Project for Happiness

Or: how I learned to stop moping and love my life.

Some days you just don’t want to talk to anybody.

Depression is humiliating. It turns intelligent, kind people into zombies who can’t wash a dish or change their socks. It affects the ability to think clearly, to feel anything, to ascribe value to your children, your lifelong passions, your relative good fortune. It scoops out your normal healthy ability to cope with bad days and bad news, and replaces it with an unrecognizable sludge that finds no pleasure, no delight, no point in anything outside of bed. You alienate your friends because you can’t comport yourself socially, you risk your job because you can’t concentrate, you live in moderate squalor because you have no energy to stand up, let alone take out the garbage. You become pathetic and you know it. And you have no capacity to stop the downward plunge. You have no perspective, no emotional reserves, no faith that it will get better. So you feel guilty and ashamed of your inability to deal with life like a regular human, which exacerbates the depression and the isolation. If you’ve never been depressed, thank your lucky stars and back off the folks who take a pill so they can make eye contact with the grocery store cashier. No one on earth would choose the nightmare of depression over an averagely turbulent normal life.

It’s not an incapacity to cope with day to day living in the modern world. It’s an incapacity to function. At all. If you and your loved ones have been spared, every blessing to you. If depression has taken root in you or your loved ones, every blessing to you, too. No one chooses it. No one deserves it. It runs in families, it ruins families. You cannot imagine what it takes to feign normalcy, to show up to work, to make a dentist appointment, to pay bills, to walk your dog, to return library books on time, to keep enough toilet paper on hand, when you are exerting most of your capacity on trying not to kill yourself. Depression is real. Just because you’ve never had it doesn’t make it imaginary. Compassion is also real. And a depressed person may cling desperately to it until they are out of the woods and they may remember your compassion for the rest of their lives as a force greater than their depression. Have a heart. Judge not lest ye be judged.

Searching for a roommate for college is incredibly frustrating. I keep feeling like nobody wants to live with me, like who would want to live with me. When I contact someone and they don’t reply, like nobody likes me. I worry that I won’t find anyone, and I’ll have to live at home forever. I worry I’ll never make any friends in college, and I’ll just have to keep crawling back to the ones from high school with their own lives and their own friends and become a nuisance.

I know none of it’s true, and it’s just empty worry, and I just need to keep my chin up and keep looking, but it’s the little trivial things like this that really get me down, make me feel worthless. I just wish someone would reach out and say, hey, I think you’re cool, let’s be roommates.

But they don’t.

And I’m left alone at the end of the day.

I thought that I had kind of beaten my issues, but when you struggle with depression or anxiety or anything else, you never really win. You always carry it with you and the point, I learned, isn’t to win. The point is to keep fighting. It turned out that “I’m not sad anymore” wasn’t a victory speech. It was a battle cry.

—Dan “Soupy” Campbell (via numchuckbitch)

(Source: kcirf, via letourscarsfallinlove)

memento-panem:

I am afraid of death.
But I am more afraid of pain.

I am afraid of death.
But I am more afraid
of spending my life alone.

I am afraid of everything.
This is a side affect of being
so completely alone.

Alive, I am afraid.
Dead, I am not anything. 

(Source: atardisandaprayer, via letourscarsfallinlove)

thats0jack:

I want to be a nice person. I want to put aside my troubles and the walls I put up and be a genuinely nice person. I want to be the person everyone can come to. The person that can just be there to cheer you up. But in today’s society, it really doesn’t matter. Everyone gets screwed over. Everyone gets taken advantage of. Everyone is ignored, or not appreciated. Everyone is forgotten. Everyone is fucked.