Currently resisting the urge to burst into a horrible rendition of Britney Spears’ Baby One More Time while sitting alone in front of my computer.
I want to preface this post by acknowledging the fact that I know there are so many people in my life who care about me and love me, whether we talk every day, haven’t talked in years, or somewhere in between. I’ve written a whole post on it before. I don’t want anyone who reads this to feel that they are responsible for the feelings that I am going to describe. Depression is the best liar, and I am constantly working on challenging those lies, but the feelings remain the same and that is what I am going to be talking about.
Making friends is something I’ve never been particularly good at or comfortable with, but have always managed to figure out just the same. I spent a semester in France at 16, going to school where I knew absolutely no one and only had moderate French language conversation skills with a very bad accent. I moved six hours away from home to go to university where the only person I knew was my best friend who came with me. I grew up in a small town so I’ve always been aware of how hard it is for “new people” to come into a place where people have grown up together, whose kids have grown up together. Yet I still decided to move out of the city, further away from my hometown friends and family, and now away from the new friends I had made in university, to the small town where the only people I knew were my coworkers at a new job. I am no stranger to feelings of loneliness, but have always managed to find a place for myself with people who love and care about me.
Looking back, I’ve dealt with social anxiety of varied severity for pretty much my entire life. I remember being terrified to start kindergarten because even though my best friend and I were in the same class, they were doing staggered start days and we were separated for that. I hated being the one to call my friends and much preferred when they called me first. I made my mom knock on doors and ring doorbells when I was still young enough that she would have to accompany me around the neighbourhood. Presentations in front of the class in high school were enough to make me cry. I never really thought much about it. I was always the quiet kid, happy to go along with whatever everyone else was doing. My first childhood best friend was loud and outgoing and always ready to take charge, and I was happy to follow in her shadow.
I had a taste of independence when I spent that semester in France, a completely new place literally across the world where no one knew anything about me. I had a chance to be whoever I wanted to be. This happened again when I went to university, luckily with my best friend by my side this time, where everything was completely new.
The social anxiety ended up getting worse at this time, and that’s what eventually ended up leading me to seek help for the first time. There were certainly plenty of chances when I could have decided to isolate (which would have had its own consequences obviously, but still less anxiety provoking). But despite always being the quiet one and dealing with extreme anxiety, I’ve always enjoyed being around people. So I pushed myself. I reached out to people in my classes. I joined some clubs. It was a constant battle of tears and nausea and forcing myself to go out, but I was always happy after I did. The same thing happened when I took this job in a small town. There was a lot of anxiety and being uncomfortable, but now I have some of the best friends in the entire world, and a family of coworkers who I know will always have my back, inside the hospital and out.
So things sound okay, right? Well you are right. Things are more than okay. The outpouring of support I received from my closest friends at first, and then from my coworkers and other friends once I decided to be publicly open about my struggles and hospitalizations was incredible. And I am so so thankful for it every day.
But… this post is titled loneliness. Since I was discharged from my most recent inpatient stay in November, I’ve been struggling with feelings of loneliness and isolation. I spent a few weeks at Christmas in my hometown where I don’t really have any friends anymore (although I did have a lovely visit with one of the most beautiful souls I know). I luckily get to spend four hours a week at dance with some amazing people. I know I have so many supportive friends and coworkers, but they are extremely busy with jobs and families and lives. Because I am still off work and still fighting to come out of a severe depressive episode which almost took my life, I have a very little amount of “life” outside of endless appointments and dance class.
The majority of my social life was my job. I work full time hours, and pick up a lot of overtime shifts. There are certainly times where I spend more time at the hospital than I do at home. Not having that has been difficult. Trying to coordinate schedules as adults is not easy so getting together outside of work isn’t always easy, but when you’re stuck together for 12+ hours a day, you find time to socialize around the busyness of an understaffed ER.
I mentioned before that depression (and anxiety) is an incredible liar. It’s exhausting to constantly challenge the lies my illness likes to tell me, so sometimes it wins. It loves to tell me that my friends are tired of me, that my illness is going to not only ruin my life, but theirs too. It tells me that I’m annoying, that people are only nice to me because they feel sorry for me. That once someone has to force charcoal down your throat in the emergency department post overdose, they’re not going to want to be your friend anymore. That your coworkers aren’t going to want to work with the crazy girl. That I should just stop bothering people. Constant nagging thoughts way worse than any of the bullying I’ve experienced in my life (and there’s been a significant amount, but that’s a topic for another day).
It would be so easy to isolate. To stop reaching out. I’ve considered getting a new job. I’m comforted by the fact that I have a versatile career and skill set so if anything major did happen, I could move far away and start my life over again.
But I refuse to let this illness win. And that means challenging these lies day after day, no matter how exhausting it is, with all over the concrete evidence I have that shows me I am loved.
Thank you to the ones who make it easy. To my best friend who lives with me, who talks when we want to talk or is happy to just sit in silence in each other’s company. To my best friend who texts me every day and puts up with my constant whining and sends me pictures of her kids. To the ones who tag me in funny memes or send me silly Snapchats. To the ones who’ve stayed through it all.
I started writing this today because, honestly, my illness was winning. I wasn’t sure where it was going to go, and I’m not even sure how I feel about the end product. But it reminded me that my illness is lying, and that the evidence says otherwise. I am loved. I am cared about. I am valued. And I will continue to try and believe these things every single day.
(PS- I apologize in advance for my horrible grammar skills, endless use of commas, and nonstop run on sentences that no amount of editing can fix. English and essay writing was never my strong point lol).






