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How Mother Nature and I Manage My Depression

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“I go to nature to be soothed and healed, and to have my senses put in order.” ~John Burroughs

I sat on the front stoop sobbing, unable to move. Hunched over like a heaving dog hugging my knees and clutching a wad of decomposing tissues. About fifteen minutes before, I’d managed to get myself off the couch where I’d been parked, withered and absent, for the fourth consecutive day, and had made it through the front door.

Once there, I tried to stay upright, but like cool syrup I slid down the side of the wrought iron railing and down onto the steps. Now all I had to do was get up and walk to the mailbox and back and maybe I’d feel better. But I couldn’t do it. It was too much.

I hoisted my ladened head from my knees and stared out the driveway to the mailbox about seven hundred feet away. It may as well have been ten miles… or fifteen feet. It didn’t matter, it was too far.

“Please just help me get up,” I pleaded to a somber sky. The help didn’t come and so there I sat crying, searching for the energy or the wherewithal to make myself move. Fifteen minutes, twenty minutes, twenty-five… the time oozed by thick and distorted.

It had happened before, more than once, and had overtaken me at varying speeds and intensity.  Sometimes it leached in with the change of seasons; like an inflatable pool toy left floating past the end of summer, sad and wilted, the air having seeped out in infinitesimal degrees. Sometimes I could fight it off, catch it before things got too grim. Not this time. I’d felt myself spiraling down, hot wind escaping me until I was in a deflated heap, slack and flaccid on the sofa.

It had happened a few years ago, although not this bad, and a chirpy classmate had suggested that I just “snap out of it!”

“Just… ‘snap out of it?’” I repeated.

“Yeah!! Snap out of it!”

“It’s not that simple,” I said.

“Sure, it is! Like the song says, ‘Put on a happy face!’”

“Are you kidding me right now?”

“No, I’m not kidding,” she said. “It’s mind over matter. Just distract yourself by doing something that makes you happy. Stop thinking about it… you know, snap out of it!”

I looked at the woman through a haze of disbelief and deadpanned, “Just snap out of it. Gee. Why didn’t I think of that?”

Another friend enquired, “Why don’t you just ask for help when things get bad?”

“Because you can’t,” I said

“What do you mean you can’t? You just pick up the phone and ask for help. It takes two seconds!”

“I mean you can’t; not when you’re in the depths of it. That’s the insidiousness of it. When you need help the most is when you’re least able to ask for it.”

“That doesn’t make any sense,” the friend replied. “If you’re sick you call the doctor. If your car breaks down you get it to a mechanic. If you have a drinking problem you go to AA. When you need help, you ask for help!”

“That’s like telling someone who is trapped under a piano to walk over to the phone and call the movers,” I scoffed. “You simply can’t”

“Of course, you can! You’re not actually trapped under a piano and you’re not paralyzed, are you?”

“Well, no, obviously it’s a metaphor. But in a way you are… paralyzed, I mean.”

“Oh, come on… I think you’re being a little dramatic.”

“And I think you’re being dismissive and oversimplifying it.”

“Because it’s pretty simple. You just ask for help.”

“I don’t think there’s anything I can say to help you to understand how it feels. I just don’t know how to explain it if you’ve never experienced it.”

“Well, I think if someone needs help, they should just ask for it.”

I sighed and said “Maybe the name says it all. It’s a good name for how you feel. ‘Depression.’ There’s the word depression like a hole in the ground and you definitely feel like you’re stuck down in a hole. And there’s depression in the sense that something is pressing down on you. It absolutely feels like there is a physical weight holding you down. It’s inexplicably heavy. It’s heavy in your mind. It’s heavy in your lungs. It’s heavy in your body. Sometimes, when it’s really bad, it’s nearly impossible to move.”

Nearly impossible… but not impossible,” my friend said. “You could still get to the phone.”

Okay… Whatever…

But that was then and now I was alone. No nonbelievers to convert nor pep talks to deflect.

Medication had worked to a degree and only for a while. The struggle to find the right prescription and dosage combined with the ever-growing list of side effects had proven too much. I also swore I could feel the drugs in my system, and they made me feel toxic, for lack of a better term, and I couldn’t stand it.  So, under my doctor’s guidance I’d titrated off my meds.

I’d discovered that, for me, the best way to loosen the grip of despair and keep it at bay was intense, intentional, physical exercise. As I slowly increased the time I spent walking, then running, my doctor kept close tabs on my progress. It had worked. It was my magic pill and like any prescription, I had to take it without fail or face a relapse.

I’d found that he more/less I exercised the more/less I wanted to, and the better/worse I felt; it was self-perpetuating in both directions, and over the past couple of months I had gotten lazy; my laziness turned into malaise, the malaise had become despondence, and despondence had gotten me here. Sitting languid and bleak between a spitting gray sky and the gravel drive.

It was late September in Mid-Coast Maine. The days were growing shorter and winter would not be long behind. The hibernal season was always a struggle and it was harder to manage my mood. The window of opportunity was closing. If I didn’t get ahead of it straightaway there’d be no escaping without medical intervention. I had to move my body so my mind could follow, it was the only way out and would happen right now or not at all.

I had to dig down deep, excavate some minuscule untapped reserve, the survival instinct maybe, and use it to push back against the darkness with everything I had left.

Okay. On the count of one… two… three… I took a deep breath in and with the exhale, slowly rolled forward off the step onto my hands and knees into the small dusty stones. I looked out to the end of the drive, toward the empty road and the stand of pines beyond, then hooked my eyes onto the mailbox. Just get thereCrawl if you have to, but go.

I crept a few feet forward on all fours, the sharp pebbles jabbing into my knees and palms “I think you’re being a little dramatic…” I rolled my eyes and set my jaw. Sitting back on my heels, I pushed with my hands and came up into a four-point squat. I sat there for a minute keep moving keep moving then, fingers splayed on the ground, I stuck my fanny in the air, grabbed hold of my thighs one at a time, and hauled myself up.

Arms crossed over my stomach and chest, stooped and shivering, I hugged myself. Move. Move your feet Taking tiny steps, increments of half a foot-length, I shuffled forward; right, left, pause… right, left, pause…  “God it’s so hard.” Keep going keep going…

Over the past couple of years I’d become an athlete, a trail runner. I ran twenty-five or thirty miles a week, up and down ski slopes in the summertime, yet right then I could barely move. There was nothing physically wrong with me, but depression is an autocrat and I’d fallen under its totalitarian rule. It forbade me from moving with my normal grace and ease and instead had me shackled and chained… but I kept going.

“You should die from this,” I breathed out loud. “If there was a true, proportionate cause and effect, feeling this bad should, in all fairness, kill a person.” Keep going keep going. 

But it doesn’t. It squeezes the life out of you but doesn’t actually kill you.”

I was halfway to the mailbox.  I didn’t pick up my feet, just sort of slid them along, rocking back and forth like a sickly penguin leaving drag marks behind. It hurt to move, it hurt to breathe.

“Please help me,” I turned my face upward and beseeched the misting sky. “Please give me a sign. I need something, anything, so I know this will be worth it. If you do, I promise I’ll believe it and I won’t give up.  I promise I’ll keep going.” Right, left, right, left. I was closing in on the letterbox, tears flowing. My body ached.

I got no sign, no random flash of light nor clap of thunder, just the sound of the breeze in the pines and my feet scratching in the pebbles.

When I was about ten feet away, I extended an arm, right, left, right, left, almost there… reaching…  fingertips touching the cold damp metal. “I did it,” I feebly cried. Maybe there’s something in the mail today… maybe that will be my sign. I opened the box and peered inside. Nothing. Just a flyer from the market with its weekly specials—not even real mail, just more junk.

But with or without a sign, I’d made it.

Oh… God… I turned around and, clamping my Kleenex and the stupid flyer to my chest, stared blankly back down the driveway to the house. Now I have to do it again. It was so far. “Just get it over with and then you can be done.”

I breathed in and started back… right, left, right, left, right, left, I resumed my melancholy march. My gaze was fixed yet something moving high in a tree caught in my periphery… a bird; a crow or raven maybe.

I paused and looked up, and there he was flapping his wings just a bit, arranging himself on his perch. The huge chocolate-colored body and glorious white crown were unmistakable, even at this distance.

Bald Eagles were common up here, but this was no ordinary creature and I knew it.  Strength, pride, power, Mother Nature to the rescue again. Yes, this was my eagle and I understood the message he brought. I sniffled, dragged my damp sleeve across my nose and cheek, and nodded. “Okay,” I whispered. “Thank you. This is good. I can do this”

I regained momentum. Right, left, right, left. I’m a runner, I’m an athlete, I eat hills for breakfast, Goddammit. Keep going. Hand outstretched, I grabbed hold of the railing and climbed the three steps to the house. I made it back, albeit barely, and let myself inside.

I got out of my wet clothes and wrapped myself up in my accomplishment and a fluffy robe. I would get a little something to eat, I thought, take a hot shower, go to bed, and watch TV.  I still felt like hell, but I did it. I would get some sleep tonight and first thing tomorrow morning, I told myself, I would go to the mailbox again… and maybe just a little bit farther.

* * * *

When a person releases any type of toxicity from their lives or stops accepting their drug of choice, in whatever form it takes, after years of abuse, they discover all sorts of things about themselves that may have been masked by, or mistaken for, their addiction.

One of the things I unearthed when I got sober was a history of severe depression that I’d attributed to alcoholism; I was wrong, they weren’t one and the same. They were, however, mutually parasitic, two separate entities that fed off one another.

Which came first, the depression or the alcoholism, I have no idea and, frankly, it didn’t really matter to me. My substance abuse certainly exacerbated my despondency, but cessation didn’t cure it; I was left with chronic, sometimes debilitating bouts of despair.

My first twelve-step sponsor suggested we meet for weekly walks at the town reservoir, a three thousand-acre forested reserve dotted with pristine watershed lakes. It was to become a transformative practice.

Once a week, we walked and talked our way around a popular three-mile loop where I learned, among many other things, a quote that I believe helped save my life: “Move a muscle, change a thought.”

This quote introduced me to the theory that physically moving the body helps dislodge negativity and facilitates a healthy thought process. It also reintroduced me to my love of the woods, something I’d forfeited long ago to alcoholism.

The activity became so enjoyable that I began to seek out my new like-minded friends for a “walk at the Res,” building healthy relationships in a tranquil setting, eventually heading out on my own as well.

I’d walk the loop after work as the days grew long and hike for hours on sunny weekend mornings. I’d often catch glimpses of deer, even a doe with her fawn. It relaxed me and made me smile, which may not sound like much but for me, as sick as I’d been, it was a big deal.

Surrounded by the soft shapes and sounds of the forest, the whispers of the breeze rustling the leaves, the sound of water moving over rocks in the creeks and the birdsong in the trees, and the rich smell and feel of earth under my feet, I found the magical world I’d claimed as a girl and then left behind.

Being alone in nature I found peace and my very first feelings of joy as an adult. I’d forgotten that joy existed, let alone that it was something that might be available to me. Not to be understated, it also kept me occupied, away from dangerous environments and temptation.

As the happiness in my heart grew and my healthful body returned, I began going for short runs. It wasn’t easy, but I kept at it, physically challenging myself gradually, mindfully, and without impunity. The endorphins, already being released on walks and hikes, increased proportionately with the pace, the distance, and demand of the terrain.

I was feeling strong, happy, empowered; literally and intentionally changing the chemical balance in my brain. With the blessing and guidance of my therapist, I slowly replaced my antidepressants with scheduled, purposeful exercise, proud to be scaling my active participation in my recovery under the watchful eye of my doctor.

After several years, I traded regular visits with my shrink for the occasional tune-up with a sports physician.   Nature was at the center of my spiritual healing and running and hiking had become my medicine.  And like any medicine, if I kept taking it, it kept working and, well, if I didn’t…

****

Day by day, I had allowed one excuse after another to erode my commitment to exercise and disrupt my healthy routine, but I’d just sloughed it off. “No big deal,” I told myself. “I’ll get back to it tomorrow.”

But my “tomorrows” were adding up and before I knew it, momentum was lost and the pendulum had swung. Then, my relationship fell apart. My conditioned response would have been to run it off; take my anger and pain into the woods and leave it there rather than turn it inward. But it was too late. My depression had already taken hold and gotten ahead of me, so instead of hitting the trail I’d spiraled down and hit the couch… and I stayed there for days. It was a very difficult lesson, but I learned it. I have yet to make that mistake again.

Today, nearly twenty years after my long journey to the mailbox, I have a million things to do. But first, I went for a run.

I know I need to make intentional exercise a priority, and to celebrate the small victories when all I can manage is a short walk. When you’re depressed it can be hard to see this, but small wins are wins, nonetheless.

If you’re struggling right now, I get it.  I know you can’t just snap out of it. I know it’s hard to ask for help. I know you might need medication, and there’s nothing wrong with that. But perhaps, like me, you’ll find it helpful to get out of your head, get outside, and get moving.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned it’s to never underestimate the healing power of physical exercise and mother nature.

About Amie Gabriel

Holistic Wellness expert, certified yoga, meditation, and group fitness instructor specializing in mind/body fitness, women's wellness, 12-step recovery, processing grief and depression, and celebrating joy. Amie creates mindful, nature-based programs and retreats focusing on the inseparable connection of mind/breath/body/spirit/intention. Her work has been featured at Canyon Ranch Lenox and Tucson, Mayflower Inn and Spa, Washington Depot, CT, Silver Hill Hospital, New Canaan, CT, among others. She has written a book on healing through holistic wellness to be published in 2020.

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Meghan
Meghan

I NEEDED this article. Thank you!

Shell Fino
Shell Fino

Thank you for sharing your story . Help isn’t something I have an easy time asking for either when The Black Dog shows up.
I too consider walks and hikes as my medication..dispensed at intervals thru the day. Even thru the NH winters. It’s non negotiable. Every day.
I appreciate hearing your story. It especially resonated with me.

Pieter
Pieter

“You should die from this,” I breathed out loud. “If there was a true, proportionate cause and effect, feeling this bad should, in all fairness, kill a person.” Keep going keep going.
“But it doesn’t. It squeezes the life out of you but doesn’t actually kill you.”

Very powerful and moving!

“The Problem with hell is that the fire doesn’t consume you… The fires of Transformation do.” ‘Reflections on the Art of Living’ by J Campbell at lunch:

“The building block of matter is velocity” keep going

michellealbrecht
michellealbrecht

I hate that I am wasting the life that God gave me. And I really don’t like this pity party that I keep finding myself in. I need to find a way to step up.

windkissed
windkissed

I clung to every, oh, so familiar word! I’ve definitely been there!

At 27 years of recovery I had slacked on my spiritual program. Leading me through depression to relapse. My drug of choice, opiates, worked until they didn’t. In turn leading me back down the painful road to recovery. Now sober for almost six years I still struggle with depression.

That quote “Move a muscle, change a thought” is so true! But this time the depression brought along it’s friend fibromyalgia! I just have to work extra hard to find my serenity.

This was definitely not only inspiring but very motivating!!

Thank you for your words!
Lauri

Missy Koeppel
Missy Koeppel

I’ve been struggling the past month or so, and this article brought me to tears, in a very good way. Thank you.

Karen Patricia
Karen Patricia

Brilliant ! I’ve never ever read anything on depression that captures the essence of despair in a way this does. The ease that I identified with Amie’s story was overwhelming! With over 20 years of sobriety and a spiritual program the threat of depression returning is what keeps me diligent with what Amie refers to as intentional exercise! I Love that description!
Thank you for sharing your journey with others.

Amie Gabriel
Amie Gabriel
Reply to  Meghan

Meghan, I am so happy that this found it’s way to you just when you needed it. I wonder how much it would have helped me back then to know that someday I would tell this story and use it as a way to connect with others and that it would help us all feel a little less alone? Thank you so much for sharing. Amie

Amie Gabriel
Amie Gabriel
Reply to  Pieter

Hello Pieter, and thank you so much. I so clearly remember this moment even though it happened so many years ago! I knew that others who have suffered from depression would understand this feeling. I love the quotes you shared! Amie

Amie Gabriel
Amie Gabriel
Reply to  Shell Fino

Thank you, Shell Fino. I’m so pleased to hear that you share this practice and understand the way this feels. Knowing that we’re not alone is one more tool we can use to push back against the darkness. Hearing that my story has helped you and reading a bit of yours has helped me. There is medicine in the New England woods! Amie

Amie Gabriel
Amie Gabriel
Reply to  windkissed

Dear Lauri,

You are a miracle.

It isn’t easy, is it? Addiction, depression, and other physical challenges on top of that. I’m sure if you channel all that strength you so clearly possess you’ll find ways to both move and honor your body.

“Move a muscle, change a thought” even if that movement is slow, gentle, it’s still intentional. Have you tried guided meditation with breath work, yoga nidra, restorative or yin yoga? Gentle walks on a flat dirt trail or walking a labyrinth? You’ll find what works best for you, I’m sure of it.

Thank you for sharing. It means so much. Amie

Amie Gabriel
Amie Gabriel
Reply to  Missy Koeppel

Dear Missy, You are so welcome. Reading this has brought me to tears, also in a very good way! So I thank you, too. It is so powerful when we find out we’re not alone. Amie

Amie Gabriel
Amie Gabriel

<3

michellealbrecht
michellealbrecht

Thank you

Eljae
Eljae

@michellealbrecht 🤗 Sending love and a dash of hope to you, my sister 💜

Amie Gabriel
Amie Gabriel

Dear Michelle, I had to start with a doctor and anti-depressants. They got me to a place where I was strong enough to get well by other means. I urge you to please call your doctor to help you until you can help yourself. If you’re in a place where you’re unable to call have someone do it for you and get you to the doctor. None of us do this alone. “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step” ~Lao Tzo~

Amie Gabriel
Amie Gabriel
Reply to  Karen Patricia

Thank you, Karen. I am so pleased that you found my story relateable. Your wonderful comments just made my day! Congratulations on you sobriety and managing your depression. Thank you so much. Amie

Amie Gabriel
Amie Gabriel

<3

Deborah Lounsberry

On so many levels I relate to this. In so many ways you describe my world. The depression never really goes away, at best we make peace with it and learn to live with it.
I’ve long yearned to learn the joy and release of running, it’s something I will attempt again.
Thank you for your story, and for sharing.

michellealbrecht
michellealbrecht
Reply to  Eljae

thank you so much

Gomek
Gomek

You are such as wonderful writer! The way you set the story up was brilliant and a real pleasure to read. I sometimes have bouts of anxiety, nothing to the level that you describe though. I find when the attacks occur, I start to hyperventilate some. One of the recent techniques I have taught myself when I have an attack is to remember that I have all the air in the world to breathe and just relax. It does help me relax. Thank you again for sharing your story!