The Sun Will Yet Shine
| July 22, 2020How could I wait while the world moved on and I was a ghost of myself — not a mother, not a daughter, not a wife?
You know me. That woman in the grocery. The one with the freshly washed wig, crossbody, and trendy sunglasses. Super capable, a great multitasker.
I was all of those things. Until I wasn’t.
This is my story.
It’s a story that could’ve happened to anyone.
It’s a story too often silenced and hidden behind shuttered windows because what will people think? and no one must ever know.
But I want people to know, and I no longer worry about what people think. Because it’s a story I so badly needed to hear when I was lost in the darkness, when I believed there was no way I would ever again feel like myself.
I pray it reaches even just one woman who feels as hopeless as I did. I pray she discovers, sooner than I did, that there’s no shame in asking for help, that mental illness can be as excruciating — but also as treatable — as a physical illness, and that with Hashem’s help, she’ll one day be okay again.
My story begins when I was blessed with a beautiful baby boy after an easy, uncomplicated pregnancy and an easy, uncomplicated birth. I came home from the hospital on a high.
I’d had complicated births with my older children, so I appreciated how fortunate I was to come home a healthy mother with a healthy baby. I had a baby nurse, so I slept well at night, and those first two weeks were a joyous blur. I felt a deep sense of peace, gratitude for my family, and for my capacity to heal.
Then, without warning, something changed. Everything changed.
It started with a strange undercurrent of unease. Throughout the day, I felt on edge. I worried but couldn’t express what was worrying me.
I assured myself it was normal: I had a family wedding coming up, my son’s bar mitzvah was approaching, and I had a newborn. But normal or not, I couldn’t shake the persistent anxiety. I just couldn’t relax.
I went to my general practitioner for a checkup and told him how unsettled I’d been feeling. He recommended I take a relatively mild medication to quiet my anxiety, and I acceded quickly. Perfect. I was so grateful that a pill could get me back to feeling like myself.
At first, that pill seemed to be enough. I got through the wedding and the bar mitzvah, the anxiety still present but less intense. But just when life was supposed to return to normal, the anxiety intensified with a ferocity.
My mind raced with unsettling thoughts, and a relentless nausea, far worse than anything I’d ever experienced during pregnancy, consumed every hour of my days and nights. I couldn’t eat and I couldn’t sleep.
Terrified, I made an appointment with my OB-GYN. I wondered, even then, if I was experiencing symptoms of postpartum depression, but my doctor didn’t see things that way. He suggested I had an allergy or a gastrointestinal problem and referred me to specialists in those fields.
His advice didn’t resonate with me, and I made an appointment with a social worker instead. I sat nervously in her office, seeking to convince her — and myself — that I wasn’t experiencing postpartum depression. If I had PPD, I could never have pulled myself together and scheduled this appointment, right? If I had PPD, I’d never have looked as good as I did — with freshly cleaned clothing, makeup, and a sheitel, right?
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