can’t fix this; no partner could”
  • Self-compassion: Placing a hand on my heart when I’m upset; especially if I sense that my thoughts are bordering on self-critical

I wish I could tell you I cured my wife’s depression for her and could now share with you the miraculous techniques I’d been combing through TEDx Talks trying to find. But we all know it doesn’t work that way.

How is depression affecting your relationship? What has worked to help you ride out an episode as a couple?

Depression and Me: Dragging Myself Through Depression

I hate to be so dramatic, but for a while I’ve been feeling as if I was dragging myself through depression. This is the main reason I haven’t been writing my blog consistently. I’ve been displaying the symptom of anhedonia or not wanting to do the things you like doing or not being able to feel pleasure,

green car running of flooded road
Photo by ahmad syahrir on Pexels.com

Here’s what has been going on. About 5 weeks ago ago I stopped taking the antidepressant, Lexapro and started taking Prozac. My psychiatrist was in complete agreement with this medication change because I felt like the Lexapro wasn’t alleviating my depression very much. I started on 20 mg of Prozac and after about 3 weeks it didn’t seem to be working. My psychiatrist had told me it could take 4 to 6 weeks for the Prozac to start working but I was very impatient!

I’ve been having some uncomfortably bad symptoms including crying in the morning and feeling like I could cry at any time. I’ve also been very irritable and I’ve tried not to take that symptom out on my husband and daughter. I’ve been feeling very tired and it’s been difficult for me to do basic household chores. My ability to concentrate has been off so that I’ve had trouble completing an article for my blog. My self-esteem has been barely in existence. Another symptom that’s usually the clincher that I’m having another bout of serious depression is that I’ve been feeling like binging, although I haven’t done it in over 2 years.

It’s unusual for me to have depression in the spring and summer when there’s much more sunlight and the weather is warm. This is the time of year when my previous psychiatrists would usually suggest lowering the dose of my antidepressant because I was feeling too pumped up. I can’t even imagine feeling that way now!

As I’ve written in previous articles, I think that part of the reason for my depression now is the changes going on in my life. For one thing, our lives are getting closer to the way they were before Covid. My daughter is going to school 5 mornings a week and my husband is starting to extend his time working in his office and decrease the time working at home. In-person gatherings are starting again so that my social anxiety is increasing. I’m also worried about summer activities/camp for my daughter who will be going to summer school in the morning for 6 weeks. It’s been difficult to find her activities in the afternoon other than going to the town pool (and I know we’re very lucky to have 2 open pools in our town).

I started to wonder if I was becoming resistant to the medications used to treat depression. After all I’ve had depression for 40 years and I’ve been on medication for almost all of those years. In fact there is a diagnosis known as “treatment resistant depression”. “… with treatment-resistant depression, standard treatments aren’t enough. They may not help much at all, or your symptoms may improve, only to keep coming back (https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/depression/in-depth/treatment-resistant-depression/art-20044324.”)

I’m not sure that I have the patience to try another antidepressant(s) if the Prozac doesn’t work. There are alternative treatments however, that I’ve heard about from people who have used them. One is electroconvulsive therapy or ECT. “Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a procedure, done under general anesthesia, in which small electric currents are passed through the brain, intentionally triggering a brief seizure. ECT seems to cause changes in brain chemistry that can quickly reverse symptoms of certain mental health conditions (https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/electroconvulsive-therapy/about/pac-20393894.”) ECT scares me though and I kind of see it as a last resort.

Another alternative treatment I’ve considered is medical marijuana. I would have to find a doctor to write me a prescription for it because my present psychiatrist doesn’t prescribe it.

When my psychiatrist suggested that I take 40 mg of Prozac I decided to give it a try and hold off on any alternative treatments. He told me that 20 mg is considered a low dose for Prozac and that 40 mg might work better.

At times it seems as if the 40 mg isn’t working either because I’m showing the same symptoms as when I was on 20 mg. I even seem to be crying more than usual. At other times however, I think that I’m feeling better and that the Prozac must be working. I have a few days without crying. I’m more in control of how my irritability shows up in my relationships, and I’m able to sit at my computer and work on an article for my blog.

I’ve been told that I actually have cyclical depression. ” Cyclical or cyclic depression is also sometimes referred to as recurrent depression. It can occur, abate, and then reoccur throughout a person’s life (https://www.betterhelp.com/advice/depression/what-is-cyclical-depression/).” I’m not sure if this type of depression varies in its severity also. I believe that I do have cyclical depression because I’ve had periods in my life when I was seriously depressed and other times when I barely notice the depression.

I feel as if I’ve been in a period of more severe depression lately. I’m not hopeless though because the 40 mg of Prozac seems to be helping at times and I’m hopeful these times will occur more often.

Has the return to almost normal life after Covid affected you in a positive or negative way?