Have you ever been depressed?
I don't mean have you ever been a bit down, or a bit unhappy, or peed off.
I mean, have you ever been diagnosed with clinical depression? If you have, then you have my complete sympathy. If you haven't, well . . .
In March 2017 I was diagnosed with clinical depression. I feel now, with the benefit of hindsight that it had been brewing for a long time, but had come to a head, probably through a change in work circumstances. By March 2017 I was driving to work everyday in tears, clutching the steering wheel for grim death. I was short tempered, withdrawn, and had lost interest in many things which I had always loved. I hadn't quite gone so far as making plans for suicide, but I went to bed every night hoping that I wouldn't wake up the next day. I think the only thing that stopped me, and made me go to get medical help, was the fact that I couldn't bear the thought of my daughters having to explain to my grandchildren what had happened. It was like there was a wee demon sitting on my shoulder, continually whispering to me the worst things that I'd ever thought about myself. In my own voice.
Don't worry.
That's quite a heavy paragraph to read, isn't it? It is important, though.
I went to see my GP, who immediately signed me off work for a month - which became 2 months - talked with me, and put me on a course of medication. And I have no doubt that my subsequent recovery had more to do with the medication than anything else.
However, a few weeks after my diagnosis, I made a long planned visit to Prague. I was only there for a few days, but while I was there I made over a dozen pen and ink sketches. I don't know if the process helped because essentially it meant I was taking the real world - which seemed a frightening and threatening place to me at that time - and taking control over it, reducing it so that it fit upon a page in my sketchbook. But it did help.
I've always sketched a bit. The first couple of sketches I'm going to show you were made before I was diagnosed. But I found sketching in Prague so therapeutic that I made 2 resolutions when I returned. The first was to make 100 'warts and all' sketches of the town where I've lived for over 30 years - Port Talbot. You can see these in a sister blog called 100 Faces of Port Talbot . The second resolution was to travel to European cities as often as I could, during holidays from work, and make as many sketches as I could in a few days.
So that's what's here. I don't kid myself that I've permanently rid myself of the little demon on my shoulder. I take it one day at a time, and today, I'm good. Please feel free to leave a comment about the sketches, even if it's just to tell me that you don't like them.
Showing posts with label purpose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label purpose. Show all posts
Sunday, 5 November 2017
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