Depression: Where did you come from??

Depression is so strange.
One day your body feels like it’s filled with lead, and you sleep for hours you can’t even remember. You wake up groggy, confused, eyes barely able to open, and yet still exhausted. The next day, or maybe even that same night, you’re wired, mind racing, heart pounding, and sleep is nowhere to be found. I was up late last night, my thoughts chewing through the silence, and now it’s early morning and I’m still awake. This is depression. It’s not just sadness, it’s a war within your own body and mind. You try to walk through the day like everything is fine, like you’re holding it together, but really, you feel like a ghost haunting your own life.

You function because you have to. You smile because people expect it. But inside, you’re crumbling.

And then come the people who think they understand.
They give you clichés: “You’ll be fine.” “Everyone goes through hard times.” “Just think positive.”
But how would they know? They didn’t live through my life. They didn’t sleep in fear as a child or wake up in chaos. They didn’t grow up trying to survive in a world that felt unsafe and unpredictable from the start. People say they’d handle things differently, but I don’t know many who would still be standing—let alone functioning—after what I’ve been through.

Sometimes I wonder how bad it really was, because there are parts of my childhood I’ve completely blocked out. It’s like a fog rolled in, thick and heavy, erasing everything too painful to carry. And now Tammy is gone. She was the only person who could look at me and say, “Remember?” She held the other half of the memory, my living proof that I wasn’t crazy, that those things really happened. Now all I have are the fragments. Shadows.

I’ve asked myself over and over: Why do we always focus on the negative?
Is it just easier? Or are there so few good moments that they get drowned out? For me, survival meant focusing on danger. I had to be alert. Hyper-aware. Ready. The good moments didn’t require that kind of attention, so they faded into the background while the trauma burned itself into my brain. I’ve spent years trying to heal, trying to unpack that pain, and yet it still creeps up behind me, especially when I think I’m finally okay.

My last breakdown wasn’t that long ago, just a couple of years. I remember sitting in a psychiatrist’s office, asking, “Why are these breakdowns happening more often now?”
All they said was, “You need to deal with the trauma at this stage of your life.”
I stared at them, completely lost.
What did that even mean? I always thought healing had a finish line. That one day, I’d wake up and the trauma would be gone, processed, buried, handled. But now I know that’s not true. Trauma doesn’t leave. It sleeps. It waits. It wakes up when you’re vulnerable and grabs you by the throat.

I guess I shouldn’t be surprised it came back now. I’ve been through so much recently, fighting in court over my divorce, closing the door on a marriage that spanned nearly two decades, moving out of the home I lived in for 18 years. And then trying to process the unthinkable: that my ex-husband tried to kill me. Twice.

Yes, you heard that right. Twice.

The first time felt like something out of a horror movie.
I had returned to the farm to pick up my truck and trailer. Everything looked fine, the truck was parked out front like nothing had happened. I got in, started the engine, and let it warm up. It was a standard, and I remember shifting into gear like I had done a thousand times before. The gate opened, and I pulled out, heading toward the city.

Then I got to the train tracks.

I pressed the brakes. Nothing.
I pumped them, panicked, hoping it was just air in the lines, but there was nothing. My heart slammed in my chest. I scanned the tracks; left, right; thankfully, no train. But my mind spun with the question: What would I have done if one had been coming? I clenched the wheel, jackknifed the trailer, and forced the rig to stop. Then I turned around and brought it back to the farm.

That’s when I saw it. The brake lines had been cut, on both the truck and the trailer.
Seventeen years of marriage, and I never thought he was capable of that kind of cruelty. You don’t want to believe the person you loved would plan your death. It’s easier to think it was a mistake. A freak accident. But it wasn’t. It was deliberate.

And I didn’t report it. Not at first.
Because how do you walk into a police station and say, “I think my husband tried to kill me.”
It sounds insane. Until it happens again.

The second time was even worse.

The house’s water system had been drained, including the hot water tank. I had to rig up a new setup to get water flowing again, since we lived on a farm. I connected the pump, got everything in place, and flipped the power. The water started flowing, but something didn’t feel right. That gut feeling, the one you only get after surviving trauma—was screaming at me. So I kept checking the tank. Up and down the hallway, over and over. Something was wrong.

Then suddenly, water started spraying everywhere. I rushed to shut it off. And that’s when I saw it.

The ground wire to the hot water tank had been cut.

He tried to electrocute me.

I just stood there, dripping, stunned, and terrified. I asked myself, What did I do to deserve this? I couldn’t come up with a single answer. But I knew, I knew without a doubt, that I had been lucky again. Someone or something was watching over me that day, just like at the train tracks. My intuition had saved me. My instinct had kept me alive.

Experiences like these change you.
They chip away at your trust in people. You want to believe in the good, you try to, but now you know darkness can hide behind a smile. Maybe you’re like me. Maybe you’ve spent your life seeing the best in people, ignoring the red flags, convincing yourself it’s not that bad. But it is. And it was.

Now, I sit here, looking back on everything, trying to make sense of it all.
Trying to figure out where the pain ends and where I begin.


Coping with Trauma: My Journey Through Stress and Depression

They never tell you about stress and the effects of it. For me it was hair loss and depression. I have found that I can not deal well with stress. After the death of Tammy I lost all my hair. I mean all my hair, from my head to my toes. It was a very sad time for me in every way possible. Then after Tammy’s death, I begun having issues at work. Thinking I was doing a good job when I was really doing a shitty one. It really hurt me to find this out. I had no one left that would understand me and let me just lose it, without judgment. I found that I was crying all the time, especially if I had to go to work. It was difficult for me. I suffer from Major Depressive Disorder. The issues had triggered it, and I was off work again.

During this time I spent a lot of my time in my bedroom. It was horrible. My younger sister, who I lived with, would call me downstairs. She tried to get me out of my room. I drove her crazy because I just did not want to be around anyone. The kids would come over to try and cheer me up, it just did not work. I just did not care anymore. I had to wear a wig, fake eyelashes, put on eye brows, it was really depressing. My nieces were amazing. They would do my make up and do my eyebrows. They encouraged me to get out of the house.

I would go shopping, which seemed to make me feel better for awhile but then the feeling went away. Then I had to deal with the financial costs of the shopping. It was just a really bad roller coaster ride. One minute you are high. Next, you are at an extreme low. Nothing seemed to consistently make you feel better. When I hit the lows it was almost unbearable. I would just sit in my room and work in my bible. I would listen to the bible to find the answers to the questions that I had. “Why is this happening, again?”, “Didn’t I suffer enough in my life?”, “What do I need to do to take this feeling away?”.

The bible studies continued for months, I listened to the bible three times. Each time was 75 hrs. I did attend church bible studies, to help me understand what I was going through. I learned that I had to be strong and courageous. I had to carry on no matter the situation. I also had to believe God has a plan. I attended the bible study once a week for three months. At least it got me out of the house. I took my niece to the bible studies to grade five class. She enjoyed it very much. I thought that after the bible study was done I would be all better but I wasn’t.

During one of the studies I had an epiphany, I was enabling my younger sister to be a alcoholic. I thought that I was putting healthy boundaries but that was not true. I was causing a lot of the problems myself. Now that I realized I was doing this to myself, what was the next step. What do I do now? I was not educated for this. I did not know how to make it not affect me as much as it did. How did I let it get this far? It all goes back to my childhood.

Growing up we just accepted the situation as it was. Our mother was a alcoholic, and drug addict. Us children did not have a say in the situation, it all centered around our mother. We made sure that the young ones were looked after, and that we had what we needed. We did not have everything we needed. We often lacked food and clean clothing. Most of all, we lacked emotional support.

Going to bed hungry was easy. Going to bed with a bruised bum was also easy. However, knowing that our pain brought her so much pleasure was the worst of all. I would lay in bed thinking that I was adopted because I was so different than her. I would just want out of there so badly. I wanted out so bad that I reported the abuse to my teacher, who called the authories and took us away. I remember that day so clearly because I was so happy not to be going home. I was running up the stairs, saying I’m not going home. It was one of the happiest days of my life.

Now that I am older, I thought that I had made peace with all my trauma. However, today I am suffering from trauma-induced depression. When I was diagnosed with this I cried and wondered why? I just want my past to go away, not show its ugly head all the time. The psychiatrist could not answer how long it would take to deal with the trauma. It scares me that it will be months as there is so much to go through. If you read the blog you understand why.

They say that it could take one or more sessions of EMDR to deal with only one trauma. How is it going to be having to deal with several traumas’. How will this all work? I just hope that it works well for me and I will be happy again. Not that I know what that feels like… As I have not been happy for a long time, I have forgotten what it feels like.

All the therapist say that you need to break the cycle. I am not sure if anyone of them have had the trauma that the clients have experienced. Then ask them to break the cycle. I realize today it is so much easier to follow the same route as I lived as a child. It is predictable, I know how to handle the dysfunction. I understand why my younger sister lives the life she lives. Now it is how do I keep the cycle broken. I have broken the cycle. I am the 25% that does not have an addiction issue. I suffer so much for breaking the cycle.

Am I coping with the trauma, I am not sure. It kicks me in the ass all the time. My hair is finally coming back after three years. I thought that I would be stable enough to continue working, but it is not the case. This trauma has affected my work, in a indirect way. It caused me to have depression, which causes you not to be able to function clearly. I have to be off work. I am not healthy to practice right now. My mental state is fragile. I just have my past to blame for it.

I will continue with the posts as I deal with this trauma. I will persist as the 25% of my family. I need to stay strong and be courageous to deal with these issues. I need to show the next generation that it is possible to live a life without having an addiction. It is a difficult job to bear but one well worth it. Just like Joshua in the bible he had to believe and had to strong and courageous.