Showing posts with label suicidal ideation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label suicidal ideation. Show all posts
Thursday, January 18, 2018
Living with PMDD - Realize, Relief, Repeat
REALIZE, RELIEF, REPEAT
[Living With PMDD]
By: Danni Hanna
When you REALIZE it’s time, it’s already too late
Being engulfed in its flame is always your fate
Depression sets in.. in its bi monthly routine
Next comes the anxiety and the fatigue
Panic attacks make their appearance
And the joys in life make their disappearance
Suicidal thoughts fill your brain
But you know soon enough you’ll be off this train
The train runs on an endless track
Circling, circling, circling back
Exercise, medication, eating right
Won’t help you win this fight
Two weeks free, two weeks trapped
Two separate identities on constant relapse
One identity starving for control
The other is on an easy stroll
Career and relationship changes fill the void of sleepless nights
But freedom is coming into sight
The day of RELIEF has arrived
As per usual, right on time
An exchange of pain occurs in an instant
From mental to physical, it’s always consistent
Anxiety and depression leave your side
Feelings of comfort and amusement fill your mind
Quickly forgetting the two weeks of hell
You become trapped within its spell
You never seek help
Because this is the best you’ve ever felt
Unaware you’re still riding the train
Two weeks pass by and the hormones enter your brain
Once again the exchange has been made
Those joyous feelings briskly fade
So go ahead and take a seat
The journey of this train is about to REPEAT
[Living With PMDD]
By: Danni Hanna
When you REALIZE it’s time, it’s already too late
Being engulfed in its flame is always your fate
Depression sets in.. in its bi monthly routine
Next comes the anxiety and the fatigue
Panic attacks make their appearance
And the joys in life make their disappearance
Suicidal thoughts fill your brain
But you know soon enough you’ll be off this train
The train runs on an endless track
Circling, circling, circling back
Exercise, medication, eating right
Won’t help you win this fight
Two weeks free, two weeks trapped
Two separate identities on constant relapse
One identity starving for control
The other is on an easy stroll
Career and relationship changes fill the void of sleepless nights
But freedom is coming into sight
The day of RELIEF has arrived
As per usual, right on time
An exchange of pain occurs in an instant
From mental to physical, it’s always consistent
Anxiety and depression leave your side
Feelings of comfort and amusement fill your mind
Quickly forgetting the two weeks of hell
You become trapped within its spell
You never seek help
Because this is the best you’ve ever felt
Unaware you’re still riding the train
Two weeks pass by and the hormones enter your brain
Once again the exchange has been made
Those joyous feelings briskly fade
So go ahead and take a seat
The journey of this train is about to REPEAT
Sunday, April 30, 2017
PMDD Awareness Month Ends, But the Struggle Continues
Today wraps up the
end of PMDD Awareness Month. I've spent
the month sharing on Facebook and Twitter several posts from my Voices of PMDD
series, where women with PMDD and their partners have shared their stories. The quotes that follow come from Hormone Hell, the personal journey blog of a fellow PMDD Advocate, Jarrah, who asked her readers to describe
what PMDD feels like to them. I've
chosen several responses that I fear we can all relate to in some way. Please read on, and, if nothing else, know that you are far from alone
in your struggles with the demon that is PMDD.
Perhaps one or more of these descriptions will help you to put into
words for a loved one what it's like for you, each and every month, and raise
awareness in your own way.
On my bad days it feels like my nerves are on the outside,
that everything hurts, and there’s a heavy blanket on me that I can’t get out
from.
It feels like nails in
my brain that prevent me from thinking correctly. The nails stay in my skull
for about 2 weeks and then they finally go away and I can think again.
Your brain feels like mush, your memory is poor. You're
actually scared that one day you’re going to wake up and forget who you are.
Your digestive system is going crazy, you’re constipated one minute, rushing to
the toilet the next. Your bladder needs to empty itself 6 times
in a single hour. You're hot, no you’re cold, umm, you’re hot again. You love
your husband one minute and consider filing for divorce the next. If one more
person chews, breathes or coughs, there will be bloodshed.
I’m angry, I’m sad,
I’m laughing…now I’m crying. My joints ache. I am only 29 but I feel 99. My
hair is thinning; it’s so dry it feels like straw. I have permanent dark
circles under my eyes. My skin is so dry it’s flaking.
You’re so tired but no matter how much sleep you get, you
still wake feeling tired. You’re hungry one minute, you’re nauseous the next. You
can’t breathe; your heart races and you can’t stop sweating. You don’t want to
be touched, you feel suffocated if someone sits close to you.
Overthinking is an
everyday occurrence and often your head is swimming with thoughts that leave
you feeling terribly anxious. You no longer look forward to anything, as each
day is just a matter of survival. You have no passion and no longer think about
the future. You hate this empty person you have become.
You start daydreaming about dying. Deep down,
you know there’s a part of you that definitely does not want to die. You know
that, logically, things are fine and you will be okay. But you can’t FEEL that.
All you feel is despair, hopelessness, and a suddenly strong urge to leave this
world.
Worthless. Empty.
Angry. Bloated. Exhausted. Sometimes I just wish I could disappear…just lay
down in the grass and get absorbed in to the earth somehow. Oh yeah, and Crazy.
I know what I feel isn’t normal, but I can’t change it…at least until my period
comes and then I’m right as rain.
Anticipation for hell week becomes a hell week in itself. I
can’t control the choking wave of anxiety or the rage of this demon but I have
changed my outlook. It will not own me. I will not let it drown me. I will swim and swim until I come up for air.
Until the next storm. There have been a few hell weeks where no matter how hard
I swam I could not escape the urge to let it pull me under and take me in its
entirety. Those days and those times I don’t know how anyone makes it out
alive.
Rage, anxiety, mind
going crazy, all of those things attacking you all at once. You wish it was
over and the sad thing is you have no control over it. You see yourself doing
all these dumb things and you try and stop it but it’s so hard to control. But
you keep fighting because you love your family and you love yourself too much
to give up!
Like a tightness of the skull above the eyes, like my skin
and hearing is super sensitive, so I have a headache and am easily overwhelmed.
This coupled with lowered patience and attention span means I’m really
short-tempered. Sometimes that results in a snappy comment and then
unreasonable crying (e.g. about burnt pine nuts), but other times it’s
disproportionate rage. Sometimes it’s just a brain fog, where I sit and stare
at the work computer, trying to figure what I’m supposed to be doing, and how
someone is paying me to sit and feel like my powers of logic and reason have
been pulled out through my eye sockets.
It’s like a switch
that is flicked inside me as soon as ovulation begins. From that point on I
become the opposite of what I consider to be my “normal” self. I’m suddenly
extremely anxious, paranoid, worried, irritable and I can snap at the smallest
things. The rages are life-destroying. They hurt everyone I care for, and scare
off anyone else. My period finally begins and within a day or two, my mood
lifts. The anxiety goes away, the paranoia is no longer there. I can think
rationally and logically. I have energy to do anything I want, and sadly most of
that time is spent picking up the pieces of the storm that lives inside of me,
and has--for now--disappeared.
At the start depression starts to set in, aching body, foggy
head, headaches, high anxiety, pains in the stomach, sweating, panic attacks
when I go in public, hysterical crying, at my worst, thoughts of suicide. Then
my period arrives...all those feelings and thoughts are gone just like that…I’m
back, me again, I’m back to normal. I can go to work with ease (if I still have
a job). I can go out anywhere with no panic attacks, anxiety (what anxiety?) I
am fun, I enjoy being around people and they enjoy being around me. I wish I
could be this person all the time, I hate knowing it is short lived and the
devil lady will be back again soon.
Sensitivity to light
and sound…my son talks and talks and I just want to curl in a ball to escape.
That’s horrible to say…but I just can’t handle it.
I always wonder if this mental illness will kill me one day—I’m
sure it will. The brightest days are good. I enjoy them. The darkest days
however, seem like I won’t ever escape them. Each time it feels like maybe this
could be it, the one that I don’t come back from. But somehow I make it
through. PMDD is cruel. It’s like every month, sanity is dangled in front of me
and I have to hold onto it. There’s a glimmer of hope that this month I’ll be
cured, then suddenly it’s ripped away.
I was sitting in my
seat watching a movie, my whole body was tense, I was clenching my teeth, my
heart was racing, and I was swallowing back the nausea I felt…I tried to push
all those feelings out of my head so I could try to enjoy the movie. As I sat
there I couldn’t help but think…So this is what my life has come to? It’s a
movie for goodness' sake and my body is acting like I need to be on alert just
in case at any second someone might try and kill me.
I ended up going for a walk to try to clear my head. My legs
would only carry me half way around the block, my whole body was so fatigued
and I was so nauseous the symptoms reminded me of how I felt when I was in the
first trimester of pregnancy.
PMDD….a war you’re
constantly fighting that no one else can see.Sunday, September 18, 2016
Hello! It’s Not Just PMS. PMS and PMDD Are Not the Same Thing
Let's set the record straight once and
for all, shall we? PMS and PMDD are not the same thing.
I remember PMS. I had it as a very young
girl and woman. It was signified by the typical energy drop, irritability,
cravings, weepiness, bloating and leaden legs that preceded my period. It was a
pain in the...well, you know. It made it a challenge to go about life as usual,
but I managed, because PMS is manageable. At least, it was for me. I have a
huge pain tolerance!
At some point in my life, something
switched on...or maybe off. Either way, PMS started to transform into something
a lot less friendly. I was markedly becoming an entirely different person for
several days before my period, changing back again as soon as the blood flowed.
This wasn't about bloating and irritability. This was about marked personality
changes characterized by extreme sensitivity to stimulus and anger. Simply put,
I couldn't stand to be around people, and I couldn't handle the simplest of
frustrations.
Enter peri-menopause. Now at age 48,
PMDD has become an even bigger nightmare. With the shifting of my hormones
comes a much more unpredictable barrage of cyclic symptoms including anxiety,
rapid mood swings, rumination and self-sabotage the likes of which even years
of extreme personal development can't help me tackle. Add to the mix suicidal
fantasy, full-on rage, and an aversion to my partner with its characteristic
withdrawal and silence that is completely destructive. Marked personality
changes have become unrecognizable personality! Day-long crying jags have
replaced weepiness. And bloating and cramping have morphed into days of
constipation, muscle aches, headaches, and other inexplicable weirdness
including strings of 12 hour naps! This ain't PMS, folks!
I wonder how many of my well-meaning
associates who say they have or had PMDD really know what they are talking
about. Did they have those simple cramps, bloating, and mood changes I recall
from my youth? Do they think that is PMDD? Do they understand that PMDD is a
life-altering, destructive, and altogether demonic monthly possession which
leaves one feeling completely effed-up? I have to wonder. Because often,
something in the way they say it or look at me or how they live their lives
makes me think they don't. The dead give-away is of course, "It went away
with exercise and dietary changes" or "You just have to think more
positively".
These two female "things," PMS
and PMDD, are often lumped together. There is no harm in that, necessarily. The
problem arises when everything that is generally known about PMS is transferred
to PMDD and an assumption is made that they are in fact the same thing or so
closely associated as to be kissing cousins. In actuality, they are entirely
different races. And speaking of races, it's a lot easier to run the PMS race,
let me tell you. The PMDD race? Honey, it's a never-ending marathon of trials
over which a woman has very little control, no matter the extent of her
efforts.
Are you suffering from PMS or PMDD?
Learning the difference can make a world of difference in understanding yourself and your symptoms. For more information, visit the National Association for PMDD/Gia Allemand Foundation website.
Liana's note: The above guest post was written by the blogger Cheekyminx. With her permission, several posts she has written about PMDD will be featured on this blog in the months to come. In the meantime, to find out more about her work as a PMDD Advocate, please visit her Facebook page, PMDD Life Support.
Labels:
anger,
despair,
fatigue,
frustration,
hormones,
menopause,
menstruation,
mood disorders,
NAPMDD,
pain,
perimenopause,
PMDD,
PMS,
rage,
relationships,
suicidal ideation,
tears
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