I started going to therapy after my annual physical which was last summer, July maybe. I saw a new PA with my primary care practice. The NP that I had been seeing for the past couple of years retired a few months prior. So the good news is that he was a nice kid, smart. He talked me into not only giving an SSRI a try but also into considering seeing their therapist in the office. The bad news, I didn’t think he was going to stick around with the practice.
We had a good chat about some of the things going on with me since the whole fiasco. Again, things I thought were normal grieving were suggested to possibly be something a little more. This is where I’d insert a crying laughing emoji if we were texting. Which apparently isn’t cool anymore but be prepared to always and forever get them from me if we text. Because I like them, which will become a theme with me over the next few stories. Anyway, he talked me into trying an SSRI. So guys, here’s the thing with this prescription that’s unlike most of the others I’ve received in my adult life….. Not only did I fill this script, I also actually started to take the pills. As prescribed even.
So fun fact, a decent percentage of people with PTSD will have a paradoxical reaction to this particular SSRI when they first start to take it. Basically it will have the exact opposite effect that you’re going for, severe acceleration of symptoms. It rarely last more than a week if the patient can stand to put up with the symptoms. That’s what I read online after no sleep and anxiety at the panic attack level for 48 hours straight anyway. So I did. I stuck it out. I paced around my house for hours at a time. I rocked, that’s a good one to get nervous energy out. I thought “God damn it, I finally agreed to try this. To try to move forward. I’m not turning back now.” In retrospect, I could go either way with if I did the right thing. I mean with this drug anyway. It was a hellish 5 or 6 days but I did it. Could I have switched to another drug that wouldn’t have done that, yes. Would I have switched or just given up on the idea? That’s the real question with noncompliant patients such as myself. And I do think that that drug is helping. So for that I suppose I am glad that I stuck it out.
Has it taken away my depression and anxiety? No. Has it helped me sleep or stopped the night terrors? No again. Has it helped to lift the fog just a little bit? Yes. Has it helped me to get through entire days without crying? Yes again.
When I went back for my follow up my appointment it was switched to a primary care MD who is lovely and kept me with her based on the complexity of things going on with me. I am truly grateful for that. So we decided to keep me on this SSRI AND she talked me into making an appointment with the counselor in the office. Again, grateful to have that service accessible to me as I know it’s not to so many.
So I start therapy. Again, lovely therapist in the office. Very kind. Gave me things to work on or think about between sessions which I very much liked. But here’s the thing with therapy, it’s really patient directed. So I went in thinking that I wanted to talk about everything that happened. Especially the stuff the last few months. When things got really bad. When his physical health was declining as rapidly as his cognitive function. When the pandemic was in full swing so I literally had to risk assess every person that came in the house so I was alone with him a good percentage of the time. When I finally had to move our bed downstairs. When he needed 24/7 care and I was a one woman show. When I shoved all the terrible things down as deep as I could because I didn’t have the time or the energy to deal with them. It’s intentional at the time but then they end up like that one poor yogurt that gets pushed to the back of the top shelve of the fridge. You know the one that you have to scooch down and really look for to find it again. And then usually by the time you do its a month past expiration and the top is all puffed up. Or that one poor jalapeño that you just keep piling fresh produce on top of because you forgot he was there. It’s not until trash day that the poor little guy is revealed, all shriveled and with a furry coat. The point being, if you don’t go in there after them (and sometimes you have to really look around to find them) they’re going to fester and stink. Rot you from the inside out.
So I start going to therapy and talk about how things were at the time, what I want to do in the future, how I’m dealing emotionally day to day, how I’m sleeping, how I need to take better care of myself, all of my feeling of self loathing and lack of self worth ( a common PTSD symptom by the way). So basically I went in there and talked about everything BUT what happened. I mean obviously it was all things that were important. All things that I know needed to be talked about. But we never went after the stinking yogurt. No fault of hers. This was all self driven and we did do some great work.
Some of the most important work was me learning how to be open to the universe as far as what it’s going to bring into my life. How to go with the flow. Be open to new things. Put myself out there and just see what happens. And let me tell you guys what, I was all in. I was going to come up with a plan of how that was going to happen. I could spend maybe one day at most without working on my plan, which is most likely an exaggeration honestly. It was probably more like a few hours at a time. Then I couldn’t stand it anymore. I’m not sure if it’s an attention deficit thing, a control issue, a general lack of patience, too much time on my hands, or a combination of all four but god damn it, I was making the fucking universe come to me one way or the other.
Turns out that’s not actually how it works.
The first shift was subtle. I didn’t recognize it at the time. It took a couple of weeks for me to be like “Okay, Universe. I see you. I see what you did there.” I had been going to therapy for a few months. Meds got shifted around. I was physically feeling a little better. Sleeping some. Trying to take better care of myself. Eating, you know the basics but things I needed to work on. I was getting ready for a trip to Atlanta to spend a long weekend with the absolute best friend I could ever ask for AND see the B52’s at the Fox Theater. We try to do a trip or something for our mutual November birthdays because, well because we want to. Funny side story, she bought the tickets when we were in Grenada, on an island tour, downtown at the House of Chocolate, holding her phone up over her head to stay connected to the spotty wifi. Now that’s a crying laughing emoji worthy sentence right there. So I’m trying to pack for the trip, standing there staring into the abyss of one of my closets. Yes, I said one of my closets to emphasize what I’m about to say. I didn’t have anything to wear. I’m literally staring in a packed closet that only contains my folded clothes. Nothing on hangers, I have another previously packed closet for those. No delicates, I have drawers for those. So I obviously HAD clothes to wear. I just didn’t want to wear any of them.
I know I’ve talked about my yoyo weight through all of this but at this point I had settled in at a weight which stayed stable for a few months. Nothing gained and no more lost. So I decided to buy myself some new clothes for the trip. I picked out somethings that I liked. Things that made me happy when I looked at them. Things that made me happy when I wore them.
That weekend was a blast. We had so much fun. The first full day which was my actual birthday we went to the World of Coca Cola and did the whole touristy tour and then to Mary Mac’s Tea Room for some fine southern cuisine. I stupidly wore new boots and got blisters so bad that I asked a random stranger who looked like a mom for bandaids and literally limped back to the hotel only to find out that the concert that was supposed to be starting in 4 hours was postponed until January due to Kate having strep. Yup, you read that whole thing correctly. We were staying at a hotel directly across the street from the venue so we got ready to go out, me wearing my finest running shoes and several layers of blister dressing with my new clothes and headed down to the bar. Turns out almost the entire hotel was there for the concert so the bar was filled with self proclaimed concert refugees. We met a lot of nice people from all over who had also come in for the show, swapping travel stories over drinks. It was fun.
This was the second shift and I felt this one. My first thought when I found out the concert was postponed, I get to come to Atlanta and do this again.
I spent the rest of the weekend with the feeling of a positive shift. We visited the Atlanta History Center and had dinner at a fantastic tapas restaurant that had just opened. They had an amazing female violinist performing. The owner came over to our table and then sent food and shots to our table. The next day we went to an amazing brunch complete with a free pitcher of mimosas and then headed to the High Museum where it was Second Sunday, free admission and performers including dancers and music.
A few adult beverages were consumed and many hours were spent talking. One thing that came up was that my therapist had asked me at my last session if I had thought about dating. So we talked about that. How it was a hard no. I felt like I was still married. And who would I date anyway? When I said that to my therapist she suggested maybe someone that I already knew since it would be easier than someone that had no idea what happened. To which I absolutely lost my shit laughing. I mean, seriously why would anyone who saw what happened to me want to date me. And besides, I had a great marriage to a man I absolutely adored and I had no interest in settling for less. So I came up with a list of qualities that were absolutely crucial in a potential partner for me. And it was a list. It was a list of someone I was absolutely sure did not exist.
I felt different when I got back from that trip. I felt like I was finding some happiness. I did feel a shift. And when I opened my closet the next time I realized all those clothes that were piled so high on all the shelves, they weren’t mine. I literally felt like I was looking in someone else’s closet. The matchy matchy sweatsuits that I had bought because I could wear them during the day and to sleep in, as in literally sometimes for several days in a row out of necessity. The clothes that were “appropriate” for this occasion or that. But not things that made me happy when I looked at them, when I picked them up, when I wore them.
So that was the first thing that I decided needed to change. Guess what guys? I can wear anything I want now. Whatever makes me happy. Skirts that feel sassy when I twirl around. Gigantic dad jeans that are comfortable enough to sleep in. Things that sparkle. Clothes that serve no purpose other than to make me happy. And I’ve been purging my closets. Yes, all of them! I’m getting rid of all the clothes that belonged to the old me.
This is about the time that I was feeling good. Better anyway. Good shifts from the universe that I recognized and was open to. Sleeping some, eating more, taking better care of myself. This was also about the time that the universe saw me skipping along happily for the first time in years so obviously the only appropriate response was for the mother fucker to stick her leg out to trip me.