Laura Snelling March
12, 2018
Depression for me has always been
concealed. I’ve always been what they call “high-functioning.” I’m able to hold
down a job, go about my day just like everyone else, and — for the most part
— maintain healthy relationships with those around me.
Every single person I’ve
come across has told me they never would have guessed I was depressed if I
hadn’t told them.
I have what they call
smiling depression. I love the concept of laughter and smiling at people;
brightening someone’s day is what my goal is every single day. I don’t like
sulking in my own sadness 24/7, and I sure as hell hate bringing other people
down because of my depression. I speak about it publicly. But that’s to help
end the stigma. When someone asks me how I am that day, I’m never honest.
Because in reality, they don’t actually want to hear about how incredibly sad I
am on a regular basis.
On the outside, people
see the happy, bubbly, carefree woman. But in reality, they have no idea. I
don’t know if it’s ironic, but within the last three weeks, I have had two
different people tell me I look so happy with life. My response to them was a
little laugh, and “if only you knew my friend, if only you knew.” Neither of
them know of my history with mental illness, and I wasn’t going to bore them
with putting down their statement and explaining to them that it’s really the
complete opposite.
My depression — in
reality — is this:
It’s pretending like
nothing is wrong. It’s not anyone screaming for help; it’s actually the person
staying silent. It’s the tears I cry without anyone knowing because I have no
other way to express the overwhelming amount of emotions. It’s the plans
canceled last minute because I can’t seem to muster up the strength and energy
to go do anything. It’s the two days off spent in bed instead of doing
something fun because I’m too exhausted from pretending all week. It’s that
dark cloud that hangs over my head and never seems to go away. It creeps up on
me during the most unexpected times. It lurks and waits for something great to
happen, just so it can ruin it and convince me it’s actually something
terrible. It’s the fear of happiness because I know that at some point, it’s
bound to fade away just like the memories. It’s faded memories and a cloudy
mind, unable to recall important things that have occurred in my life. It is
numbing and leaves me unable to function on the really bad days.
The truth is, I’m not
happy with my life… at all. Nothing inside of me wants to continue living a
life riddled with anxiety and consumed by depression
and trauma. I think about death on a regular basis, yet I’m not technically
suicidal.
I have those few genuine
moments in which my laugh or smile is real. But for the most part, even when
I’m smiling or laughing, I’m breaking on the inside. Even when I try to have
those moments of happiness and pureness, depression still lingers; reminding me
that the sadness is greater. I wish I could just tell people that. I wish I
didn’t have to pretend. In all honesty, it’s the most exhausting thing I have
ever done. I’m so tired when I get home each day and it’s not because of lack
of sleep or working all day. It’s from pretending to be happy and bubbly all
day long.
No one understands what it’s
like to be trapped in such darkness, with no way out and appear to be happy. No
one understands how exhausting it is to put that mask on every single day. No
one understands how badly I just want them to genuinely ask how I’m doing — and
be ready to listen to me talk about sad I am. Because sometimes, talking about
it and sulking in it aren’t always the same thing.
On the bright side,
smiling depression has its benefits. I’m not the stereotypical depressed person
that you see on the commercials for antidepressants. People have a positive
view of me instead of judging me for constantly being sad. My stepmom has always
told me I light up any room I walk into. Other people have told me the same
thing, and that’s comforting, because I don’t want to bring them down with my
sadness when I walk into the room.
Maybe I do it to try to
give myself a glimpse of what it’s like to be happy. Maybe I do it to try to
convince myself I’m not actually depressed (even though we all know that’s a
lie). Who knows why I do it. All I know is I’ve been like this since I was
diagnosed at 12.
Here’s to you thinking
I’m the happy girl.
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