Aren't you tired of living and waiting for things to get better?

Posted by carrotbunny @carrotbunny, May 10 10:23am

I'm tired and I just want to die already. I don't know how to bring back my enthusiasm. I wake up wishing that I didn't wake up. I want to die in my sleep. I'm so so tired. Exhausted.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Depression & Anxiety Support Group.

U can't wait until life isn't hard anymore to be happy.

REPLY
@dfb

I have felt the same way ever since I had a psychotic episode at age six, fifty-four years ago. I rate my level of suicidality on a scale of 0 to 10. Zero means no depression (which has never happened) 10; I'm dead. Most mornings, I wake up at about 8. By late afternoon, I can work my way down to a 3. By the time I return to bed, I'll be around 5.

I've recently tried to treat my depression like any chronic illness that needs daily management.

Here is what I do:

I wake up at 6:00 am every day. I get right up before I can start thinking.
I am usually out of the house by 7:30 after going through my morning ritual. I am still trying not to think, just act.
I exercise for two hours every day.
I then have coffee at a local place and collect my thoughts. By now, I can think without dropping into hell.
I work on projects that are meaningful to me until five.
I read or watch TV (I hate television but I live with my mother and she likes it).
In bed between 9:30 and 10:00.

Weekends are more challenging as they are less planned.
It sucks having to keep such a rigged schedule. For now, it's working, so I stay with it.
I also try not to eat food that makes me feel worse. For me, that is refined sugar and highly processed foods.

I also use my phone to keep track of my thoughts. I am a very different person at a three than I am at an eight. Sometimes, when I'm eight, it helps to read things I felt as a three. It also allows me to see how tragic my thinking was when I was eight or worse.

I believe I have been depressed for so long that the neuropathways leading to depression are like super highways. I know my brain can reroute these pathways. I try very hard to change my thinking as the negative thoughts creep in. Once they get a hold of me, it is difficult to impossible to change them.

Depression, for me, is a chronic condition like diabetes. I can treat it but can't cure it. I still bounce back and forth between wanting to die right now and just looking forward to when my life will be over. My work gives me purpose every once in a while, and I don't actively think of dying.

I wish you peace and good health.

Jump to this post

My depression is always worse when I wake up also. Even if I take a nap, I awaken with profound sadness and anxiety. I wonder why this is? 🤔

REPLY
@dfb

I have felt the same way ever since I had a psychotic episode at age six, fifty-four years ago. I rate my level of suicidality on a scale of 0 to 10. Zero means no depression (which has never happened) 10; I'm dead. Most mornings, I wake up at about 8. By late afternoon, I can work my way down to a 3. By the time I return to bed, I'll be around 5.

I've recently tried to treat my depression like any chronic illness that needs daily management.

Here is what I do:

I wake up at 6:00 am every day. I get right up before I can start thinking.
I am usually out of the house by 7:30 after going through my morning ritual. I am still trying not to think, just act.
I exercise for two hours every day.
I then have coffee at a local place and collect my thoughts. By now, I can think without dropping into hell.
I work on projects that are meaningful to me until five.
I read or watch TV (I hate television but I live with my mother and she likes it).
In bed between 9:30 and 10:00.

Weekends are more challenging as they are less planned.
It sucks having to keep such a rigged schedule. For now, it's working, so I stay with it.
I also try not to eat food that makes me feel worse. For me, that is refined sugar and highly processed foods.

I also use my phone to keep track of my thoughts. I am a very different person at a three than I am at an eight. Sometimes, when I'm eight, it helps to read things I felt as a three. It also allows me to see how tragic my thinking was when I was eight or worse.

I believe I have been depressed for so long that the neuropathways leading to depression are like super highways. I know my brain can reroute these pathways. I try very hard to change my thinking as the negative thoughts creep in. Once they get a hold of me, it is difficult to impossible to change them.

Depression, for me, is a chronic condition like diabetes. I can treat it but can't cure it. I still bounce back and forth between wanting to die right now and just looking forward to when my life will be over. My work gives me purpose every once in a while, and I don't actively think of dying.

I wish you peace and good health.

Jump to this post

Thank you. You have clarified some of my thinking. Good ways to turn from the depression. At 72, it's ironic that I'm getting to a place when I can find ways to cope with the depression. I wish you peace and health, too. You've made a good path.

REPLY
@lizziel1

My depression is always worse when I wake up also. Even if I take a nap, I awaken with profound sadness and anxiety. I wonder why this is? 🤔

Jump to this post

@lizziel1 I remember as a child waking up from naps feeling sad, and crying! As an adult I haven’t experienced that much, but it was always the case when I was a child!

REPLY

You don't mention what your physician has said about your chronic tiredness. When was the last time you had a thorough (including blood & urine tests, EKG, a colonoscopy - the works) medical examination? That would be a good start to help pin down/eliminate any physical cause(s) for your tiredness.

REPLY
@carrotbunny

Both physical and mental. Mostly mental because after taking a shower, I get a bit of energy but it disappears throughout the day. I'm 37. Just very very exhausted from life overall. I think I've been this way since I was a kid and nothing has changed. I don't have any specific diet but I'm not overweight or anything. I'm just tired of being on earth, I guess. I feel like I have no purpose here. All suffering.

Jump to this post

I saw someone else say, "All this advice from people who don't know what it's like." They're right. Anyone who gives your advice and says you need to be positive...they think they can imagine what it's like for you, but they're just full of good intentions. I also don't want to live another day, or hear that I should call 988, or talk to my doctor about it. You feel this way because you have tried it all. Even hope can be too hard to manage. Thank you for being honest, and not using humor or false hope to make it easier to swallow.

REPLY
@samuelmyrick

I saw someone else say, "All this advice from people who don't know what it's like." They're right. Anyone who gives your advice and says you need to be positive...they think they can imagine what it's like for you, but they're just full of good intentions. I also don't want to live another day, or hear that I should call 988, or talk to my doctor about it. You feel this way because you have tried it all. Even hope can be too hard to manage. Thank you for being honest, and not using humor or false hope to make it easier to swallow.

Jump to this post

@samuelmyrick

I just saw you started discussion about favorite movies, love it. I have not thought of "Little Miss Sunshine" for a long time. Going to try and see if can find and watch tonight.

https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/what-are-some-favorite-movies/
REPLY
@samuelmyrick

I saw someone else say, "All this advice from people who don't know what it's like." They're right. Anyone who gives your advice and says you need to be positive...they think they can imagine what it's like for you, but they're just full of good intentions. I also don't want to live another day, or hear that I should call 988, or talk to my doctor about it. You feel this way because you have tried it all. Even hope can be too hard to manage. Thank you for being honest, and not using humor or false hope to make it easier to swallow.

Jump to this post

Good day I know what you say when folks say things will get better. Luckily they don't know what is going on with you. I am a retired nurse and believe in giving good information - even though it is hard some times. I do not like to tell people what is going on with me. I was in a serious car accident when I was 13 years, I fractured my skull from ear to ear. I was in a coma for awhile, had many other injuries, I have had brain cancer a few years ago - my neurosurgeon said laser surgery should work. I went through that - and it did clear for about two years then it returned. I decided to get a new oncologist and he decided to do a heavy dose of chemotherapy. Which we did and I have been in remission for over 4 years. I have had three surgeries on my right knee last year. They did not seem to heal. Finally after my 3rd surgery, it did heal. Other things have happened, which I don't want to. I agree that good therapy is to say "We are not 21 any more, and have a great day."

REPLY

Telling someone to do something to feel better when they feel like crap is hard because what works for one will not work for another. There are two short books I'd like to recommend, they both can probably come from your library at no cost. If you don't belong to a library, check into it because most libraries today also have an online app where you can check out digital books if you don't like to read physical ones.

These two books are very short and one chapter take about 5 minutes to read, so take them in small doses and digest the information slowly. I found them extremely helpful. They cover things I never knew or thought of before in my life. I reread them regularly.

The Secret by Rhonda Byrne
The Power by Rhonda Byrne

She has some other titles too that might interest you. As I look at her books I see one I have not read yet than looks interesting: The Secret to Love, Health, And Money: A Masterclass

REPLY

I live with a person that has extreme OCD. I have my own struggles with agoraphobia and PTSD. It is hard for me to go on at times. i listen to unhinged rants everyday. Screaming and yelling. I dont know how much more I can take. I have lost all desire for life. All I want to do is sleep and not wake up. Out of option at 58 I have no help. I guess I dont count anyway.

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.