theprintsale

The Print Sale Print Sale itibaren Highworth itibaren Highworth

Okuyucu The Print Sale Print Sale itibaren Highworth

The Print Sale Print Sale itibaren Highworth

theprintsale

oh, crazy lovely anne lamott, you are just so so delightful. a series of essays on writing that have some spillover onto living. lamott's voice is that of a particularly fun and cynical friend telling it how it is, but with a cushion. a lot of the writing advice isn't shocking, but the presentation is enjoyable and there are beautiful stories and turns of phrase sprinkled throughout. I love how honestly flawed she can be and the section on jealousy was probably my favorite part overall. definitely a great read for when you're feeling isolated or creatively lacking.

theprintsale

From "A Delicious Placebo" by Virginia Hefferman I would say I was sick- sick with any ailment I could think of except "depression," which no one, no matter what the brochures with grainy girls' pictures and the word "reputable" say, will ever believe it is a real illness. Overnight, it seemed, I'd gone from a twenty-eight-year old optimist, the type advertisers and politicians take into account, who might find a career and start a family, to a person who is unreliable and preoccupied, a person other people find themselves trying to avoid. As I brooded over how dingy everything seemed, I wondered if I had thrown myself into depression in order to avoid having a career. It seemed like a possibility, particularly since this theory implied that I was both melodramatic and lazy. Insights generally rang true to the degree that they were self savaging. Unless you are rich, and can convalesce in a sanatorium estate (where visitors come down a tiered, Oceanside lawn to find you at your easel), you have to keep going when you're depressed. That means phone calls, appointments, errands, holidays, family, friends and colleagues. For me, this is where things got tangled. Depression brought to me a new rationing of resources; for every twenty-four hours I got about three, then two, then one hour worth of life reserves-personality, conversation, motion. I had to be frugal while I was hustling though a day, because when I ran out of reserves, I lost control of what I said. From "Noontime" by Lauren Slater When Benjamin and I decided to get pregnant, I visited four perinatal specialists to find out what the risks to the fetus would be if I stayed on my medication regime.The doctors, given the seriousness of my struggles with depression and anxiety, said "stay on." They used words like "risk benefit analysis" and "statistical significance" and those words made no difference to me. They said it would be more dangerous for me to go off my medication than for the fetus to be on it, but even as they announced this, I saw a look of alarm in their eyes. I decided to listen to their words, not their looks. I have been told I need these pills to survive, same as a diabetic needs insulin, how ridiculously simplistic, but I'll tell you it's true. These pills, more than any egg or sperm, have brought me to the point in my life where pregnancy is possible. They threaten the embryo in the same time that they have ushered it from nothingness. I know these symptoms, I do not have emphysema, or a bad heart, I am slipping- without my medication I always slip. I must go back on. "I just couldn't put my child at risk like that," I recall a friend of mine saying when, in the middle of her anxiety ridden pregnancy she was offered Paxil. "I would always look at my child and wonder what I had done to him." I can hear the doctor's words. I know all the rationalizations. Stress, after all, may be worse for the fetus than the pills used to combat it. You cannot take care of a child unless you take care of yourself. I know all this. It barely informs my motives. From "Strands" by Rose Styron When I finally figured out that Bill was depressed- not just moody or in withdrawal or angry at life but clinically depressed- I knew we needed professional help...When Bill's pain was at its worse, he was able to take advise from friends, who had been through something similarly, more easily than from me. I became the scholar of Bill's moods and behavior...now a delicate balancing act ensued (one thing depressives are good at is keeping you off balance.) From "An Unwelcome Career" by David Karp Like everyone who suffers from depression, I spent a lot of time considering its causes...I thought for sure that my depression was rooted in these situational demands and that once I got tenure it would go away. In 1977, I was promoted and found the depression actually deepened. This suggested a wholly new and more frightening interpretation of depression's locus. I had to confront the possibility that my sickness might not have arisen from social situation, but somehow from my self. From "On Living Behind Bars" by Nancy Mairs Never mind the successes I'd had in the past... they were quirks of fate. I achieved each one with the last reserves of my energy and abilities. I lived at the edge of catastrophe. Certain that the next step would push me over, I hung back emotionally even though I took each step as it was expected of me. "I'm afraid, to in a vague, uneasy way. Afraid of what I can do...I am afraid to grow. I am afraid that when the time comes that I am grown, I will not be able to face life for fear it will not be as beautiful as it is in my private existence." From "A Melancholy of Mine Own" by Joshua Wolf Shenk Perhaps depression is simply hard to convey- even as Styron says "indescribable." But I'd like to suggest another possibility, that what we call "depression," like the mythical black bile, is a chimera. That it is cobbled together of so many different parts, causes, experiences, and affects as to render the word ineffectual and perhaps even noxious to a full, true narrative. I felt as I had felt for as long as I could remember. I did not go to therapy to understand, or to get through, an episode. I needed to understand and get through my life. In High School, I wrote in a poem that I wished "to be a slug, to have an exterior that exposed what I felt.' I greatly desired to speak the whole truth. Instead, much of the time, I merely said, Thank you, thank you. I'm getting up now, going to school, going eventually to college and the bright future that everyone expected. But the present, which I tried so hard to dodge, could not be dodged. I hoped for such fluid, full, direct communication in therapy, I tried to express the relentless streams of criticism that I directed at myself and others, the way I felt split in two, the dull and sharp aches that moved around my body as though taunting me. I wished to plug in a probe from my brain to the doctor's so that he could see- without mediation how I stood outside myself, watching and criticizing and could never full participate in a moment. How I felt bewildered, anguished, horrified. In his exhaustive survey, Melancholia & Depression From Hippocratic Times to Modern Times, the historian Stanley W. Jackson concludes that ...over 2,500 years, two images recur most often "being in a state of darkness and being weighed down." From "The Legacy" Martha Manning When I was depressed...he tried to get me to articulate what was wrong. Anyone who is seriously depressed knows that that task is as daunting as asking a lame man to tap-dance. The medicine helped quickly and dramatically. It lifted a lifelong weight off my back and made me wonder, "Is this how regular people feel?" But like many people who take psychotropic medications for significant periods of time, I struggled with questions like, "Why can't I do this on my own?" or, looking at tiny pills, "Is this all that stands between hell and me?"