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Interactions with those less crazed

A little wall surrounds my heart…

Friday, June 8th, 2007

I met the Chestnut Thoroughbred Gelding on Wednesday. He nuzzled up to me in the pasture, he allowed me to lead him to and fro the barn. I stood with him in his stall, examined his feet, ran my hands down the length of his barrel and through his tail. I averted my eyes while my mother and father examined his physical condition, looked at his teeth and inspected his legs.

I was discussing the various breeds of horses with a good friend the other night. I was explaining that my dad’s horse, an Arabian, is quick on her feet, good for sporting, but with drawbacks like a load of energy that a rider like myself would want to avoid. I explained to her that I wanted a horse who was slow, bumbling, built thick and kind of boring.

“Oh, I get it!”

“Get what?”

“Your horse. You want a slow horse, one who’s big around and not quick on his feet!”

“Yeah, that’s it!”

“Just like the people you date!”

Sure. Slow, bumbling, thick. Just like the people I date.

I go to ride him this morning. I have decided to not fall head over heels with him just this minute; I want to walk him, trott him, wonder if he is too strong for me to pull up from a spook.

When I’ve dismounted, when I walk away with muscles screaming, walking like a cow-boy, bow-legged and in search of beer: Then I’ll know if I can take down the little wall that I’ve built up, put my face to his, and call him my very own.

I chew…

Monday, June 4th, 2007

I freely admit to people that I have a disgusting habit.

I chew.

As can be expected of a chewer, I do chew on my nails. Its gross, its unbecoming of a lady to have nails down to the quick. It is not particularly attractive; although it is handy in terms of playing the guitar.

I also chew on bubble gum. I can’t get enough of gum balls in my life; I buy them in bulk and hide them away. When it comes time for me to study, I sit down with my gumballs and I begin. I must take two at a time, two of the same color, and chew them for about five minutes. I always have a paper towel handy so that I can spit out the flavorless ones and repeat the process. The people who have been subjected to the sight of me, hair tied to the top of my head, wearing my favorite sweats with a stack of nasty old chewed up gum balls beside me have nothing to express but pure horror.

I also chew on my hands. It is quite revolting and from time to time the skin surrounding my fingernails is actually open. It hurts a lot when I do this, because you can’t really avoid getting things into the open wounds, and sometimes things like dirt or pickle juice will work its wiley way in and make me feel like I have stuck my hand into a tub full of milk house acid.

The desire to chew often sneaks up on me. I’ll be sitting about, minding my own business, and a twitchy feeling will come over my jaw. Its like I can feel that the muscles in there are getting bored, they need to be working out and DOING SOMETHING to keep from atrophy. If only the muscles in my ass were as motivated as the muscles in my jaw, I would be a perfect specimen.

The easiest and most accessible thing to chew on is a lip or a hand. (My own lips or hands: When I get to the point that I need someone else’s lips or hands to chew on, I promise, I’ll go into voluntary lockup.)

I was at a social event today, observing the events around me and chewing on my thumb. The fmaily friend sitting beside me was watching me, twitching because I knew that he wanted nothing more than to grab my hand out form my mouth, shake me by my shoulders until I had a head rush, and scream “FOR THE LOVE OF JESUS, MARY, AND JOSEPH, STOP DOING THAT NOW.”

Instead he threatened me with gangrene, saying that I could actually lose a thumb to a ravenous infection of sorts.

“Hah,” I replied. “If you’re like me and you wash your hands thirty-two times a day, and you sing the entire alphabet song while you do it, your hands are home free from having infection ravage their open sores.”

Moral of the story: If you’re going to be a crazy person, you have to make sure that you have a touch of the OCD so that you can pre-empt any of the damage that might be done by your craziness.

, , , ,

Socks. Socks! Socks?!

Friday, May 18th, 2007

I did laundry last night, a task that I have learned to love now that I am not required to traverse six floors that smell like drugs and stale beer; neither do I have to consider selling my organs on the black market in order to afford to complete this task, the washing of my clothes.

The first load I do is always socks. I make it no secret that I have a love affair going on with socks. There are days when I will switch socks sometimes four or five times because I just love having clean, fluffy socks on. I’ve been known to break up with people who have come to my house — or been in my vicinity — sporting socks that I find unappealing. I’ve also been known to stop being friends with people I don’t like using the fact that they have holes in their socks as a reason. There is nothing more detestable in this world than dirty, ill-fitting, or hole-ridden socks. They cost like fifty cents a pair. Invest, people.

There are very few other items that I would consider putting in the wash with my socks. Sometimes I will allow socks and a bath towel in the same load, and sometimes pale T-shirts if I can remember exactly where I wore them. I don’t want the wash water contaminated because that might interfere with the purity of my socks. The purity of my soul? Gets contaminated on a daily basis. But if my socks get fucked with, I get testy.

I was folding up all my socks last night which is not an easy task. I have a variety of styles of socks, six to be precise, and when you are dealing with over forty pairs of six different types of socks, things can get fairly hectic. When I completed my sock-folding mission, I had a laundry basket full of them and I was beaming at my collection the way mothers beam at new babies and my own mother was staring at me in horror. She asked me: “Does that make you feel happy?”

And I have to say that yes, yes it does make me happy. If I ever have a pair that gets dirty, I can toss them. If I ever go away on vacation, half of my bag is filled with socks because if one pair gets wet? I have six more right when I need them! If holes get ground into them, they can go.

Add to that the fact that if I go shopping and my heart soars for the next seven consecutive days?

And I’m sure it makes perfect sense to have that many socks.

Being who you are…

Thursday, May 17th, 2007

My best friend spent the day with me today, sitting on the couch in my new room, chain smoking and giving me Hell for becoming someone who I’m not.

I led another life a long time ago, and I don’t wish to divulge any information about that other life other than at this point, I had everything I ever wanted, every dream come true. Shortly thereafter it all blew up in my face, leaving me a steaming mess of debris that needed to be picked up and carted away.

I’m not sure how you go about getting over the past. Sometimes I’m not sure how to go about getting over the present.

My best friend is a wonderful friend in that when everything goes to Hell, she tells it exactly like it is, with whatever amount of harshness is required. She said today that I need to move on, I need to get over this person I’ve become and go back to being the old me. Its been a number of years now, and its time to move forward.

Surprisingly, the truth didn’t hurt too much today. I find that usually the truth stings as though you’ve just ground salt into an open wound, but today it all sank in and made perfect sense.

I suppose I’m just writing today to sing the praises of being surrounded by wonderful people. I really needed to hear what my best friend had to say, and I think I’m probably a better person for it.

Sometimes being beaten about the ears with a big old stick of truth turns out to be the best thing to happen to you since prescription sedatives and beer.

Laughing at myself…

Tuesday, May 1st, 2007

There are a few people in this world who I allow to openly tease me about my insanity. My best friend often greets me in the morning shaking about any number of pill bottles, depending on my current regimen, singing “Take your meds, Crazy Girl!”

I love to laugh at the things that I do that are insane. I can’t stack dishes that haven’t been rinsed, and I can’t possibly have my socks arranged in a manner that is anything less than … military? Insane? Over the tops? Who knows.

I try not to take my issues with anxiety and depression too seriously. I think, though, that if the wrong person were to make some of the comments that my mother or best friend ever made, I’d be tempted to remove his or her teeth from his or her head. With my right fist.

The Internet provides me with a level of safety in discussing the things that are wrong with me. My Network allows me to discuss freely the things that are on my mind. I once admitted to my best friend that I lied to her: I refused to go to a social gathering of hers because I was too scared of interacting with other people to leave the house.

And like any best friend would, like every best friend should, she laughed at me in the end, asking why on Earth I thought she would want me to go to an event that would leave me dry heaving and erupting in hives in the restroom. And she looked at me, and she laughed. It was real laughter, the kind that erupts from deep within you and escapes like an oil spill, taking over everything it can, and leaving nothing untouched in its wake. She laughed for so long and so hard that I was concerned for her well-being and when she stopped, she put a hand on my knee and looked directly in my eyes.

She said:

“Amanda. My God. You are so fucking crazy! If you didn’t want to go, for God’s sake, just TELL me. Oh, my nutbar.” She stopped and chuckled here once more. “Oh, my lunatic, my crazy girl. You’re crazy but I love you.”

I’ve heard before that laughter is the best medicine. I think, though, that really, the most potent laughter is one shared with a close friend, and better than that is sharing it with a close friend who has seen me through every step of my insanity thus far in my life.

The Dixie Chicks once sang that Some days/ Ya gotta Dance. I love to take it one step further and state that some days, you gotta laugh. Laugh long and hard because really? What matters the most?

Is that you may be screwed up a little in the head, but if nothing else, you have a good friend to laugh with about your insanity.

Amanda

Like, you know… One of those things…

Friday, April 27th, 2007

“The type you put stuff in for travel…”

“Not following…”

“Like, it folds up and you keep stuff in it.”

“Stuff?”

“Yeah, like your toothpaste and your drugs.”

“I didn’t know they made a receptacle strictly for toothpaste and drugs!”

“Oh. Well, right. Really, they don’t. This thing is meant for holding all your bathroom stuff in travel size jars. But if you’re like me, all you can really fit is toothpaste. And the drugs.”

“Right. So a toothpaste and drug holder.”

“Exactly. So, anyhow… What were we talking about?”

“I’ve no idea. I’m still dumbfounded that you need a special piece of luggage for your drugs.”

Packin’ it up and movin’ it South…

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

I’m moving back home in three short days. I’m slightly terrified, not because I’ll be living back under the same roof as my parents, but because before I move there I need to put all the things I own into receptacles for ease of transport.

Other people refer to this phenomenon as packing.

I had to move last year as well, and while it wasn’t as stressful as I thought it would be, it was certainly an eye opening experience. During this experience known as packing, I found out that I hoard things, which I wasn’t aware that I did until then.

That’s the funny thing about Insanity. New Crazies keep popping up at you from out of the woodwork. Or, in this case, from the recesses of your shelves and drawers and closets.

I found out last year that I purchase things in mass quantities and then put them away for later. I found what should have been a lifetime supply of pens and hair barrettes, underneath winter sweaters and below my microwave, stuck into drawers that I never used because they were too full of other junk.

I made it my goal this year to only purchase and go through one twelve pack of Bic pens. It was a very difficult year that was full of anxiousness and hysteria because DEAR GOD, WHAT IF I LOST A PEN BEFORE IT HAD BEEN USED TO THE POINT OF BEING DRY? And so this year, rather than focusing on the quantity of pens I own, I focused on using each and every pen down to the point that it had no more ink to write with, nothing more in the depths of its soul to give to me.

My brother noticed this one day when I was working on an essay. For some reason he was looking at my pen and noticed that the ink was at the point where you could no longer see it. As an expert, however, I was well aware that I could get another four or five pages out of it. He examined it and looked at me.

“Hey! Don’t throw that pen out!”

“Why not? There’s no more ink left in it.”

“Yes there is! I can get like, another hour’s worth of writing out of that!”

“Why the Hell do you know how many hours you can get out of a pen?”

“Look, you just can’t throw out a pen before it’s completely done, ok?”

“Why?”

“Because then you wouldn’t get all the ink out of it AND THAT WOULD MAKE THE WORLD STOP SPINNING. Now, give me back my pen.”

“Wow, you really are kinda crazy.” *Tosses pen back in my direction.*

Yes. I have to say that yes I am. But at least this year I won’t be surprised by finding three hundred and twenty seven pens stored about in an odd conglomoration of places about my house.

Amanda

Long week ahead…

Monday, April 23rd, 2007

This week is looking like it’s going to be a long one. I’m starting out with two final exams and finishing it off by moving back home to the country.

My feelings regarding the fact that I’m leaving are incredibly mixed. I had a real blast while I was here. It’s been a long three years, and I’ve made some great friends and some great memories.

At the same time, going back and leaving behind what I thought was to be a permanent change in how my life is to turn out is kind of hard. I had this wonderful vision of me becoming this sophisticated cosmopolitan type of girl, and while I embrace everything there is to embrace about my plaid jacket… well, sometimes I wonder what it could have been like if I’d not become so hell-bent on going back home.

What I want to do with my life now involves copious amounts of writing and fruit farming. My parents are retired diary farmers and they have a perfect little plot of land across the gravel road from their house. It’s river front and tile drained. The soil might be a little heavy to support strawberry root systems, but there are ways to get around almost every variety of farming problem these days.

I was outside having a cigarette at a bar the other night and I ended up talking to two boys who were from the same general region as I’m from. I was discussing with them the fact that I have a degree in sociology and will now be heading back to the farm.

“You’re taking over the dairy farm? That’s kind of exciting.”

“Oh, no, I’m not taking over the dairy farm. The cows are long gone.”

“Oh, Ok. So you’re just gonna live there and work at whatever sociologists do?”

“Oh, no, I’m going to transform it into a fruit farm.”

“So, wait. You got a degree in sociology. You came to the city to do that and get a job. But now you don’t like sociology and you want to live in the country.”

“Yeppers…”

“So now you finished your degree and you’re moving home to take over a dairy farm, but instead you’re going to turn it into a fruit farm? And write on the side?”

“Yep! You got it!”

“Are you crazy?”

“Oh, Honey. You have no idea…..”

On being a depression writer….

Thursday, April 12th, 2007

“Dad! I got a job writing!”

“Really? Oh, that’s great, Dear!”

“Yeah, I’m so excited!”

“What are you writing about?”

“My Insanity!”

“Uh…”

“Isn’t it great?”

“Oh, yes! That sounds like it’s … Uh.. Right up your alley!”

About Depression Talk

I have depression, and some days depression has me. Know that you are not alone in suffering from depression. This site helps you deal with and come to terms with your depression. This site should not be used as a substitution for your doctor's or therapist's advice.

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