Archive for March, 2009

WFMW: Taking captive every thought

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

sunbeam_road“..take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ….” (2nd Corinthians 10:5)

I can’t remember exactly how this verse in 2nd Corinthians crossed my path last week, but I’ve been thinking about it ever since. The context is spiritual warfare, and I’ve always thought of this in what I call “high and mighty” terms, regarding the pitched battle between the church and the evil powers of Satan and sin. But I don’t think I’m over-reaching if I apply it in a more humble way to my own daily walk as a Christian. 

Anyone who’s lived with depression for any length of time knows how insidious it is. There’s a uniform grayness to your life, punctuated by a ray of light here and there that keeps you going — a wedding, the birth of a child, a long-looked-for event, a surprise visit by a dear friend. And yet even in joyful moments it’s easy to feel as if you’re walking on the edge of a cliff, with a chasm at your feet, just waiting for you to stumble on a stone or root and pitch headlong into it.

Sometimes it’s the smallest and most mundane roots that reach out to grab my ankles. A baby who won’t stop crying. A snappish morning with my husband. My worries about family members and their own struggles. A desperate attempt to get out the door on time that keeps getting foiled by one thing or another. [Poopy diaper, or snare of Satan? Discuss.] One thought leads to another hopeless thought, spiraling out of control until my entire life seems unprofitable and useless, worthy only to be labeled with a sign reading “Why bother?”

Therapy often helps people get back on track, but what about the days when you don’t have a trained guide back up to the path? Therapy helped me see that it’s nearly always that one difficult moment that triggers a stream of self-hating thoughts. This was a landmark moment for me. But recognizing the problem is one thing; solving it is another — I’ve been trying to stop the cycle for years, with varying success. But this week, “taking captive every thought” leaped out at me. It’s about as far away as you can get from the phrase “helpless spiraling out of control.” 

And it’s given me a new prayer, especially in those 4am wakeup moments. Not just “God, please help me” or even “Please give me rest.” But now, “Take these thoughts and hold them captive, Lord.” It’s a subtle shift. Maybe to a non-Christian it seems passive — and yet we do have one responsiblity, that of handing over. It is we who must first lay hold of these insidious thoughts and in turn give them to the One who can bear all our burdens. Who promises to give us rest. 

I’m writing this just before bedtime, and I think I can promise that this won’t ever be a rote prayer for me. It will never not be needed. Depression is something I think I’ll live with forever, but I’m thankful that another Life is able to be lived out in me. Handing over my anxieties, my fears, my burdens to be taken captive — it works for me.

(For more WFMW posts, visit We Are That Family.)

Forgot to knock on wood after yesterday’s post!

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

knockonwoodYeah, so this morning I woke up just before 4am. And I’m still awake! Frankly I do not know how I have managed to stay alive this year on so little sleep, averaging far less than 5 hours a night. Last night I freakishly slept 8 hours. Today, my body is back to its old tricks. No sleep means I crave energy from food. It means my friends without kids think I’m a flake when I forget to respond to emails. It means a door is open wide for that flood of  anxious and depressive thoughts that we all get in the wee hours of the morning.

(ps — find that cute image here.)

Today I’m in that screw-everything mode where I yell at myself and say FINE. I WILL JUST START GETTING UP AT 4AM!

If I’m up with no hope of going back to sleep, I’ll just eat at 4, do a little devotional reading, and hit the gym when it opens at 5. 

Wish me luck.

Calloo, callay! or, what you holler when you get 8 hours of sleep

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

This has been an amazing weekend. First, I only had the barest twinges of morning sickness. And then last night I slept from 10:30 to 6:30am! I feel like I’m on Planet Normal instead of my usual black hole of despair and nausea (short pause while I knock on wood about eleventy-million times).

I do not know why I am suddenly feeling good. I do not care to question how. But this is seriously an answer to prayer — I have needed a break from feeling bad for months. I’ve been waking up at anytime between 2 and 4am with no way to get back to sleep. That way lies madness, people! So it’s amazing how grateful you can get for these little things — like sleep, or eating like a normal person, that you once thought were necessities and now realize are blessings.

And of course now I have delusions of grandeur about my spring and summer, in which I single-handedly plant a garden and harvest yummy veggies for my family. And cook them. And have fun things like picnics. And write a book, decorate my house, and generally turn into Supergirl.

I just may go to the gym tomorrow if this keeps up. 

I feel bad about my neck

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

This week another round of family sickness hit us, from more stomach issues to bad colds. Oh, and more insomnia, like from 2:30am to you know, when the rest of the family gets up.  See this picture? Wish it were me. Maybe my sleep problems would be solved if I just had a cool mask and some swingin’ earplugs.

sleep_mask_holly_golightly1

And when  I went to my OB this week for a routine exam, she felt my neck and said “is your neck always this big?” Me: “?????!?” Turns out I have a very enlarged thyroid. AKA a goiter. Go google images, I dare ya.

Okay, now that you’ve picked yourself off the floor…. I have to go see a specialist and we’ll see what’s next. From what I can tell, all treatment is usually postponed during pregnancy, but it still has to be monitored. Of course now I feel like a sideshow freak with the swollen neck, but maybe this is the reason why I have felt so dead tired and muzzy-headed the last couple of years, even when I’m eating right and exercising. I’ve had my T4 levels tested and they always come back low but within normal range. But obviously something ain’t “normal” if it’s all blown up on one side. 

Meanwhile I’m having visions of a post-op Frankenstein scar and wearing scarves for the rest of my days. Isadora Duncan, I flutter my scarf in your general direction!

BRAT diet, ad nauseum…

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

bratdiet1Yeah, so it’s been almost 2 weeks since I’ve posted. I managed to get either food poisoning or a VERY nasty stomach bug twice since my last post. Plus the usual preggie nausea. And the kids keep waking up about 3 times a night each. Lord help us. It’s really wearing my family down. 

The good side of all this is that for a couple of days (after ditching a friend’s birthday party to puke in the parking lot — classy!) I forgot to take my Zofran and suddenly felt immensely better — no nausea whatsoever, not even those sudden retching spells. I wonder if the miraculous (and expensive: $3 each, and that’s with insurance) Z-pill been making me sick. This is one of those krazymaking weeks where the things that make you better make you sick. The things that make you sick make you better. (Okay, I’m still waiting for that last part to happen.)

But now that I’m finally crawling out of the stomach bug chasm of doom, I just may see light up ahead. If the Zofran has been part of the problem, and not taking it helps…. well, all I can do is test my little theory and hope I win some lottery trifecta of no flu, no nausea, no nuthin’. 

Because I really do want to get back to the gym.