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Mumonthenetheredge

~ A mum. On the EDGE. (In Sheffield).

Mumonthenetheredge

Category Archives: Postnatal depression

Summer Loving

04 Sunday Sep 2022

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in mental health, Motherhood, Postnatal depression

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Sometimes, I worry that I don’t feel the right way about my children.

Or at least, not the way other people do.

That I love them too violently and too all-consumingly and too hard.

The thing is, I just don’t know how else to do it.

If I’m honest, it’s one of the things that probably cost me my marriage.

We tell our kids – and maybe we tell ourselves – that love is this huge, infinite thing, or that it grows and encompasses and enfolds anyone else that comes along – that it doesn’t run out, that loving one thing a whole lot makes it easier to love other things too, not harder.

But that’s not been my experience.

I think my love diverted, and funneled into those babies. And the bond was so strong, all others felt weak by comparison. I fell so hard for my children I couldn’t see straight – for YEARS. Still.

And I couldn’t understand why my ex didn’t feel the same way, or at least feel IN the same way I did.

I’ve always been like this.

There’s a famous family story about one Christmas where my Granny Betty had made my sister and I two matching stuffed cats. They were the first presents we opened. And I loved mine so much I refused to open any more presents, and my sister had a bumper year of opening everything. But more than that – I followed her around with her cat as she was playing with double the new toys trying to make her cuddle it and love it as much as I loved mine.

That’s how I felt about my children, and my ex.

That’s how I tried to make him love them in my way, not his way…

I still have a great deal of this huge, hard, fierce, overwhelming love to give. But sometimes it bubbles over. Sometimes it burns through rationality. Sometimes it lacks perspective.

When my children first started spending time with their dad, one night a fortnight at first – I felt like my heart had been cut out. I was bereft. I couldn’t eat. I couldn’t sleep. I couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t function. I couldn’t do anything but feel empty – literally hollow on the inside while on the outside my arms ached for the imprint of their little bodies, my nose caught ghosts of their scents and my ears strained to hear them in their empty beds.

I wrote about it once, and someone on this blog told me I should stop acting like they’d died.

She was right.

But that’s still what it FELT like. It was still real to me, even if it wasn’t rational.

Since then, lots of people have said to me that I’m living the dream. Getting time off from the kids! A whole weekend to yourself every other weekend! A kid-free summer holiday! Whoop!

Well my dream was to be part of a functioning, happy family… So, it’s not so much a dream, really, as a reality I have had to learn how to appreciate.

And I have.

Mostly.

I mean, intellectually I KNOW they need to be with their dad – and I KNOW I need time to be the me that isn’t only their mother.

Sometimes I crave it. There ARE Friday nights when they’ve pushed every button there is and I’m almost – ALMOST – glad to see the back of them. When I know we need the distance from each other to be healthy. When I am glad to go out, and see friends, and drink, and lie in, and read and write and play at being care-free and child-free with Boynotquiteonthenetehredge – and be the me that’s there when they are not.

I KNOW this.

And I know it does me, and them, so much good.

I know a lot of stuff in my head.

But my heart… my heart knows stuff, too. And it knows it louder; wrenchingly, gutterely, roaringly.

And despite how far I’ve come and all the perspective I’ve gained, it is still hard, sometimes, for my head to wrestle it into submission.

This last week has been one of those times.

It has been one of those times because it has been the week they have been away abroad with their dad and their ‘other’ family.

The step-mum who I’m sure is lovely but I still want to scream at for having her hands on my babies and playing the role that means the very most to me, however part-time; the grandparents-by-marriage they see more than they see my own parents; the family unit I wanted so badly; the experience I can’t give them – won’t know anything about, and can’t control.

It is the longest and the furthest I have ever been away from them.

And it has been HARD.

Don’t get me wrong, it has also been wonderful to be with the Boy, pretending not to be parents, putting that bit into a box. But the lid has kept cracking open under the pressure of what’s been locked inside…

Like those first nights without them all over again – I have been grappling with all this anxiety, and all this love that suddenly has nowhere to go, and won’t be contained.

If I’m honest, I am a bit afraid of it.

When they call, they are like other people’s children.

They are browner and blonder in the sun. They don’t speak to me normally, can’t relate to me on the phone because we’re never apart enough to call – and it is all stilted and wrong. They are wearing clothes I don’t recognise, and have done activities and have family stories and jokes I’m not part of.

They are less mine.

I am less me.

And that tiny slice above my eyebrows knows this is the way, this is right, this is proper, this is growing up – but the rest of me… Oh God the rest of me is WILD with longing for them.

I get off the phone, and I weep.

I don’t know if anyone else feels this way about their children, or about co-parenting their kids.

I don’t know if the way I love is the wrong way.

But if this is you, too, I want you to know that I KNOW how hard the summer holidays are when you’re a single parent without your kids.

Much harder than they look.

And I hope yours are back in your arms soon, too.

xxx

World Mental Health Day, Baby Loss Awareness Week, International Day of the Girl

08 Saturday Feb 2020

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in Love and sex, mental health, Miscarriage, Motherhood, Parenting, Postnatal depression, Pregnancy, Returning to work

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So this week it was World Mental Health Day, Baby Loss Awareness Week, and International Day of the Girl.

For me these are all sort of related. And I’ve struggled to say one thing about any of them.

I think being a girl brings with it particular mental health challenges. I suppose they start with hormonal imbalances… and power imbalances. Expectations, from others and then from yourself. Pregnancy, pregnancy loss, baby loss, infertility, post birth PTSD, post natal depression, the whole-life upheaval of motherhood, shaped by both biology and society.

Life batters women’s bodies and minds and it’s supposed to be normal but when it’s you it’s not – and the thwarted expectation of normal is probably the hardest of them all. It feels like there’s a conspiracy of silence around being a girl, that minimises our pain, and leaves women very much isolated as a result.

We’re not supposed to tell anyone we’re pregnant until 3 months, becuase early miscarriage is just a thing that happens and should be gotten over, and God forbid it might make others uncomfortable.
We have to grieve our losses, appropriately, in private, at the correct volume, for the correct duration or we are unstable, hysterical, need to get over it now, have you considered taking up a new hobby?
We’re supposed to live with the pain of endometriosis because that’s normal and we should stop complaining when the decorators are in, it can’t be that bad.
We’re not allowed to address or even process a traumatic birth because at least the baby is healthy and that’s the main thing, isn’t it?
We can’t say how awful and hard and boring our new baby is because that’s ungrateful and some people would kill to be in your position, you know – you don’t deserve to be a mother.
We can’t share the thought the baby would be better off without us, in case they take it away.
We can’t say we are struggling – with motherhood, work, life, our marriages and relationships, with crippling loneliness and disconnection because that’s failure, other people are doing it all, look at the Facebook pictures.
We can’t talk about waking up in the middle of the night terrified the baby has stopped breathing, even when they’re 8, living the worst case scenario in our heads and fighting off crippling fear every waking moment of every single day – of which there are too many – in case the world thinks we’re mad, because maybe we are.

And those silences leave women alone in their heads. They leave women’s mental health untreated. They leave too many too normal things a taboo.

If there’s anything that I’ve learned about my own mental health, over the years but particularly recently, it’s that you need to be able to feel your feelings. They are not wrong. Ever. No one else should tell you how to feel, when, for how long, or how to express it.

Not feeling a feeling, suppressing it, denying it, trying to shape it to fit someone else’s expectations, replacing it with another feeling like anger instead of fear or sadness – turns it dark. And it will eat you up from the inside out.

We owe it to ourselves – and to each other – to come out of hiding. To say the things we’re afraid to think out loud. To share our pain, so it is heard and we are witnessed, and so that others can find comfort in the mirror of their own feelings.

I suppose really, that’s what this page has become about. It’s a bit about motherhood, sure. It’s a bit about mental health. It’s a bit about being a girl. But mostly it’s about truth. It’s about not being afraid anymore. And stepping out of the shadows.

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Let’s talk about birth. Properly.

17 Sunday Jun 2018

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in Breastfeeding, mental health, Motherhood, Postnatal depression

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“Ahhhhh, Congratulations! Girl or a boy? How much does she weigh?”

These are the questions that typically follow the magical creation of life.

They are the wrong questions.

Because sometimes, a bundle of joy comes out as a bundle of fear.

The questions we should really be asking new mothers include: “How are you? Did you get enough support? Do you want to tell me about it? What do you need?” And possibly, if you know them well enough, “Has anyone talked to you about pelvic physiotherapy?”

I often tell the Big Small that she’s the best thing that ever happened to me. This is because it’s true, and also because everyone deserves to hear that from someone. (Now I get to smile when I hear her say the same thing to Catonthenetheredge). 🙂

But the best thing happened in the worst way.

Her birth was not what I imagined, to say the least. And for me, postnatal depression began in the labour room.

I thought I was prepared by my rather airy fairy NCT classes to power through the pain and be empowered by it. I thought I’d read-up and watched-up on it. I genuinely believed in the birth plan (I was so cute!) and I genuinely thought I’d tough it out with a tens machine and a bit of a massage…

Ha ha ha ha!!!!!

Instead my birth story was a tale of mistakes and over-stretched midwives, shift changes, and ultimately long, long hours of a back-to-back labour stuck on my back with a monitor on, and no pain relief. The epidural had failed, but no one noticed and I was treated like I was making a terrible fuss over nothing. All followed by an emergency c-section.

BIG FUN.

That particular combination of impotence and injustice is pretty huge to deal with, and is something I still grapple with today. It somehow takes you right back to being a child, doesn’t it? The powerlessness, rage and fear of it – nameless and hopeless swelling in your chest. The knowledge no one believes you and no one will help you.

That sudden understanding that when it really, really comes down to the wire – you are fundamentally alone.

The loneliness of motherhood started there. Right there. And thinking back I can still taste the blood and metal of it – that very moment – under my tongue.  

Not being able to control your own body or your fate is pretty scary for anyone. Not being able to do what millions of women have done throughout time is pretty disappointing, too. And it all came with a sense of distance, and inadequacy, and isolation, and desperation like I’ve never known.

None of that actually left my body with the placenta. It didn’t just disappear – how could it?  It all stayed inside. And it made the bits that came next even harder.

It was all still there as I struggled to adjust to motherhood, to feed the baby (intent on starving itself – another story), to manage, to love every moment, to join in, to be joyful – to feel myself, to feel REAL again. I was overwhelmed by it. I thought I had made a huge mistake. That I couldn’t do this. That I’d let the baby down and didn’t deserve her.

Now, I’m one of the lucky ones, because in the midst of all that I was still violently in love with her. That doesn’t always happen.

And no bloody wonder.

Even the births that go right are huge physical events that change your body forever, followed by huge responsibility, no sleep, and massive hormonal fluctuations. And there is so little support. Your partner goes back to work after two weeks, and you are left broken in a fog, in charge of a tiny person you have no idea how to care for, with endlessly conflicting advice and everything you’ve ever known fundamentally altered.

And yet it is so universal…

So how can it be that we are still sending women into the breach (sometimes literally) so woefully under-prepared and under-supported?

And how can it be that we still don’t talk about postnatal depression, or birth trauma, or the horrors of early motherhood?

How are we still not asking women the right questions?

There has to be a line somewhere between scaring expectant mothers stupid, and giving them the coping mechanisms, tools and knowledge to help them take control of their bodies, and their babies, and make informed choices – even when things start to go wrong.

I don’t think we’ve got the balance right.

Today is Father’s day, and fathers are to be celebrated. But the day fathers became fathers was the same day that mothers became mothers (pretty obviously), and there’s no point pretending it wasn’t a day that had a far bigger impact on HER life than on his. It’s a combination of biology and society.

The real question is how we make that impact more positive.

If you had a traumatic birth, there’s a great organisation that’s there to help – The Birth Trauma Association. They do fab work to support women (and men) after traumatic birth experiences.

And if you’ve got an experience you’d like (or need) to share, I’d like to hear it.

 

A mental health fairy tale

04 Thursday May 2017

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in Breastfeeding, mental health, Motherhood, Postnatal depression

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Once upon a time, not so very long ago, there was a Little Girl who had Big Worries and Sticky Thoughts.

The Sticky Thoughts were always Dark.

They would not leave her head, and would intrude on her daily life – particularly at bedtimes.

She was born, as some people are, having already learned the lesson of Fear. She knew from an early age – from the abstract rather than from experience – about Death, and Germs, and Contamination and Loss – and other largely nameless, shapeless but no less real Bad Things.

She new them instinctively, inherently, like a newborn lamb knows a wolf.

Even distracted – even laughing – she would know deep down there was Dark waiting, that Light was the illusion. That she would pay for happiness in an eternal trade off.

And so she learned to Dread.

And after she learned to Dread, she learned to Bargain.

Because the Little Girl knew that the only way to stop the Dark was to control it, feed it, and pander to its needs. She knew with the same deep-down, guttural certainty that it was her job to protect everyone – to stop the Bad Things from coming.

So she developed routines that would keep her safe, and keep her family safe. And if she did them, it would all be OK. That was the deal she made.

The burden of this responsibility was large, for the Little Girl was only little. But if she tried to cheat, the Dark’s insistent voice would drill in her head until her vision blurred, her throat closed and her heart pounded. There was little choice for the Little Girl but to obey.

So she did. She checked the light switches 316 times – 16 for luck, being 4 x 4, her lucky number. Because if they got stuck in that excruciating, flickering, juddering centre, the Dark would come.

She learned to Doubt. To Doubt she had checked enough, was sure enough, had given enough to the Dark.

After the light switches, she checked the taps. She checked the taps were off 32 times each, until she broke the washers and they had to be replaced. Her Dad shouted, but his noise was not as scary as the Dark.

The Little Girl’s Mum and Dad used to joke about her 32 trips up and down the landing at bedtime. Until she learned to wait until they were downstairs, or asleep, until she had memorised all the squeaky floorboards and how to avoid them.

They did not know how hard she tried not to go down the landing again. How many times she assured herself the taps were off. How terrible and frightening the Dark was in her head telling her she hadn’t done it right, that she wasn’t sure, that she needed to check again.

They did not know how many times the routine was interrupted, and the Little Girl would sob as she had to start all over again.

They did not know the exhaustion, the yawning hopelessness when she was forced to creep out of her bedroom once more, already knowing deep down it wasn’t yet the last time. Knowing the she wasn’t broken enough yet, or tired enough yet.

So the Little Girl learned to grit her teeth and Endure, and go through the gruelling routines until they could finally be finished. Until she was finally allowed to go to sleep.

Sometimes the Little Girl was up so late with her checking, her creeping, her protecting, she could barely open her eyes in the morning. But she did, because she had a whole day to live and forget until the Dark called again.

And so often she seemed happy. Because relief and freedom, however brief, are powerful too. And so she learned to be High as well as to be Low, and this became a pattern.

Although the Dark wanted to be secret, they did know some things, the Mum and Dad.

They knew, for instance, about the handwashing, because the Little Girl was chapped, and sore, and often bleeding – but this was cleaner, always, than the alternative. They scolded, and threatened, and moisturised. But the Little Girl knew she could not stop, and she knew she could not explain to them why.

And so gradually the Little Girl learned Solitude, and Shame, and Loneliness.

The Mum and Dad also knew about the gas, and the locks. They knew she would beg them to check the gas hobs and that the front and back doors were locked before they came to bed.

They did not know and that she would wait for them to come and check on her before she could go to sleep, so she’d be able to ask if they’d done it. Doubt, of course, never let her believe their assurances.

They knew, too, that the Little Girl had seen the Dark enter one of her toys, and could not sleep knowing it was there, alive, watching out of orange, staring glass eyes. They knew only because it got so bad – trying to live with it – that the Little Girl burst one day and had to ask for their help.

But they did not know how much that failure cost her with the Dark. For telling its secrets. They did not know how much she loved that toy, or the guilt of giving it up because she was too weak to cope and to control and to protect. They didn’t know the relief their Little Girl felt going on holiday, to be able to leave her responsibilities behind. To not have to worry about the stupid stuffed cat, now relegated to the back of her Dad’s wardrobe. And they didn’t know when she realised the Dark had followed them, and that she would not really be free, or safe, anywhere.

They did not know that the Dark had finally taught the Little Girl Despair.

Eventually, though, the Mum and Dad knew enough about the obsessive thoughts, and rituals, and worries, to do something about them.

And so the Little Girl went to Big Hospital, and she Endured the kind eyes, and kind silences, meant for her to fill. She Endured the hateful two-way mirror, and dirty communal toys, and talking about Feelings, and seeing the real mad people holding their heads and swaying in the corridors.

Eventually she let enough out, and let enough in, for things to improve.

And they did improve – things for the Little Girl.

Lots of things helped as she grew. Friends helped, and Hobbies, and Pets, and then then after that – Alcohol, and Drugs, and Desire.

The Dark receded.

But it did not leave.

So the Little Girl grew into a Big Girl, who hated sleepovers and school trips, and picked her skin.

The Big Girl became a Teenager who was late to school every day because she was picking her skin, covering her spots, and returning to check the door was locked 16 times, only making down the hill when the imprint of the handle was bruised into her palm. And the Dark still whispered the door wasn’t locked. It whispered that she was Ugly, that she would always Fail, that she would never be Enough, that people would See Through her, that she was Broken.

In time, the Teenager became a Young Woman who controlled her environment and structured her life in such a way that she could be comfortable, and give just enough to the Dark – just enough to get by.

The Young Woman avoided Risk, and Uncertainty, and Spontaneity. She knew she had to stay Even and Steady. So she stayed blind to the things that would upset the Balance she had engineered. She embraced ordinary. And gradually the impression of normal became so good she forgot that it wasn’t real.

Yes, the Young Woman checked the gas and the door locks, avoided her post, and sometimes forgot how to breathe out. But mostly – mostly she dared to think she was fixed.

And then – then the Young Woman became a Mother.

And she realised at that very moment those lessons she had learned, those patterns, were still there – well-worn, well-used grooves in her mind.

And the Dark was ready and waiting, and surged down them like boiling, bubbling lava.

Although she knew it’s tricks, she was powerless to resist them, because her responsibilities – protecting the tiny life of her new daughter, keeping her safe, bringing her up to be better than herself – were bigger than ever. And so the The Big Worries were bigger than ever, and the Sticky Thoughts were stickier than ever, and the Bad Things were badder than ever.

The Fear was back, of Germs, of Contamination, of Sickness, of Death, of Loss – of having it all snatched away from her. So the Bargain with the Dark was struck once more, and she was once again its slave.

The Dread was back, the pending doom that dragged her up out of exhaustion into a new ritual of checking the baby, making sure she was breathing, that the sheet was tight enough, that the room was cool enough, that the doors were locked and the gas was off.

The Doubt was back, as she questioned every move, every decision. Rechecked. Researched. Reviewed. Rewound. And started all over again.

The Solitude was back, in the unforgiving depths of the night, as she battled to keep the baby alive with her own body, and cried at her failures. As she listened to the Dark tell her she was Useless, that she wasn’t Enough, that she would Flail, and Fail, and Fall forever. And the Mother was too tired to fight the Dark, and too afraid to resist it.

The Shame was back, at not being able to cope, to manage, to feed, to sleep, to contain herself, to love every moment of being in love with her baby.

The Loneliness was back, only a hundred times lonelier – the loneliness that can only be experienced constantly attached to another human being and stuck inside yourself.

The Highs and Lows were back, all at once, until the Mother could not separate them, could not work out which one was real, and so could not trust either. She was tossed up and down on their crimson waves, trying only to catch her breath in between the swells, to concentrate on not burning up completely.

Even though she knew well how to Endure, the Mother was no longer young or resilient, and she could feel herself drowning under the pressure to protect, to keep this new family safe, to fulfill her side of the Dark Bargain.

The Mother could not see, through the smoke and churning tides, a happy ending. The Despair was back, now on an adult scale, and it’s emptiness filled her up; her head turgid with sulpher, her lungs heavy with molten rock – cooling fast and dragging her deeper and deeper down; her soul dissolved to ashes. She knew she would not be rescued. She knew she was alone in the Dark. And its roaring whispers turned welcoming.

But now, of course, the Mother wasn’t alone.

She was a Mother.

And there was another insistent voice ringing in her head, in her dreams. And she listened, and she held on, to herself, and to the baby – bright ballast in the Dark storm.

Eventually, the Mother noticed the sea was cooler and calmer, and she could think and see once more. Somehow, she had come through the Dark days of early motherhood, and she found to her surprise that the baby in her arms had grown into a Little Girl.

And she remembered that one of the gifts of the Dark is seeing the Light with new eyes once it recedes. And she saw through those new eyes, in startling green and blue technicolour, that this Little Girl also had Big Worries and Sticky Thoughts.

At first the Mother grieved that the Dark had got through to be part of the Little Girl’s life. But soon she realised that she was perhaps uniquely qualified to help the Little Girl navigate it.

She knew she had the experience to identify it, name it, confront it – and in doing so rob it of its power. Stop it in its tracks before it could wear the same deep grooves in this Little Girl’s mind.

She knew she could tell the Little Girl about its tricks – its use of Dread and Doubt, and Solitude, and Shame and Loneliness.

She knew she could help the Little Girl see its lies, talk back to the voice in her head and stand up to it like any other bully.

She knew she could help her to tell the Sticky Thoughts to Go Away and the Big Worries they were Not Real, and would not come to pass.

She knew, too, that to do so, she would have to face her own Dark first. She would have to stand tall against her own Big Worries and Sticky Thoughts. She would have to find the language to explain it. She would have to break her own long-enforced silence and drag her own Dark into the Light.

So it was time for the Mother to shake off Solitude, Shame and Loneliness – and to Share.

It was time, for the first time, to start telling the Dark’s secrets.

By doing so she hoped she would find Strength. By doing so she hoped she could help herself, help the Little Girl – and perhaps help others along the way. Others stuck in their own Dark.

She hoped most of all, that they could all find a way to live Happily Ever After.

In Darkness – and in Light.

The End

 

Mumonthenetheredge

 

If you know the Dark, whatever it looks like to you, please know you’re not on your own. There’s people out there who can help you live with it. The lovely people at MIND are a good place to start.  

 

If you know a Little Girl or a Little Boy with Big Worries and Sticky Thoughts, this is a great book to start you talking about it.

 

 

Carrying you, carried me

19 Thursday Jan 2017

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in Baby wearing, mental health, Motherhood, Poetry, Postnatal depression

≈ 2 Comments

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Your downy head rests in my palm,
Tiny hands curled on my chest
And pressed to me impresses
How it’s here we’re most at rest.

Holding you close, keeping you safe –
Where we know you belong
A body kiss, tucked in tight
We’ve learned each other’s song.

Chest to chest and heart to heart
A beating symbiosis
Skin to skin and breath to breath –
Love’s underived osmosis.

For as I marvel at your makeup,
Inhale your sweet head smell
Trace your ear and count your toes,
The oxytocin swells.

The rush is heavy, heady,
Constricting in my throat –
And wrapping you still wraps us both
In devotion, need and hope.

We’re tied together you and I,
The material immaterial –
Because that perfect closeness
Bonds strong, sure, pure, ethereal.

“You’ll spoil that baby, put her down”,
They said, I heard, I hear.
But I know deep down it’s me that’s spoilt,
That much to me is clear.

It’s hard to find the words – explain –
For they can’t know like us,
The calm, the peace, the rightness,
That can soothe all woes and fuss.

The jig, the sway, the miles we’ve walked
All strapped up together.
The colds, the teeth, the reflux
That carrying’s helped us weather.

Dark thoughts and doubts don’t reach me –
I’m whole again, less torn
When you are with me bound and sound,
Less worn-out when you’re worn.

For wearing you it centres me –
An anchor in my storm,
And with you, I am better
Less flawed, restored; reborn.

I’ve worn you like I’d wear a cape
You are my super power –
And with you I have blossomed,
A mum come into flower.

And now you’re big you don’t require
The comfort of our sling
But it helped us connect, reflect,
And it helped us both to win.

I miss you early, on these last ‘ups’,
Storing up your imprint,
But I’m so glad I carried you
And listened to that instinct.

Carrying you, carried me,
Through dark hours night and day
And holding you it held me, too
In a place I want to stay –
To a me lost on the way.  

 

New Year – true you

30 Friday Dec 2016

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in Infertility, mental health, Miscarriage, Motherhood, Parenting, Postnatal depression

≈ 11 Comments

true-2

I have always hated New Year’s Resolutions, because I have always failed spectacularly at them.

The trouble, I think, is that too often our resolutions are to change ourselves. A diet. An exercise regime. A new hobby. A new outlook. A new philosophy.

And change is hard.

It is even harder when the foundations upon which you are trying to build that change, are crumbling.

About this time last year, though, I started to think. Not about changing myself – but about trying to strengthen my foundations. Trying to find myself again.

No, no! Not that way. I didn’t feel the need to go on a pilgrimage to Nepal or to explore the wilderness’ of Borneo, to seek refuge with Tibetan monks or Swedish yoginis. Travel has never been my thing. (I get homesick after a week in Devon).

I felt the need to write.

I have always best processed my thoughts and expressed my emotions in text. Words are always where I have found solace, succour, sanctuary. It started with novels as a small child. Each book had a self-illustrated cover and back-blurb about it being one of my ‘best ever books’. Inevitably this escalated into astonishingly bad angsty poetry in my teens, and then became the focus of my studies and even my work.

Not writing had become – quite honestly – physically painful.

I didn’t lose myself because I stopped writing. I stopped writing because I got lost.

Parenthood was part of it. Miscarriage was part of it. Infertility was part of it. The physical trauma of ongoing procedures. The obsession of it, the tunnel vision. The all-encompassment. Sleep deprivation. The impact of all that on my relationship, my job, my friendships – the stabilising factors of my life. All the things I’d carefully constructed around me to allow me to cope, all of the things that had tumbled down around my ears one by one. And I couldn’t write any of it down because I got lost in the middle of it all. And by the time I realised how lost I was – by the time I could look up – I couldn’t find my way back. To the life I knew, to the ME I knew.

So last January I didn’t make any resolutions to change. I simply make a decision to try and be me – and do the things that make me feel like the best version of me. That would help me to think clearly again, explore hurts, expound on the ridiculous, and express – something. Anything. Everything. Whatever was blocking me from me.

And that’s where Mumonthenetheredge was born.

I worried – and still worry – that some people might think I’m trying to be the next Unmumsy Mum, Peter and Jane or Hurrah for Gin – or any one of the marvellous parent bloggers I personally follow and love, and who have blogging awards or book deals or millions of followers. I honestly don’t think I’m any of them. The point is – and has always been – to be me, to find me – not someone else. I don’t need to be the biggest, brightest or best fish in the pond. I just needed to to swim again. I just needed to write it all down.  

What’s more, if I was suddenly struck with notoriety and ostentatious success I would be both alarmed and terrified, and either run away or sabotage it, as that’s basically what I do whenever I’ve sniffed any kind of personal triumph or success, because yes, for unknown reasons I am apparently that fucked up. (I really wish I could blame this on some set of interesting personal trauma, but I can’t. I’m just a drama queen knobhead with astonishingly low self esteem, OCD, and a fulfilment phobia.)

Anyway, instead of just talking about it, or thinking about it, or persuading myself out of it, or second guessing it, or worrying what other people might think of it, I actually did it. I started a blog.

My first posts got about 14 likes. But gradually, people started responding. Not in vast droves, but in dribs and drabs. And whether placing value in the validation of strangers is sad or desperate or not, each one FELT like a connection. And suddenly I wasn’t lost. Suddenly I found something.

And I think – I think it was me.

Not all of it has been great. I’ve struggled with not feeling good enough. The posts that bombed. The friends I told about it who haven’t liked it, or haven’t found anything to connect with (I quote, and it still hurts). The people who have taken the piss when I’ve been vulnerable, or taken me seriously when I’ve been taking the piss. (Shout out to the guy who thought I seriously wanted to garotte farmers over the October clock change).

But actually, all of that, all of that I’ve needed, in a way. Because actually it’s good for me. I need to question myself. I need to check when I’m being an eejit. I need people to tell me to lighten up, or to knuckle down. I need to grow a thicker skin. To stop letting doubt freeze me. To stop being afraid.  

In many ways I’ve gotten off lightly – I’m sure if I carry on blogging the negative bits will get worse. But so far, so far the good bits have very much outweighed the bad.

Because it turns out the thing I needed most of all, was simply to know that I wasn’t lost alone.

Oh I’ve got people I can call on, but the truth is I don’t, not when I most need to. And even when I do I can’t really articulate what I want to say, or why I want to say it. It’s like I need to write it down to think it through. To process it. To understand my own narrative.

And like any story, it has two halves – teller and listener. And it is the act of listening that really brings life to any story – that really completes any narrative.

Writing wasn’t enough – I needed to be heard, too.

So I’d like to say thank you, to everyone who’s listened. Anyone who’s read something I’ve written, and liked it, or commented. I really, really appreciate it – more than you can know.

I would like to say a very special thank you to the people who’ve got in touch in private – especially after my Rainbow Woodlice post. I’ve talked to some wonderful women, also struggling, also lost, also trying to get back to themselves. One new stranger-pal in particular talked about needing to write things down to get them out – something I totally, totally get. So I told her how ridiculously easy it is to make a start – so easy even I could do it – and her first blog appeared on Selfish Mother the very next day. It’s a hell of a read. And for me that’s been a rainbow woodlouse in and of itself.

In fact, it’s been one of many.

Mumonthenetheredge has helped me connect with all sorts of people, in all sorts of ways. It’s helped me reconnect, for instance, with some old friends – people I’d lost a bit when I lost me.

Then there’s the wonderful group of mummy mates I talk to about writing, including a writer who works on a grander scale than I, and who is infinitely better than she thinks she is. There’s the brilliant Kate over at Little Sheffield (a fantastic resource for Sheff parents – go check it out) and the other pals who support the blog willy nilly, good or bad, and boost my Facebook ratings whether they’ve read the bloody thing or not, because they know the algorithms kill me if it doesn’t get out and about fast enough.

It’s also helped me find some other creative Sheffield types, of which  there are quite a few. There’s the poetry guys – check out Lyrical Events and Verse Matters, and then there’s the fabulous Sophie over at Imogen’s Imagination (seriously stylish retro hats and hair stuff) and lovely Lydia at Studio Binky (cute designs, cards and prints) and all the other Sheffield Etsy folk. These are all people who also need to create to be themselves, and I’ve found a foot-hole in a community I never knew existed, and I never knew I needed.

So if you are thinking about making a resolution this year, I’d implore you to make it about you. Not someone you want to be, one day. You. Now. And whatever makes you the most you. The best of you. The real, authentic, bone-deep you.

Whatever makes you feel the most like yourself, do more of it. And do it for you. Not your kids, your employer, your partner. Just you. If you can’t remember you, find the people that do and spend time with them to remind you. Avoid those that drain you, or bring out the worst in you. Spend time doing the things that are special to you. It might be something creative. It might be learning, or sport, or fashion, or music, or walking – or just laughing – or ANYTHING. Find it, and do it.

Don’t reinvent a new you for the new year – recognise and reinvigorate instead. Regenerate YOU.

Go get ’em tigers. Or woodlice. Or fish – big or little. It really, really doesn’t matter. Don’t compare yourself. Don’t compete. You don’t need to be the best. Just listen to yourself. Just stop for a moment, and think about you for a change. Nobody else.

Because come February you really can’t fail at being you – the true you. You are uniquely qualified. And you can rock the shit out of it.

And maybe you can join me in stepping away from the (Nether) edge, wherever or whatever yours may be.

Cheers all. Happy new year.

Mumonthenetheredge

 

Rainbow woodlice

21 Friday Oct 2016

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in mental health, Motherhood, Postnatal depression

≈ 2 Comments

barbie-2

This has not been a good week. There has not been a good week – a really good week – for a little while, now.

Sometimes, I think I have an invisible shield that makes me impervious to happiness.

From the outside I have a perfect, even charmed life. I’ve got my two beautiful girls. I live in a nice Nether Edge house, with a nice husband who puts up with me, some friends, and a cushy part time job that lets me spend time with my babies.

But.

But.

I am often sad. At my core I am lonely. I am frequently overwhelmed. I am swept away, almost daily, by a sense of gnawing unfulfillment and crushing inadequacy. I am confused at my own discontent, and frustrated by it. Too often, I am angry, at nothing; at everything.

Everyday, I chase happiness.

I wake up and I try and I strive and I drive to get to the next place, the next goal, the next thing that will create happy. But it never quite comes – I can never quite get there. The irony in the pursuit of happiness is that the more doggedly you chase it the more elusive it becomes. The more you try to grip it, force it, the more it slides away. It remains tantalisingly just beyond my fingertips – I can almost, almost reach it… but somehow I can’t get it right, and I fail to meet my own expectations over and over and over again.

Even when I should be happy, I can’t feel it properly. I can’t be in the moment. It’s like something is blocking it, numbing it, muting it. Like there is a barrier – a grey veil between me and the world.

Some days, that barrier is just a light fog. Things are bright enough for me to see clearly. On those days I can taste happy on my mind’s tongue. Other days it is a dense black smoke, filling my lungs, stinging my eyes, choking, cloying and clogging. I can’t see my hand in front of my face. I can’t feel anything. And I can feel too much of it.

The cloud, the trying, the failing, the thin veneer of functionality, all has a name, these days. It’s called high-functioning depression.

On the outside it looks very much like a smile. A joke. Clean hair. Make-up. Plans. Days out. It looks like happy, fed, washed children. A hoovered carpet, a job.

But underneath, underneath it looks different. And the iceberg goes deep.

It looks like a pile of never-ended, never-sorted washing. Overflowing drawers. It looks like unopened post, unanswered emails. Fear of text messages. Excuses. Not turning up at the last minute. It looks like a haphazard diary, short-term, hand-to-mouth, because a micro scale is all you can cope with. It looks like late nights, because if you go to sleep, the next day – the one you can’t face – comes quicker. It looks like too much sleep, in search of oblivion, none of it replenishing. It looks like shitty romances, to anaesthetise the brain. Struggling to make yourself pick up the phone at work. Lung-seizing panic at the smallest of tasks or deadlines. Zoning out over tea, until the four-year-old asks why you’re staring. It looks like spending too much, because that pair of boots, that dress, that’s the thing that’s going to make you happy. That’s going to fix everything. It looks like an unused gym membership, an unread self-help book. It looks like paranoia, obsession over tiny details, mistakes or slights, and then it looks like overcompensation, over brightness. It looks like filling your days, so you don’t have time to think. It looks like tunnel vision, blinkers, deliberately closing your mind off from big news, big thoughts, the enormity of real life. It looks like drinking too much. Eating too much. Not being enough.

It looks like me.

Perhaps it looks like you too.

The thing is, that almost when I least expect it, the happiness does turn up. If I let it. If I’m not looking. If it sneaks up and takes me by surprise.

And it is never the unicorns or fireworks I’m always searching for, expecting or trying to engineer.

It is an impromptu bedtime disco. A hug. A baby’s belly laugh. A stranger’s validation. A recognition of ridiculousness. A well-turned sentence. A connection. A lolcat. It is moments of unforeseen, unpredictable, unexpected wonder and grace and joy – like rainbow woodlice crawling out from under slightly rotten logs.

I like to say that postnatal depression was my introduction to mental ill-health, but that isn’t true. I have lived with anxiety and obsessive compulsive disorder since I was a child. And the worst thing about it is that I can see it in my daughter. It’s all there – obsessive behaviour, fear of germs, hand washing, repetition, the importance of rituals. Worries – so many big worries for someone so very small.

And it terrifies me.

It terrifies me that I might have condemned her to live under my same cloud.

I don’t want a grey veil for her; I want technicolour.

Perhaps one of the reasons I try so hard – too hard – to squeeze happy out of our lives all the time is that I want so badly for her to know it, and recognise it. But I don’t want her to learn to manically chase it, and risk chasing it away like I do. I don’t want her to learn to run away or hide from the black cloud, either.

Because, I am learning, living with depression is not a matter of outracing, outwitting or outmaneuvering. What I want her to know – need her to know – is that more often than not it’s about resilience. It’s about endurance. It’s about patience.

If I met someone else living with depression, someone like me, if I could tell them just one thing, I wouldn’t try and tell them how to find happiness. I would tell them about the rainbow woodlice.

It doesn’t matter how thick or black the smoke. It doesn’t matter how huge the nuclear fallout of your life. It doesn’t matter if everything has crumbled to dust around you. The one thing that will always survive, will always come scuttling out of the rubble and dying embers, is the woodlice.

And some of them – some of them will have rainbows.

Sometimes they will swarm, and you will feel their tiny feet across your soul and their rainbows in your heart. Sometimes you realise you’ve not seen one in a long, long time. You can search for them, lift some rocks, poke the woodpile. Maybe you will find them by looking – but don’t look too hard. Grit your teeth, dig in your heels and just remember that they will come. They will come to you eventually.

They are inexplicable, incongruous, alien, absurd, but always, always inevitable. And they are weirdly, creepingly, crawlingly, astonishingly beautiful. They are the meaning of life.

You just have to hold on.

Just hold on and wait for them.

 

Mumonthenetheredge

The loss

10 Monday Oct 2016

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in mental health, Miscarriage, Poetry, Postnatal depression, Pregnancy

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

3

the

A poem for pregnancy and baby loss awareness week.

Words are important to me. They help me make sense of things, understand the world around me, and shape my own narrative. It helped me to write this. I hope maybe it helps someone else to read it. #babyloss #waveoflight

The loss

The blood, just a spot, a smear on the gusset.
The beat in the throat; the rush in the ears.
The phone call, who to see, when.
The journey.
The unreality of practicality.
The wait.
The running late.
The certainly, deep down, it won’t happen to me,
The certainty, deep down, that it will.
The bargain – if I worry, if I wind tight, if I torment, if I promise, if I pray, it will be ok, it will be ok.
The mantra. Please be there. Please stay, please stay, please stay.
The tick and bustle and comings and goings and ebb and flow in slow, slow, slow motion.
The scan.
The game – searching faces, searching inside – trying to feel you, find you, will you, hold you, fold you into me.
The hope.
The news.
The distress, of getting dressed – familiar, foreign: final.
The truth, that no one is looking for you now. No one but me. Nothing to see, here.
The paperwork.
The excruciating kindness.
The walk back, holding back, tears.
The tears.
The jagged edges of raw, rasping, rattling despair.
The emptiness – emptier than if you’d never been there, at all.
The clawing, raging beast of injustice.
The howl that should have been your first cry in MY chest, pressed against my breast – a cyclone in hibernation,
The desperation, the wildness –
The wilderness.
The loneliness – because hardly there you were most real to me, most mine.
The lie, when I say I’m fine.
The savage fist, the shift, the listlessness, wistfulness, repeated again and again
The impotent love, with nowhere to go –
The need to know.
The need to keep you.
The need to get you out.
The bleeding,
The pain.
The blame.
The weight of your betrayal –
The weight of mine.
The hollow core, the cold tile floor as you left me, bereft me, unblessed me.
The analysis – why you went, what I did wrong,
The song – of sorrow.
The heaviness of sympathy.
The assumption that I will get over you, you. You – like you’re flu – done, gone, move on.
The unfair inevitability of the next day, and the day after, and the day after that.
The sunshine, blue sky and careless, endless, turning, churning, indifferent cycle of life, always
The same.
The shame – of my failure, my unruly feelings.
The depletion, gnawing, grinding incompletion that doesn’t have language or permission.
The space, the echoing, roaring, soaring space, in head, in womb, in heart.
The drift apart.
The new dark.
The fear.

 

Mumonthenetheredge

#babyloss
#waveoflight
www.babyloss-awareness.org

When the fear comes

17 Friday Jun 2016

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in Parenting, Postnatal depression

≈ 4 Comments

IMG_4056.JPGcroc

I was going to write a blog this week about the return from a family holiday. Perhaps I still will. But today I’m tired, I’m hormonal, I’m sad and I don’t bloody feel like it. And I don’t feel like it mostly because I’m scared.

I’m scared some nutter with a gun is going to walk into a library and start shooting. An MP. Walking out of a surgery. Someone actually trying to make stuff better for people. Fighting poverty. Fighting injustice.  

I’m scared some dickhead is going to walk into an office building to shoot cartoonists, a rock concert to shoot leather-clad rockers, or a club to shoot a bunch of people having a bit of a bop. A school, to shoot children. That next time it’ll be me, or mine. Any one of us.

I’m scared Donald Trump will get in and send the world to hell on a handcart.

I’m scared of Brexit, the small mindedness of the world, the push to the right.

I’m scared Boris Bloody Johnson or Michael Merkin Gove will be the next Prime Minister.

I’m scared of war. Of broken people. Of fanaticism. Of the desperation and deprivation that drives people and families to do desperate things.

I’m scared that I’ll turn over the baby washed up on beach and see my daughter’s face.

I’m scared an alligator is going to grab my paddling toddler, and I’m obsessed with thinking about her baby legs, her pudgy arms, trapped in jaws, pulled apart by teeth. The screams, the horror, the struggle, the hopelessness. The last view of her, looking to me to make it better. Her pain.

I’m scared I’ll look away for one minute and my big kid will have fallen into a gorilla enclosure. I live it. I can see it. I can feel it. That moment she’s just gone. The plummeting, the slow motion, the panic.

I’m scared my kid is going to drown on holiday. That I’ll take my eye off the ball and she’ll slip quietly into the pool and it will be too late.

I’m scared someone is going to shoot my plane out of the sky.

I’m scared someone will steal them from the villa in the middle of the night. The heart stopping horror of finding them gone. The torture of imaging where they are, what they’re going through.

I’m scared the holiday apartment will have dodgy generators, and they won’t wake up one morning. And the howl is already in my chest.

I’m scared the cot mattress won’t fit properly, and she’s going to get her face stuck down the edge and stop breathing. And I can’t sleep from the panic.

I’m scared we’re going to crash the car on the motorway on the way somewhere. The terror, the roll, the fear, the blackout, the children. God, are the children okay?

I’m scared of bringing home a foreign spider or insect in the suitcase and having it bite or sting one the children.

I’m scared the baby is going to find one of her sister’s fucking barbie shoes and choke on it, and that I’m not going to know what to do. That I’m going to watch her die. That I won’t be able to help her.

I’m scared of the big kid going on school trips. What if that’s the one time something happens. The coach crashes, the harness isn’t done up right, the bridge fails.

I’m scared one of them is going to get ill. Seriously ill. That every recurring cough is a sign of underlying immunity issues.

I’m scared I’m not doing enough with them, for them. That I’m not enough. That I can’t cope. That I’m fucking them up. That I can’t keep them safe.

I’m scared of the world and it’s horrors big and small, real and imaginary, and how the hell I’m going to get them through it. Get me through it.

I’m scared of failing.

I’m scared of succeeding.

I’m scared at how much there is to be scared of.

I’m scared of how scared I am.

I’m scared of how visceral that fear has become. How debilitating. The weight on my chest.

I’m scared that I really am on the edge.

Because I now know enough about my mental health to know that the apocalyptic thoughts, the sense of doom, the personalisation of news items and tragedy, the detail, the inability to distance those thoughts and feelings – to stop thinking or feeling them – is all a sign. It’s a sign I need to stop. Take stock. And take care.

I know there are other people out there who feel the fear. Who are gripped by it. Frozen. Paralysed. Who let the bad thoughts creep in and take over.

So this is a blog to say the one thing you don’t have to be scared of is being alone. Because you’re not.

I never had the fear before I had children. Maybe having them triggered it. Certainly it changed me. Maybe I just never had as much to lose.

There is a fine line between caution and obsession, empathy and infatuation. And recognising the fear when it comes – spotting the pattern in time – is the key to stopping it.

When the fear comes, when the hypothetical becomes hyperreal, when you are crippled by crisis not yet come to pass; breathe.

The mistake people make in taking a deep breath is to breathe IN. The trick is to breathe OUT, and keep your lungs empty for as long as possible. The next breath in then really matters. Let it pull your diaphragm down and push your stomach out. Don’t let your shoulders rise.

I’ve learnt to speak my fears, because they’re always worse in my head. I can then recognise their ridiculousness. Like alligators in Sheffield. Yet trying to suppress or dismiss the emotions doesn’t work. Let them out. Feel them. Acknowledge them. It’s only then you’ll be able to rid yourself of them – put them away in a box and seal the lid.

Accept where you are stupid, where you are impotent, and where you have the power to manage, mitigate or change things. And then change them.

Because if you’re too scared to try and change the world, starting with you and your head, it will never get better for your kids to grow up in. And they will never see or learn how it’s done.

And that’s something that should frighten every one us.

Take care.

Mumonthenetheredge

 

Is this you? If you recognise these thought patterns, please breathe, take stock and take care, too. And if that doesn’t work, please ask someone for help. Try your GP, or MIND.

 

Postnatal depression and Pottery

08 Tuesday Mar 2016

Posted by mumonthenetheredge in Motherhood, Postnatal depression

≈ 2 Comments

IMG_3465.JPG pottery

Life metaphors have always struck me as invariably silly.

Life isn’t in the least like a box of chocolates. If it was, who the f*&% is eating all the caramel swirls – answer me that?  Greedy bastard.  And if life gives you lemons, you can’t really make lemonade unless it also happens to have conveniently gifted you sugar and carbonated water/baking soda.

Neither is life that much like a roller coaster. In my experience there isn’t that much hanging upside down in the company of screaming teenagers on a school trip – but maybe I’ve been doing it wrong.  I’m not even convinced by Shakespeare’s all the world’s a stage. If it was a play there’d be way more intervals – I really need more intervals.

Nope. What life is really like is one of those paint-a-pot shops.

Bear with me, as I extend a metaphor beyond all tensility, sensibility, or indeed probability.

You often don’t get that much choice in what kind of pot you get, or time to plan your approach. It might be sturdy earthenware, or delicate China. An intricate teapot or a comedy cat. And it’s your responsibility to make something of it in the very short time  allotted to you before the next group booking.

Sure, you get to decorate it as you wish, but only using the colours and tools immediately available to you. The colours don’t always come out as you planned. It’s hard to get the detail right. You make mistakes. You can use a wet sponge to try and rub them out, but you’ll still be able to see them once it’s been through the kiln – so you’re probably better off just adapting the design as you go along.  Sometimes there’s someone to offer you advice, but mostly you’ve got to do it all yourself. There’s invariably someone next to you doing something better.  And in the end, you may or may not be pleased with the results.

So each and every one of is a pot, lined up on the shelves of life, stretching as far as the eye can see. Some of us will be displayed pride of place up front and centre. Some of us will be half hidden behind a spider plant.  Perhaps we get to choose the pots we want to be arranged next to – possibly those with similar patterns.  Some folks are happy to be on the highest shelves, others lurk in safety near the bottom rungs.

Sometimes, just sometimes, pots get broken. Maybe they were already fragile. But when the pieces shatter, they will never be put back in quite the same way.

There are two natural enemies of pottery, the first (obviously) is bulls, the second is small children.  And it’s having children that broke my pot wide, wide open.

I think most of the mothers I know would admit to a few cracks postpartum.  Some may have been relatively minor – hairline fractures.  Others weren’t.  Some had ugly, raw gouges.  A few completely smashed.  I don’t know many that came through the process completely intact, as before, without tarnish or at least a little fading round the edges.  And mostly, we don’t talk about it.  We fall apart in private, and show our best side to the world.

There is a very bad habit, in our modern world, of just chucking out and replacing broken stuff without even trying to fix it.  Simple consumerism – the pursuit of perfection, maybe.  And if we don’t write it off as irreparable, we still don’t ever think of it or use it in quite the same way again. Slap it back together with a bit of superglue or gaffa tape, stick it in the little loo where no one will really see it. Hide it. Move on.

When my pot broke, I did pick the pieces up, eventually. With a bit of help. But it wasn’t water tight anymore. (Hell, I spring leaks from various orifices every time I sneeze unexpectedly or watch a bloody John Lewis advert).  But it’s still standing. I’m still standing.

We have never bottomed out the veritable melting pot (see what I did there?) of mental health in the UK – something that affects an estimated 1 in 4 people at some point in their lives.  It is not just a women’s issue; mental health is very much an equal opportunities affliction.  Oh we pretend to understand it, to sympathise, to be PC.  But in reality we mostly just avoid it, medicate it, wait for it to go away. Stigmatise. Blame. Roll our eyes.

Pull yourself together.

Everyone’s got problems.

Try looking on the bright side.

Change the record.

I don’t need that kind of negativity.

Other people do this all the time.

He’s no fun anymore.

She enjoys wallowing.

Why can’t she just get over it?

Why can’t he just be grateful for what he’s got?

You’ve probably thought one or more of these things about one or more of your acquaintances over the years.

Then it happens to you.

And you can’t make the effort. You can’t face the day. Even getting out of bed feels so HUGE a mountain to climb you can hardly make your limbs obey you.  That heaviness pervades your body, your mind.  You can’t bear to see people, nor to be alone in your own echoing, fickle, foggy head. You obsess over details, become overwhelmed by minutiae, anxious about every little thing.  You can’t make decisions.  You can’t think, plan, engage.

Life is reduced to a series of motions you go through but can’t feel, and emotions you feel but can’t sort through.  There is an unrelenting ebb and flow of panic and lethargy, hyper-reality and detachment.  All you can do is grit your teeth, put your head down, focus, try, fail, repeat. Over, and over and over again.

The battle to maintain structural integrity, to keep up a flimsy shell of functionality, to hold all your pieces together – it takes all the energy and concentration you can muster.

For many women, postnatal depression is their ‘intro’ to mental health issues.  Crazy 101. And it’s pretty fucking scary. And the only thing even scarier than all that is the aftermath – what happens when the fog lifts and you finally put your head up again.

She’s delicate.

He’s weak.

She’s a flapper.

He’s lost his edge.

She can’t cope.  

He’s changed.

She’s a dramatist.

A neurotic.

Overwrought.

Unstable.

Damaged goods.

You’re put in a box that people won’t let you out of again.  It’s like they can’t see your pot anymore – they can only see the cracks.  Like that’s what you’ve become. That’s all you’re worth.

This is not always so.  Elsewhere in the world, survival and experience are embraced.  Kintsugi is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold.  It treats breakage and repair as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise.  It even highlights the cracks and celebrates them as something actually adding to its value.  

And that, folks, is why life is REALLY like pottery.  Kintsugi.

Because you are not damaged or ruined.  Whether you are a sufferer or a survivor, you are uniquely beautiful – not despite your scars but because of them.

If I know anything from watching two whole episodes of Time Team on the History Channel, it’s that broken pieces of pottery are what archaeologists will find thousands of years from now.  It’s how we all end up – at the very end – dashed on the ol’ rocks of life.  Dug out of a trench by a future Tony Robinson.  What story will your pot tell, I wonder?

The golden veins that hold my pieces together are a map of love – the only thing that can really heal or seal the cracks.  And as I sit here on my shelf, gradually collecting dust, they glint in the afternoon sun. Blinding flashes of hope.

 

Mumonthenetheredge

 

Resources:

PANDAS – The pre and postnatal depression support service

MIND – The mental health charity

Sheffield Light – a small Charity run by volunteers providing support across Sheffield to families affected by perinatal mental heath illnesses, including postnatal depression and anxiety.

Fired Arts – the craft cafe at 957 Ecclesall Road, Sheffield S11 8TN

Planet Pot – ceramic cafe at 102 Hangingwater Road, Sheffield S11 7ER

 

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