I add my voice to the
chorus of millions worldwide who mourn the loss of Robin Williams, a bright
genius light we loved who, unbeknownst to us, spent much of his private time in
an overwhelming darkness, a despair so strong that it trumped fame, fortune,
and the true love of family and friends. He suffered – oh, man did he suffer –
from severe, chronic, clinical Depression.
So it’s unfair and downright
ignorant to think he was insane or selfish because he killed himself. He was
neither of those things. He also wasn’t “taking the easy way out” of something
we don’t know about. His death is a tragedy – not just because he was who he
was: a greatly multi-talented man of only 63 – but because he died of a disease that we as a society don’t
understand, don’t talk about, and for which there are a variety of often
inadequate treatments and no cure.
Which is why I believe
that the best way to honor Robin Williams is not with mourning or tributes or
film festivals or posthumous awards. Our greatest tribute would be creating
greater awareness and understanding of Depression, in the same way that Rock
Hudson’s death set America on a path of greater awareness and understanding of
AIDS.
And that must begin
with the millions of Americans who cope with this disease Coming Out of the
Pain Closet, risking and fighting the stupid stigma attached to it, and talking
about it. So here and now I’m going to walk my talk and Come Out. I have
Depression. I’ve had it at least since I was a teenager. I’ve been taking
different anti-depressants (with varying degrees of success) for decades.
My mother and my maternal
grandfather had it. Other relatives on both sides of my family had it. Some of
them, like me, spent some time on the psych wards of general hospitals. Some of
them attempted suicide. Others, like me, just thought about it. A lot. It
destroyed some of their lives.
It sure has fucked up
mine. It led to a nervous breakdown in 2003 and my not functioning very well (
! ) for the past ten years. I wasn’t functioning very well before the nervous
breakdown. I had a thriving business as a freelance writer that I ran into the
ground because, increasingly, I couldn’t meet deadlines or make it to meetings.
I became a compulsive TV shopper and was one day short of eviction from my
apartment because I was shopping away the rent money. Addictive behavior is a common component of Depression. My privacy
and independence were imposed upon by a NYC agency called APS – Adult
Protective Services. That was how I avoided eviction.
After my breakdown I
became a virtual hermit. I didn’t leave the house for months at a time. I
didn’t bathe or dress for months at a time. (These
two are also common components of Depression.) Thanks to a legal aid-type
lawyer I ended up on permanent Social Security Disability in my early 50s – but
I was on Welfare for a couple of months waiting for the Disability to kick in.
That in itself was a shameful nightmare. Shame is a big element in Depression.
I had a home health care
aide for eight years. I became agoraphobic (fear of going outdoors) and only
made it to doctor visits because of the aide. I also developed an anxiety
disorder, as well as a condition called “hyper vigilance,” which means I’m
unhinged by loud, dangerous noises. To this day, if a fire engine screams down
the avenue outside my window and at
the same time the phone and the intercom from the lobby ring, I cover my head
and duck.
I’m much better now than I used to be. But it’s not “over.” Depression
still colors and limits my life. Mine became acute in 1995 when my mother died.
I held on for my father’s sake (although I was starting to screw up). When he
died in 1999, I really began to fall apart. When my aunt, my last surviving
blood relative, died in 2001, my tether shortened and tightened. By the end of
2003 I was gone. I got to a point, pretty soon, where I could sort of function
at home, but not a lot and not very well.
For a couple of years, I
cooked dinner nearly every night for a frail, very elderly friend/neighbor. It
helped her and it helped me. I could put on a good face for the occasional
others who came here, largely thanks to my aide, but I couldn’t go down to the
lobby to get my mail. I spent most of my time sleeping and watching TV. I
became concerned about the state of the nation and started this blog. But I did
very little else. The occasional writing assignment, however small, stressed me
out. Why did all of this happen?
Because Depression is a
brain disease – just as Alzheimer’s, autism, and dyslexia are brain diseases.
Depression is also a mental illness. It’s not in the same class as
schizophrenia, but it is a mental illness. That’s why people who have it are
ashamed, and those who don’t, stigmatize it. And they don’t get it. There are
different kinds of Depression and different levels of it. Mine was fairly serious and not everything is detailed in what I’ve
just described. But I know it was less than Williams' nightmare because I'm still here. Can you imagine the intensity of what he went through?!
My depression was
exacerbated by long-term grief and it stays with me, in part, because I’m pretty
broke (financially), in debt, and very lonely. All but one of my local friends
relocated, died or dumped me. And even some of those who hung in with me didn’t
really get what was wrong with me. They thought I had gone from being an
active, well-kempt, successful businesswoman to being a sad, lazy, slob because
I was giving in to myself and just not trying.
Well, I’m trying now. And
it’s a daily bitch. There are still things I can’t do, in part because I also
have physical ailments. I still think about suicide a lot. But I don’t want to
die, really, I want to get better, I want treatment for this disease that still
impacts my life. Maybe now that sweet, sick Robin Williams has paved the way,
my hopes will be realized.
Should you be Coming Out
of the Pain Closet? Do you now realize that someone you know is in it? Do you
understand a little better that it’s not just self-indulgent “feeling sorry for
yourself”?
Do you appreciate that people with Depression who can function at
all are brave warriors? Did you know that Depression is at epidemic levels in
America? Do you realize that 22 returned US service people commit suicide each
day – 22 a day! That’s largely
because of PTSD, which is a complex brain disease that includes Depression and
a whole lot more.
I sure hope you know more,
and better, now – or I’ve just spilled my guts to you and all over the Internet
for nothing. But no, not for nothing. For Robin. And for the too many like him.
May awareness, understanding, and brain science increase really quickly. There
are too many suffering in the closet.