Anxiety

Words Once Unspoken

Content Warning: This post contains extensive discussion about grief, depression, and contains mentions of suicide.

So, as has been mentioned on this blog before, my mother died when I was ten years old. It’s a bit of an abrupt gut-punch of a start to this blog post, but as I’ve found many times throughout life, there’s never really a painless way to bring it up. But bring it up I shall, because today I want to talk about my journey from that moment onward, throughout my teenage years, and how that affected me going forward.

Why? Because I’m a chronic oversharer? Maybe. But I’ve found myself thinking about my early teenage years a lot over the past few weeks, and applying what I know now to my mental state back then. And maybe in sharing my journey here, someone may find some use out of it. Plus, looking back on the completed post now, I realise that I’m not sure many people understand what I went through as a teenager. I’m not sure I truly did!

So, I’m ten years old, and my mum has just died. Life changing stuff. But it’s not really information that’s possible to absorb right now. It’s something I’m dreadfully aware of, but I feel guilty for taking time out of school because for the most part, I feel strangely normal. It may sound brutal, but at the time I’m telling myself that the only change to my life is that I never get to see my mum ever again, right? That’s sad, that sucks, I loved my mum to pieces. But I’ve turned a complex four dimensional traumatic loss into a 2D problem. My most immediate concerns are the bleak atmosphere which now surrounds us as a family. Oh, and for a good year I’m on standby to give anyone who badmouths my mother a black eye. Nobody did, of course, but that defensive aggression was there.

I don’t have a lot of memories from that period (I’d say due to time but I remember this part of my life being a little hazy in the years immediately after.) I have vague memories of mum’s funeral, where I was too numb to cry. This’ll be important later on. My throat got real tight and my mouth got real dry, but I felt a deep disconnect between these physical reactions and my numb emotional state. If I were to take a guess at psychology I’d say this was either the cause or beginning of a lifelong (so far) problem. I’m still surprised by the physical emotional reactions my body has to this day. But for the next ten years at least, I very rarely cry, that’s the point here.

Something I don’t really talk about too much is the misfortune we had with pets in the immediate years afterwards. I cried when our dog Tiffany died, and my dad told me that was probably everything coming out then, but I wasn’t convinced, and to be honest, I’m still not. If anything, this caused me more concern over my inability to cry for my mum. I’d cry over the dog but not her? What did that say about me? Anyway, we also adopted rabbits and guinea pigs which didn’t last long for various health reasons or other misfortunes. We treated them perfectly well, but it began to feel like death had cursed our family.

Again, I really don’t remember too much about the immediate two or so years after my mum died, but I should probably add that it wouldn’t have been all doom and gloom. My numbness came paired with the ability to compartmentalise the grieving part of myself with the usual ten year old kid part of myself, and only when looking back now can I understand that this duality of self contributed to a lot of my developing worldview and mindstate going forwards. Hell, one of my mum’s friends later told me that at her very wake, I spent a lot of it enthusiastically telling her all about the Nintendo Wii, which must have just been announced. I was a kid who was getting by convincing himself that the world was still normal, and acting accordingly.

I remember having a lot of anxiety about starting secondary school. Probably the normal stuff, but as I suffer so much with anxiety now I do wonder. Those thoughts patterns feel awfully familiar. Catastrophising about change, fearing the unknown. What if nobody likes me, what if I’m bullied, what if I get lost between lessons? But hey, I survived. I remember being sapient enough about time and change that I tried to commit much of my first day to memory, as I knew it’d be something I looked back on and reminisced on later in life. I’d become highly aware of how time could erode memory and transform normality.

Anyway, new school, new friends. I spent a lot of time feeling like I had some sort of other knowledge. That mostly manifested as me feeling “wiser” than the other kids, which would be absurd to anyone who knew me at the time because I was outwardly very immature and hyperactive, like many other twelve year olds. I didn’t spend school moping; not yet, anyway. I spent it forming a group of friends who’d mostly go on to leave by the end of the school year.

Inwardly, I’d dramatise my “duality”, though I wouldn’t think about it in quite that sense yet. I’d replay in my head ordinary conversations with a different tone. Phrases of happenstance could become moments of deep importance. And here’s the thing: I still have no idea how much of this behaviour was normal for a kid my age, and how much of it was influenced by my “unique” worldview. This is important, I realise now. I had no idea what normal was. I had no idea how much of me would have been me if my mum was still alive. I still don’t.

(I would eventually gain enough self awareness to realise that any other kid in school could be hiding just as much trauma as I was, but it took a bit.)

To add to my emotional plate, I’d developed quite a crush, one which would end up in us going out for two weeks before she moved away at the start of the summer holidays. We’re still friends, so there’s a chance she’s reading this, and if she is I’d like to say that whatever came next wasn’t your fault!

I mention it here because for the first time, I’m correlating these two very different types of loss under one word. My then-girlfriend moving away just as we finally got together did have a profound effect on my mental health. This type of loss was one I could digest, and so for the first time I fully felt the sting of missing someone. This wasn’t a pain I was too numb to recognise. It was a “normal” growing experience, perhaps twisted a little out of shape by my past experiences.

I fell into what I would now consider to be undiagnosed depression. I maintained that aforementioned “duality”, but for the first time my friends saw the cracks. Some days I’d be almost completely unresponsive, spending lessons with my head in my arms (when allowed), wandering off at lunch breaks. It wasn’t all about the girlfriend moving away, which I of course got over in time; I became obsessed with the intangibility of this generalised awful feeling I was having. I never became suicidal, thankfully, but I would dedicate many thoughts to what my funeral would look like, how I could die in an accident, what music would play at the service, that sort of thing.

I didn’t understand what was happening in my brain so as much as I dramatised my own life in my thoughts, I also beat myself up for being overly dramatic. I called myself an attention seeker for being hyperactive, and developed a very low opinion of myself. And, crucially, I didn’t tell anyone in my life how I was feeling at the time. I’d lose entire evenings to feeling depressed, not that I knew to even think of it that way at the time. And I spent the entire time thinking I was just being overly dramatic, punishing myself for feeling bad.

It’s not until I put those words down that I realise how bleak it sounds, so let me add this: Despite the pervasive depression in my life at the time, some pretty amazing stuff also happened. I met my step family, who I love dearly, and had many fantastic days even with this headspace I’d sink into. And I hid that shit, by the way. If anyone’s wondering, I was ashamed of it. If I was sulking sullenly in my room and somebody knocked, I’d perk up and pretend I was fine before they came in.

Importantly, it doesn’t make any of the joy or happiness I expressed false at all. The thing that confused me so much about how I was feeling is that the smiles weren’t fake, they were genuine. It was possible for me to have a really good day and a really bad night, and both halves of my day were as true as each other.

I hit another pretty rough patch when I was sixteen. An online friend of mine who I didn’t know too well chose to end his own life, and this cut through me in ways I didn’t understand. If I hadn’t known him so well, why did I feel so much grief over his passing? Compounding on this, some of my closest friends were going through their own mental health crises, and in my haste to help them I began obsessing over them following in my online friend’s footsteps. This was just about as much depression and anxiety as I’ve ever felt all at once; my grades slipped, my behaviour became extremely irrational, and after months of masking my pain I finally broke down in front of my parents.

I lay this all bare now because I finally start to see a pattern. Besides just understanding anxiety and depression a lot better now, I can also see how experiencing loss at such a young age formed my response to loss and pain going forwards.

This is all the distant past now. I’d like you to know that while I still deal with anxiety every day, I’m fairly confident in saying I haven’t felt depressed in a decent while. I’ve had amazing support from my family and friends, and I’m actually due for my first therapy session next week. I’m generally in a pretty good place for me! But I wanted to share my adolescent experiences, and how things which all felt so intangible and indefinable back then were actually always linked together and quantifiable.

And to give a clear shining message: I got better. In my darkest moments I convinced myself that I didn’t want to feel better because I didn’t know who I was without the pain. But it turns out that it wasn’t the pain that defined me. And as I learn how to deal with it now, I find that I’m still myself. I just spend less time paralysed by my own brain.

One last thing, although it’s a little personal. I mentioned my mum a lot and how I digested her passing by compartmentalising what it meant. But a few years ago I think I did finally confront the “4D version” of events by recontextualising things from an adult point of view. Instead of just considering my life without her in it, I considered her life and how it ended too early, and the world without her in it. And on the way home from work at 12am, I sat in a bus shelter and had a good cry.

If you made it this far, thanks so much for reading. I hope it helped you in some way, but if not, that’s fine too. This was mostly for me.

Anxiety and Me

At the beginning of the year, I mentioned that I was looking into mental health issues I have relating to anxiety and ADHD, and whilst I don’t have too much to share since (besides the over-stretched nature of the NHS), I have spent three months learning about my anxiety and how it affects me. Today, I’d like to share some of what I’ve learned, both as a reminder for my future self and as a personal experience for anyone who may notice these behaviours within themselves. Plus, I’ll share a general life update with you afterwards! Special treat.

When I first spoke to the mental health practitioner at my local doctors’, she used a word that I’ve found extremely helpful to describe what I do on a daily basis. According to her, I spend a lot of time catastrophising. In other words, my mind takes the express route to town Worst Case Scenario, and it happens a lot. To give a recent example, on Monday I experienced some abdominal pain. Could be anything. Brain said, maybe appendicitis? Turns out, it was not! But boy, did I spend all of Monday thinking about appendicitis. Not for fear of dying or needing an operation. More for fear of the drama it would cause, the interruption to my life, the worries people would have. Of course, I was able to hear the rational part of my brain telling me not all the symptoms aligned, that my father had first hand experience and assured me the pain would be much greater and more immediate were it appendicitis. But here’s the thing about my brain: It doesn’t want to listen to the rational parts. Because the irrational parts now think I’m just talking myself into being fine, that I’m going to die because I’m too stubborn to call the doctors’. I visualise myself dying, and my funeral, multiple times throughout the day. I have a hard time focusing on games and shows that night because of it.

The next day, the pain is mostly gone. I have a great day!

The next day, I notice a spot (now since faded) at the area of the prior pain. Rational brain says, it’s just a spot. Irrational brain says, it could grow into a lump. I lose another day to anxiety. It is exhausting.

At the end of 2021, I developed minor digestive issues which cause heartburn and acid reflux if I drink certain fizzy drinks. I spent the first half of 2022 obsessing over this. (And yes, I went to the doctors. Would you be surprised to hear I’m fine?) One of the issues I face is something akin to imposter syndrome when trying to analyse any problem within myself. Is it heartburn? I don’t know. Did the medication fix it? I guess, but what if I’m wrong? It’s not completely gone. Could be anything!

Point is, I don’t want to be a hypochondriac. And to be clear, my catastrophising is by no means specific to just my health. I believe that despite being a naturally introverted person, my anxiety dramatically limits the amount of time I spend actually visiting friends, especially if they’re not local. It’s something I’ve grown ashamed of, and I worry that friends think I just don’t care. But I’ve come to learn that it’s not a personality flaw, and by sharing it here I hope to help people understand me, or themselves, a little better.

There’s lots more, but this is a public post and you’re not a doctor. Probably. But even if I’m yet to really get a handle on my anxiety, I’ve definitely shifted my mindset away from being hard on myself for facing the issues I face, and that’s been something of a relief. I still get frustrated, but I’m developing counter-arguments for the negativity I levy at myself.

As for my experience getting help for it, it’s still early days, but I’m happy to share what I’ve been through so far. (Keep in mind this is UK based and your experience may vary.) I rang up my doctors asking for an appointment related to anxiety, and spoke to a mental health practitioner who offered me two options: Antidepressants, which I declined, or local mental health services, in this case, Plymouth Options. (Both was probably an option too.) Options set me up on an online CBT course, but due to heavy demand, signed me off from supervisor oversight within the course after just two weeks based on a questionnaire which I apparently answered too positively. When I mentioned this on social media, I had multiple friends and family members contact me telling me they had a similar experience. I subsequently complained to Options, who, to be fair, contacted me seeming legitimately concerned and wanting to hear what went wrong. Today, I had another appointment which puts me back on track within the course.

I need proper counselling, I think, but unfortunately this country isn’t in a position to provide it unless I meet “certain criteria”, or have money to pay for it privately, which I don’t. But for the time being, I’ll give the CBT a second whack. Hopefully the ADHD self-referral I completed with my mental health practitioner two months ago gets a response soon too, so I can enter a six-month waiting list to be seen for that.

So, three months into 2023, that’s where I’m at. If you’re seeing some glaring issues with the NHS here, please remember to vote the Tories out at any opportunity. As for me, I’ve spent my entire life battling this stuff, so don’t worry; treatment for me comes down to quality of life, nothing more.

In other news (I did promise), I’m having another history binge! This time, it’s in the format of a podcast called The History of England, which is a podcast that talks about, well, you might guess. But it’s chronological, from the Dark Ages onwards, and it’s bloody fascinating! Well, it’s a bit long winded, but that’s history for you, isn’t it? I’m also continuing my foray into audiobooks. After reading How To Stop Time by the fantastic Matt Haig, I decided to take on the Doctor Who New Adventure series of novels. I’m only two books deep, but I can tell you that The Clockwise Man is a proper Ninth Doctor adventure.

The entire reason I wrote today’s blog post is because… well, you know when you’re dusting, and you get distracted by something on your bookshelf? It’s the digital equivalent of that. I’ve decided to finally invest in cloud storage, and was moving writing files from my free Dropbox account to this Google Drive when I realised I hadn’t updated The Tombstone Project since 2020. Of course, I read some entries as I was pasting them in to the document, and I realised how far I’ve come in the past three years in regards to my attitude about my own mental health. So, to any ancestors reading this in the far off paradise of the year 2538, don’t worry, Kristian did finally gain some level of self-awareness and seek outside help for his inner problems. Keep reading, as I’m sure it only gets better from here!

To those of you reading today in 2023, though, thank you for caring. Be kind to yourselves and each other.

(Oh, and a note to anyone leaving comments: Speculating about what’s wrong with me would actually be really unhelpful, so please don’t do that <3)

From Here Onwards

I used to write one of these at every turn of the year, but it got a little exhausting talking about the past and the future at intervals where my life saw little change. Last year, I… did nothing, and this year I shall… hopefully do things! It began to feel like empty words. So, as we’re twenty days into January, please feel free to take this as a hint that this is not a scheduled yearly blog post, but one that I’m writing because I actually have things to say.

I’ve spent a lot of my twenties beating myself up about the state of my life. I grew up with grandiose ideas about becoming a world famous story teller who’d change the way people thought about the world! Fast forward to last year, when I’m sitting through a faculty meeting at work, listening to my boss tell us that we wouldn’t realistically be working here if part of us didn’t enjoy the work. No, I think, I’m working here because I’m trapped within my own limitations and only my friends here keep me sane. I still work there. I recently had an attendance review meeting because I took four unpaid days off in four months for being curled up in bed with the flu. It’s going real well.

So how come I’m not a world famous story teller? Well, I have a few theories about that (sans the world famous part). And this year… well, starting from the end of last year, because I wasn’t waiting for an arbitrary New Year’s Resolution before changing my life… this year I’m following up on my theories. For starters, I’m seeing someone about ADHD. I have nothing to share yet, so don’t assume I have it – there are people in my life who certainly don’t think I do – but personally, it’d go a long way to explaining why I have such difficulty not just with sticking to a single idea long enough to see it through, but also with plenty of every day problems in real life. Speaking of which, I’m also starting an online CBT course thing for anxiety! I won’t get into oversharing, but I think that a lot of my issues in life come from a generalised variety of anxiety, and so far it would seem that doctors agree.

So I’m not promising to write a novel this year, because I tried brute forcing that last year and I got four chapters into my first draft before having a crisis of confidence and binning the thing. But I am promising to work on myself. If ADHD and anxiety aren’t the issue, something else is, I know that much by now. I’ve barely dipped my toe into figuring this stuff out but I already feel more confident for the small scraps of validation that my investigations have brought me so far. Maybe I’m not just shit. Maybe I’m facing some real obstacles. Maybe I always have.

On a lighter note, another thing I want to do in 2023 is read more books! I’ve become super engrossed in comic books these last few years, so it’s not that I’ve not been reading exactly, but on the novel front, I’ve been mired seven books into the Wheel of Time series for some months now. Unfortunately, this fantasy epic becomes a notorious slog for the middle three books, and in my stubbornness to not give up I’ve ended up forsaking almost everything else. Last year, I read four books, two of them Wheel of Time novels. (The other two were Good Omens and Sylvanas, a World of Warcraft tie-in novel. Both are excellent.) This year, my aim is to read 15 books by the end of the year, which may not sound difficult to you, but… remember the possible-ADHD thing? I use Audible nowadays to listen to books on the way to work, as I have a tough time keeping my attention on the real physical deal. Unfortunately, Audible only gives out 12 book tokens over the course of a year, so 15 books may actually be an issue! Ah well. I’ll figure it out.

Thanks for reading. I hope your 2023 proves as fruitful as mine is planning to be. I’m considering changing the name of this blog from Perpetually Perturbed to The Tombstone Project, after the real-time memoirs project that every blog post here contributes to. What do you think? Let me know!

June – A Month of Finding Validation

When I was a kid I used to pray to God several times a night to not let the roof fall down. Not because it was particularly likely, or because I was a religious kid, but because it was something I used to worry about long after my parents put me to bed, and on the off chance that God was real, asking him to not let the roof fall down on us would increase the likelihood of that not happening.

The other day I was thinking about the Coronavirus, and how it was one of the many theorised things that could go wrong for mankind in the modern age. I considered how none of the pre-existing narratives and methods of rational thinking have stopped our world leaders from making awful decisions, and I considered the many other high death toll events that could happen in my lifetime – climate change, Yellowstone Park, nuclear war, so on and so forth. And then I recognised that thought pattern, that fear spiral, and I realised I’ve been doing it all my life. How that level of fear and agitation bleeds into my everyday life.

I’m not jumping to any conclusions on mental health here, I’m looking at this from more of a personality point of view. This basically all stemmed from when I was talking to my friend about how I always tend to value other people’s opinions over my own, practically by default. I’m awful at debates and arguments because I have this innate need to agree with the person who is sharing their opinion with me. As an example, I’m someone who loves massively multiplayer online games. But if a friend tells me they don’t like them, and outlines why, all I do is agree with them. Yeah, that’s a good point. Yeah, that is dumb. Yeah, I don’t know why I enjoy it, I’m just dumb like that, I guess. And while it’s important to listen to and understand counterpoints to your opinion, it turns out that if you live your whole life doing nothing but accepting that your preferences on everyday things is flawed, you lose faith in yourself as an individual quite entirely.

So there’s a small eureka I’ve had this month. It’s had me re-evaluating the way I talk and think about myself a lot too, about my level of confidence in social situations. The main thing to do now is implement it into my everyday life.

In other news, I turned 25 this month. Hurrah! I’d already made headway last year into nipping the bud on the attitude of aging being a bad thing (more on that later), and in accordance with my previous statements about self confidence and validation, I only have this to say: Every day I stray further from youth, but closer towards a more realised vision of who I want to be.

As for what I’ve been up to this month outside the relentlessly bleak state of the world? I’ve been rediscovering my love of collecting trophies, the achievement system for Playstation consoles. I’ve raised my total Platinum (fully completed games) count from 7 up to 10 in the last few weeks, finishing up The Crew 2, Assassin’s Creed Odyssey, and the merciless grind of Ratchet and Clank’s one million bolts. In previous months I’d surely add a clarification that I know it’s dumb to spend so much time chasing arbitrary accomplishments that have no value in real life, but instead I’ll say it’s something that brings me joy, and at the end of the day that’s what videogames are all about.

Now, what were you up to last year, Past Kristian?

A Journal Through Time #20

Speaking of fear spirals, yeesh, Chernobyl is a terrifying but important watch. Plus. it’s neat that this is the month where I go on about how much I love the combination of history and fiction, given that I’m currently obsessed about the Assassin’s Creed franchise.

A Journal Through Time #21

That headway into positive thinking about aging I mentioned. During the latter half of my 23rd year, I really got inside my own head about aging. I had this mental image of an old man version of myself with lots of bitterness and regret, and it was around this time I realised that I was in danger of becoming him if I didn’t stop thinking about him and start living my damn life outside the big number.

Oh, and I absolutely do not have my shit together yet. I’m just not letting that stop me from being creatively inclined.

A Journal Through Time #22

Ruh roh, cracks appearing in the project. Small reminder that I don’t see this through to the end. I don’t remember when the cutoff is either, we may be approaching it. Ah well, at least we still got 4 real posts this month.

A Journal Through Time #23

A little example of that innate need to agree with people in this very blog post, when I outlined how I gave my conservative manager the time of day on humans as depletable resources. I wish I could say that was the last time I’ve murmured agreement because it’s easier than debate. Conviction doesn’t equal truth, Kristian. C’mon, buddy, we can do this.

A Journal Through Time #24

I shared a very personal story in this entry, and I’m glad I did. This is one of the more important ones.

October – A Month of Self Reflection

October is, quite possibly, my favourite month of the year. Autumn, undeniably the best season, is in full swing; darker nights and cooler days bring with them nostalgia and self-reflection, a phenomenon which I’ve only just learned is apparently natural among humans and not just my own personal quirk. The best part of October, however, is that it is the month of Halloween, a holiday which embraces the dark, the arcane and the weird, all of which are totally my aesthetic.

The aforementioned self-reflection has manifested itself in the Tombstone Project. One night I got to thinking about this little blue diary I used to write in as a kid, and after turning my room upside down looking for it and being unable to find it, it made me think about the nature of time and change and the documentation of these things being accessible. The rest of that is already documented in my previous blog post. But I’ve also been thinking about some of my lifestyle choices, the things which led to who I am today. I spend much of my free time gaming, something I love doing, and while I don’t neglect aspects of my life in favour of it per se, I have become somewhat more organised as a person for re-assessing how I prioritise my hobby. I also spent some time assessing how and why I’m teetotal and if that’s something I want to change. For now – no. But I certainly use it as an excuse to remove myself from more social situations than are necessary.

The thing about me is that, especially this year, I’ve not taken many risks. After a turbulent 2018 I resolved to just, er, turtle up and remain in my comfort zone. And coming from someone who doesn’t venture far outside of their comfort zone in the first place, you can imagine how that leads into a stagnant lifestyle. So when it comes to social situations, I have no idea what my limits are, and I suppose up until now I’ve been afraid to push myself into testing them. I don’t know. It’s very hard to discern to the difference between my insecurities and my personality; am I restricted by some inherent level of anxiety which I need to work on, or am I just beating myself up for being an introvert? It’s something I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about this month, and I’m no closer to an answer than I was at the start.

But besides the usual existential ruminations, what have I actually gotten up to this month? Well, given what I just discussed, it should be obvious that I don’t typically get up to much, but let’s see… celebrated some family birthdays, taught my niece how to blow raspberries, revisited a childhood favourite videogame series and made content out of it, grappled with the ethical ramifications of my then-favourite game company causing an international incident, and dressed up as the Mundane Dread for Halloween. (That’s tonight. I’m working. So I’ll be in regular uniform. Funny Joke.) I’ve also decided to starting updating my Instagram and Facebook Story feeds, because more social media can only be a good thing.

Moving forward, I’m going to be taking notes throughout the month of things to discuss at the end of it. Given that I only decided to start this project during the final third of October, it’s safe to say that I’ve forgotten a lot. Either way, though, that’s been my October, or the ass end of it at the very least. See you at the end on November!