Stigma

I am so sick right now. I think it might just be the worlds worst cold, or maybe the flu. I feel dreadful and could barely lift my head off my pillow all day. My eyes are puffy little slits. My nose is running like a tap. I have been using nose flowers (aka stuffing tissue up my nose to absorb the constant drip. The ends hanging our your nose look like the carnations you made in art class when you were 7. You’re welcome for both the imagery and the ingenious tip). My skin is chapped. I am alternating between shivering and sweating – casting off the duvet one minute, wrapping tightly around myself the next. I am sneezing everywhere. I cough.

I am throwing everything I’ve got at this cold. Vitamin C. Vit D. All of the B’s. Various drops and drinks and remedies. Advil and Tylenol and even Midol. I just want to be well. I am pissing and moaning to anyone who will listen to me about how crap I feel.

Because suffering with this cold or maybe flu for 3 days now is just not acceptable!!!!

I have a point here. I am getting to it. It feels hard – because, well, stigma. That is why.

There is a big push to end the stigma surrounding mental illness. For good reason! I’ve been basically just ignoring the campaign. Staying silent. Like a complete total chump. Until right now.

Me, a person who will do basically anything to rid myself of a cold, went about 27 years before I got help for bouts of depression that lasted for months on end, and more recently crushing anxiety.  I mean, I only just recognized about 6 months ago that there was help for me, because I only just recognized that I am not well and that it is not a personal failing.

It happened after I read an interview with Sarah Silverman – a comedian I adore. I don’t remember where I read it, or even specifically what she said. What I do remember is relating completely to her story. And learning that she takes a very low dose of meds everyday to stay well, and that it works. Shortly after that a dear friend told me that meds were the best thing to ever happen to her and she could not recommend them more. Two women I admire openly taking about how these pills saved them from so much misery. It was empowering for me.

The depression started in my teens. I believed that I somehow wasn’t holy enough, or good enough, or something enough and that is why I felt so bad. That it was my fault and that I alone could fix it. It came and went. Rolled in like a storm and would roll out sometimes just as fast. There were two or three episodes that are particularly difficult to look back on now, knowing what I know. That I didn’t have to suffer through it.

Through the six month stretch in my 20’s were I wept in the fetal position in the shower every day. Or the six month stretch in my 30’s were every morning I considered how hurt my family would be if I gave into the urge to jump in front of the Go Train. Or the horrible day last winter when on my drive to work traffic came to a stop because someone had jumped from an overpass. And I related to that person. My thought was just … yes, of course.

The anxiety though… that just came out of nowhere fast and furious. It started right after I had minor surgery 2 1/2 years ago. The anesthetic really fucked me up for days on end and the worst side effect was panic attacks. The first one was just awful and my husband rushed me to the hospital because I was sure, and so was he, that I was having a heart attack. Later, I came to recognize the early signs and do my best to breathe through them praying my pounding heart out, or sometimes taking an Ativan. The anxiety got worse and worse. Circumstances contributed – stressful situations amped it up, and up it would stay. My son had to have surgery… a family member died…I got in a car accident.  I was always so level headed and calm, but suddenly I was a disaster. On a 24/7 adrenaline rush – it was hell.  I went to a Naturopath, therapy, my doctor… we debated meds many times.

Then one day on my drive to work I felt the storm coming. As soon as I got to my desk I called my doctor. I cried while I told her that I could not handle both at the same time. Anxiety on it’s own…maybe. Depression on it’s own…maybe. Not both. She called in a prescription for me that day and that night I took my first Zoloft. It did not go well. I got violently ill. We tried again, this time Celexa. I joined an online forum and by reading literally every post I knew I was going to be up against a nasty few weeks of side effects until it started to work. Two weeks of basically hell. Extreme fatigue. Nausea. Heightened anxiety. This awful feeling that I had the major shakes, but I didn’t, I just felt like I did. Mental fog. I powered through because the internet told me that I was going to be ok. And guess what?

I am better than OK. I AM FRIGGING AWESOME. I had no idea how crushing my anxiety was – until it was gone. I had no idea how much lighter I would feel. I had no idea I could feel this well. I am not in a state of bliss or anything. I am not feeling any false happiness or flatness or otherness. I still get sad. I get mad. I feel like me. Me but without a mental head cold or flu. I feel relief. My quality of life has vastly improved. My husband and kids see it. People at work see it.

If there was no stigma, perhaps I would have taken action all those years ago. Recently we had family over, and I put my pills away in my bathroom. I have only told a few people that I am taking meds. I do not have secrets from anyone… except for this.

Today with this stupid cold I realized that I am part of the problem – I have zero shame about my physical sickness, I don’t blame myself for it. I don’t consider it a shortcoming that I have a cold and am looking for any relief I can get. I consider it perfectly normal and I doubt I could find a soul on this earth to disagree.

If more people were open and honest about their mental health experiences the stigma would not exist and no one would have to quietly suffer, questioning their strength, character, being. I am not saying that meds are for everyone. There are many ways to improve your mental health. Natural ways, therapy, diet, shit tons of options. Addressing inflammation, getting more sunlight. But the meds worked for me, and this is my story.

Now, you might be shaking your head at this point asking yourself why I am writing a blog about having a midlife crisis if I am doing so damn amazing…but the thing is, it is amazing that I am having a mid-life crisis. That I care about my future and how I spend my time and how I feel and that I feel I have something to contribute and have the energy to write about it and the will to make changes for myself and my family  and to really LIVE.

So today I say FUCK YOU MENTAL HEALTH STIGMA! (In my blog, which literally one person reads. Hey…one step at a time).

 

 

 

Life Plan

I have learned many things in the last 10 years of my career, but I think the most valuable lesson has been that setting goals and a making plan to achieve them works. Shit gets done. It is very simple. This is how our business runs.

This may be another one of those obvious truths that other people have always known, but for me it has been a revelation. I always kinda flew by the seat of my pants, living in the moment and taking life one day at a time. Working in show biz (the first 10 years of my career) is very deadline driven, but the deadlines are hours, days or maybe weeks away. Nothing is long-term. Truthfully, I was very happy to live that way. It was exciting and fresh and fun.

BUT… when you are ambitious, and you want to make progress, and living hand to mouth starts to get stressful because you have babies- you need something to work towards that is a bit more substantive than curtain up at 8.

I made my first five-year plan in 2007. Actually, it was more like a shadow of a hope of a plan, but still, it worked. It was simple. Buy a house, live there for 5 years, buy a better house. Somewhere into year two of this plan I went to a corporate offsite business strategy session where we were encouraged to envision what our life could look like in 5 years. It was a surprising exercise. I saw myself sitting in the sun on a dock. I had a nice manicure. We had to draw a picture. I did. We had to stand up and say it, I did. Then… I did nothing.

Flash forward to Jan of 2014. I am packing my bedroom because we are moving to a better house. I am going through my notebooks and binders and folders and purging all of the business documents I really don’t need. I find my drawing. My vision of the future… and my eyes almost pop out of my head as I look at the page clutched between my polished fingers. Because… our new better house is steps from the lake. And we have access to a private dock and beach. And we pretty much live in paradise (for 4 month of the year at least, fuck you every season but summer). My vision became reality…and I didn’t even make a plan. I just saw it and drew it and said it. I believe that subconsciously every choice I made after that point led me to today. To making my vision a reality.

And now I wonder to myself … what can I accomplish if I am consciously making choices to achieve a vision?

I kinda went here on a really surface level in my first blog post, but the other day I decided to do some real soul-searching… which sounds so heavy and labourious, but really all it took was to ask myself these questions: How do I want to spend my time? How do I want to feel? What do I want to see?

In less than 20 minutes  I got this:

Short Term (next 18 months)

  1. Spend more quality time with my husband
  2. Spend more quality time with my children
  3. Space to decompress, re-energize and truly consider my career aspirations in an unbiased and objective manner
  4. Healthy and fit body, mind and soul
  5. Comfortable attire at all times!! Make up for special occasions only!
  6. Cultivate my creativity
  7. Have more sex
  8. Travel with the kids as much as humanely possible while they still will.
Medium term (2-5 years)
  1. Location independent career, or in a location I love, accountable to self.
  2. Find my tribe – live surrounded by people I love where friendship is a priority
  3. Continue to live in a beautiful home on or near water. (In a forest with a pool is ok too)
  4. Flexibility with schedule to allow for Doula work
  5. Kids continue to get a good education and have meaningful friendships
  6. Give a Ted Talk (I know, super weird right?!)
  7. Drive a Tesla or other equally awesome maching
  8. Date night once a week at a min (double or group dates are acceptable)
  9. Travel! 2 trips a year at least

Long term (5 years and beyond)

  1. Retire!
  2. Overwinter or live somewhere warm
  3. Expend energy making a positive difference for people
  4. Travel!
  5. Own and operate a retirement community for my friends and loved ones
These might all change, or they might stay the same. Who knows. What I do know is that when I am making choices I can ask myself…is this in service of my goals? What choice gets me closer to my personal truth? Am I saying yes or no to achieving my vision?
I asked my husband to make a list of his goals for me. He hasn’t done it. He is a musician, and I think when I bug him to do this stuff he feels like I am boxing him in. Maybe I am. I just want to make sure that our goals are aligned, and if they aren’t, reevaluate and adjust our expectations. So far, he has just said that his goal is that I achieve my goals.
Well look out baby because now I plan!!
OR, maybe he will get lucky and I will completely forget that I made this list. Maybe in 5 years I will look back on my early blog posts and see this and be amazed.

 

Calories, Calories

None of my pants fit. NOT EVEN MY FAT PANTS. I am chunking out pretty fast. I recently told my husband “It is like my body WANTS to be fat”.  As soon as I said it I felt this big UH OH and rushed to buy a pregnancy test.  It was negative so I have no idea what is going on.

Actually…I have a small idea about what might be going on.

The other week some of the folks on my team invited me for Poutine. Which after pizza, is my favourite food. But get this… I said ” I would love to, but I can’t. I have a salad in the fridge. I went to yoga last night so I don’t want to spoil my hard work with junk food”.  To which my coworker responded “No, it’s BECAUSE you went to yoga, that you can eat Poutine”, to which I responded, “Ok, let’s go!”.

I have no willpower when it comes to food so I completely embraced this new thought that I can actually eat shittier because I am exercising.

And then there are the car snacks. I have a long commute…and somewhere near the start of it I get this crazy snack attack because it is the end of the day and I am ready for dinner, but I still have to drive for an hour or more, which is boring…and I eat when I am bored so…. So I basically feel ravenous at all times in the car.

If I don’t have healthy car snacks ready to go (aka I have literally never had a healthy car snack ready to go), I stop at a gas station and buy Zesty Cheese Doritos and a Crunchie bar. Then I need a drink, and because I have a fundamental issue with the bottled water industry (But yet never remember my reusable bottle, ever), I can’t get water so I get ginger ale or apple juice or coconut water. When I have PMS  I get really smart and actually stock up on car snacks and my PMS tells me that the best snacks are at Bulk Barn, in bulk, and you see where this is going. My centre console is filled with dozens of those flimsy film bags with holes ripped in them. My glove compartment should be renamed ‘salty snack world’.

I recently took action and reactivated my My Fitness Pal account to count my calories, and it was pretty shocking. I was going over my daily allotment by 50%, 60%…70%. But I mean, really red wine? 450 calories a glass? WTF. And who knew how many calories there are in a burrito bowl! Like come on, it is not even wrapped in bread!

In all seriousness, I really do find tracking calories to be a very useful tool to control my eating habits. I am super competitive and sticking within my calories feels like a game I have to win. It also motivates me to exercise more to win back calories.  I have to WIN. I have to end right on the number.

Over the last three days I have eaten 300% more veggies and stocked my car up with snacks that are healthier. Like these puffed quinoa cubes that are super gross but hey, they fill the void, are low cal, and have protien.

Also, I am learning a lot of new things … here are some samples from my internet search history:

  • What foods have negative calories? (Celery! Black coffee!)
  • What are the most low cal cocktails? (Gin Gimlet! EW)
  • What causes sudden weight gain? (Cancer, inhaling food)
  • How many calories do you burn doing yoga? (hardly any, is it even real exercise?)
  • How many calories do you burn during sex? (well…depends on how long you go and wild you are. (None of your business!))
  • How many calories do you burn jumping on a trampoline? (doesn’t matter, it’s too cold out and I haven’t been doing my kegels)
  • How many calories do you burn walking up stairs? (THIS IS A COP OUT)
  • How many calories are in a shot of maple syrup? (less than you think! WHOOP)
  • Why am I always hungry?

A friend of mine told me to get a step counter that syncs to my fitness pal because it will automatically roll back the calories for you. Since she got hers she has been going up and down the stairs 10x a day. Sounds like fun.

I feel like having a step counter would actually destroy my life.

Did I mention this thing I have where I have to win? Winning at steps means doing 10,000 a day. I am willing to bet my next paycheck that I currently clock about 800 steps a day. I walk from the house to the car, the car to my desk, my desk back to the car and then home where I sit or sleep. Very grim. Fucking yoga won’t get me steps.. too much flow. I think I need to switch to Zumba.

If I had a step counter I would go crazy trying to get those steps to the point where everything and everyone in my life would be completely neglected. Sure, I would be skinny and fit, but also prob get fired and divorced. Where do people find the time for 10,000 steps?!

This whole clothes that don’t fit, car snacks, steps situation … SIGH.  I know my middle-aged body doesn’t rock the same metabolism I had when I was younger. That is an issue. My lack of self-control, also an issue. Poor food choices…all on me. But the thing is…this is a symptom of a greater problem.

I need a complete lifestyle overhaul.

 

Balancing Act

Wrinkles

I have been a pretty intense control freak for the last 13 years. Prob my whole life actually, but the last 13 years freakish in a way that I am acutely aware of and in a way that I find personally distressing, because there is no way I can claim to be the one thing I want to be:

A fun and easy-going free spirit.

#easygoingfreespirit would have been the hashtag on all of my selfies if we had instagram in the 90’s (vs. #glorioussunset which is my current default).

#easygoingfreespirit might have been how others described me even. I sort of did whatever the heck I felt like, I was spontaneous, carefree, going where the wind blew me. I was also a chronic pothead, drank too much, and made some crap choices that were inconsiderate to others. I guess somewhere along the lines I decided all of these attributes must be intertwined.

When I found out I was pregnant with my oldest son, I was forced to confess to my midwife that he was conceived while on a bender that lasted about 22 days (it ended the day I peed on the stick and saw 2 lines, he turned out just fine, better than fine), and that I had not only been drinking  but smoking pot and possibly had taken mushrooms (couldn’t quite remember the timing). I know it sounds bad, but it wasn’t a dark time – I was just partying. My husbands music career was on the rapid rise, we spent all of our time in bars and clubs and going to places like  NYC to meet with fancy industry people in fancy places, and it was really fun and exciting and all came screeching to a halt because I got knocked up and got a grip.

When I say I got a grip, I really, really, mean it. Like an iron grip. I went into full on control mode which manifested in a multitude of ways.

~ Yes, obviously I want everyone to conform to my will, but I have always been like that and I don’t see that changing – and, um, don’t we all want that? ~? Right?

But there was more to it. There was the almost exploding if I was going to be late for anything, including my self-imposed deadline of being 15 min early for everything. There was my need to iron and lay out all of my clothes the night before work, including accessories and makeup – or forget sleeping. The socks having to match no matter what.

There was and is so much control to wield over my job itself. Somehow I got a really good one, in an extremely respectable industry, doing very worthwhile work, with very well-educated and very smart people. PRESSURE (My previous job had been at Second City where I hung out with very funny people all day, drank wine and pretty much just laughed my ass off). There is a lot to deliver on. I’ve got some serious strategy and scheduling and to do listing and work back planning and risk mitigation going on. For myself AND for my team.

My husband can likely give you a million other examples of how much fun I am these days … like how when company is coming I go psycho and shriek at everyone until the house is spotless, or another thing that he wishes were a little different was how I have rejected the weed and my immense irritation that he did not also reject it.  But I mean, what if we suddenly became serious drug addicts? Everyone knows pot is a gateway drug (I don’t actually believe this… but hmm, do I?).

Addiction runs in both of our families (someday there will be a whole other post about my fears for my children related to this and my recent panic attack after hearing my 9 year old call something trippy (and be right about it)). What if I succumb to some predestined biological impulse and wind up losing my job and abandoning my family and living on the streets? I have two other humans to keep alive and raise right and mold into good citizens who are also happy people.

I have been pretty tense for a decade or so as a result of all of my making sure our life is a success. I mean, total strangers have come up behind me and massaged my shoulders level of tense. I can’t watch full genres of tv and movies because it is too stressful. I am basically limited to rom coms and Friends re-runs.

My point is, motherhood changed me. I suddenly had a whole universe to hold together. I could not be care-free, I had to be care-full. Very, very careful.

When I pray there is always one thing I ask for help with. BALANCE. If I was going to have a mantra or set an intention for myself it would be BALANCE. If I was going to create one of those collages (are they called mood boards? Is that a thing?) of all you aspire to, it would just be pictures of people balancing on things, and scales in balance.

I am working on it. Hard.

I wouldn’t dream of missing a work deadline, but I have allowed myself to be just on time or even a few minutes late for other engagements – and I have managed to stay pretty chill about it. I already told you about the pot laced lollipops.

There is more.

I have stopped laying out my clothes at night. Now I just think about it for a minute or two and mentally decide…or sometimes I don’t! I scramble around in a ball of stress in the morning freaking out until I pull an outfit together. But guess what? Our whole world does not fall apart!

Just the other day  I almost didn’t iron my shirt in the morning. I took it out of my drawer, observed that it was a little crumpled, and put it on feeling smug and accomplished. Of course, I immediately ripped it off and ironed it, but still. A year ago I would not even have tried to do something like that.

And then I walked out of my bedroom and took a good look at my oldest son. We had this conversation:

Me: Honey, your shirt is really wrinkly. It’s bad. Let me iron it.

Him: Nah, I don’t care. It’s fine.

Me: It’s not fine, it looks horrible, and I care. The iron is still hot, it will only take a second.

Him: No. I don’t care.

Me: Ok. If you don’t care, I don’t care (a lie).

And there you have it. I let his wrinkles go. Progress! I managed to be #kindaeasygoing and #slightlymorebalanced