Today's powerful guest post was written by Amanda Van Slyke, Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Flurt Magazine. For more information, please visit Flurt's Facebook Page.
Every month around this time the darkness swallows me up. It
seems to happen in an instant, where I previously felt more creative and
fulfilled than I've felt in a long time. Just before the lights go out, I climb
mountains of work that I've been trying to reach for weeks. I write essays full
of passion and reach out to others for emotional connection. I walk down the
street smiling ear to ear, thinking that maybe – hopefully, this time – I've
escaped the torture I see others endure online. They post about how they can't
do this anymore – about how it happens every month, and every month like
clockwork it's the same thing – feelings of hopelessness, loneliness and
isolation. But I am happy. I eat well and do yoga and meditate and run –
everything you're supposed to do to get rid of the darkness. I think that if
only people did what I did, they'd feel just as great as I do. I am the
exception to the rule.
When I was younger, I came to a point where I'd felt like I
had already died. I was a shell of a person, barely leaving my bed because of
the fatigue and depression, stuffing my face with whatever temporarily took
away the pain. I barely escaped to the west coast to get away from the darkness
before it swallowed me whole – and I saw a lifestyle that could make me feel
better. I stopped drinking, stopped eating sugar and dairy and gluten – and I
know how you all feel about gluten, but it worked. For the first time in my
life, my face cleared up. My bloated belly flattened. When I filled my body
with fuel instead of poison, my energy started to come back. My depression
started to lift. I could feel the oxygen coming back into my bloodstream. The
more I took care of my body, the more I saw God through me – and I was an
atheist.
I know that sometimes people take medication – SSRIs mixed
with therapeutic conversation – and believe me, I've been on so many pills I
considered swallowing them all at once. But pills took away something far
deeper than the darkness – they took away my ability to feel your toes tingle
and your whole body remember what spirituality feels like. And for me, I'm not
willing to give up my God – the one that speaks to me through my own moans and
screams. To me, feeling that numbness inside me might as well as be the death
of me. So I tapered off my medication – well, after I tried to go cold turkey,
and my boyfriend almost broke up with me. When I finally felt I was myself
again – the one I had been searching for and didn't know could exist – I wanted
everyone to know about the revolution.
And the revolution came in a plant based crusade. I felt
like I had finally found a cure for the darkness. I went two years without
eating meat, and I was so skinny my panties fell to the floor. But I still said
that I was part of the movement. I shared photos of my recipes online, and
talked about how well I was doing. But away from the limelight my diet
fluctuated just as much as much as my mood. Just like I'd tapered off my
medication, I tapered off fuel for my body, replacing it with poison –
processed foods that were easy, thinking that just a little bit of junk food
would make the pain go away. Because the pain never did, regardless of what I
was eating. If I gave in and reached for the poison, it would spread throughout
my body and the pain would inflate my belly and the lights would go out. And
then I would say, "Screw it," like the people online that I thought just needed
to be more like me.
I know now the darkness is inevitable. I know I
need to do my best to choose the light – and that I won't choose it every day,
nor will anyone else – even the gurus on Instagram who post photos of food I don't have the money to make. Because the darkness isn't a place where you
only go when you're weak. Diet and exercise and medication is for the
privileged – and I'm privileged enough – but sometimes I don't have much money
for food or the will to leave my apartment, so I reach for something I know
will be easy but harder in the long run. And then I spiral down – feeling
hopeless, lonely, and isolated – where my only friend is the poison that I know
will kill me. Because people die from this.
The darkness leaves you feeling like there's a hole where
your heart should be – where you try to fill it with things to make the pain
subside. Junk food, alcohol, sex, and drugs. But the real misery comes when you
realize these things are never going to be enough. It comes from the
knowledge that only finding self love can fill that hole – and trying to love
yourself is hard when you never did. Once you see it's just you and the
darkness, you can either stay up til morning or go to sleep. And while it's
easy to say some are weak for not fighting, I don't blame them.
Because right now, I am unhappy. I walk around my apartment
with swollen eyes, moping about how I'm just like everyone else, posting online
about how I can't do this anymore, about how it happens every month, and every
month like clockwork the darkness returns. But I know that soon the light will
appear – so for today, I eat well, do yoga, meditate and run. I know it
isn't a “cure,” but I know the more I take care of my body the more I'll
see God through me. And maybe she can give me strength so I can see the light
another day and remember what it's like to be happy – to smile ear to ear,
thinking that maybe – hopefully, this time – I've escaped the darkness.