year old whose world had progressively gotten smaller and smaller.
Insanely small (both literally and figuratively). We lived on a
cul-de-sac and I couldn’t walk to the corner of our street without a
wave of panic washing over me and a voice screaming inside my head:
“You have to get home! You are weak!” So I didn’t leave my circle
of safety. I used to put Caleb in the stroller and pace back and
forth in front of my house because I was supposed to be supervising
my other 2 babies as they played with their friends in our yard, but
my thoughts were consumed with myself. My heart would pound and my
brain would race and I was there, but not present.
was more afraid of myself than I was afraid of psychiatric help I was
diagnosed with panic disorder and agoraphobia. In non-sciency terms
that means that I would have panic attacks where my heart would race
uncontrollably, my body would feel numb and weak and I would break
out in a cold sweat and it would feel like I couldn’t breathe. In my
broken brain’s wisdom, it had made perfect sense to avoid anywhere that I
ever had a panic attack because if I had a panic attack in the
grocery store then avoiding the the grocery would keep it from
happening again. My list of unsafe places kept getting longer and
longer: eventually the only safe place left was my house. And then I
became afraid of being left alone and would call my husband at work
and beg him to come home so I wasn’t the only one responsible for
these 3 little boys. Because I wasn’t strong enough to care for them.
therapist and medication, I gradually got better and if you met me
now, you’d never know that mental illness was in my past. (I hope!)
Except for the fact that I talk about it every chance I get because
when I was in my darkest place a dear friend who I thought had it all
together shared her dark past with me and told me that psychiatrists
and mental hospitals weren’t something to be ashamed or afraid of. If
talking about it helps someone else then the hell our family went
through wasn’t for nothing.
was going through Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (basically retraining
my brain so I didn’t keep telling myself that I was weak – have you
seen What about Bob? “Baby steps” are an actual thing!)
has guided me in the years since. I’m better/recovered/whatever you
want to call it, but I have to work to keep from going back to that
place.
sign that you need to do it.
wasn’t talking about things that normal people are scared of: playing
chicken with a train, standing up to an armed robber, or I don’t know
. . . what are normal people scared of? She meant the things that my
overactive subconcious automatically rejected as too dangerous: at
first those were things like riding an elevator, driving to a new
city, or going to the store by myself. As I got better they
became things like public speaking, getting on an airplane, or
something physically demanding.
across Bahrain on my 40th birthday.
said “I ran across the country” when we arrived here 18 months
ago and my first thought was, “How fun to be able to say that!”
My second thought that immediately stomped all over the first one,
“There’s no way you could do that. You’re not strong enough.” (My
frenemy still hangs out in the corners of my brain and makes his
presence known every now and then.)
every December and last year I wanted to run it in theory, but
since we were traveling (not on the day of the race, but close to it) that made it easy skip it without admitting to myself that I was
chickening out.
it was my last chance since we’re moving this summer (to a still unknown destination). A friend mentioned it was coming up and when I went to just check out the registration information and saw it was on my 40th birthday . . . it was a sign. I registered immediately.














