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Tag Archives: Depression

Self Sabotage

02 Sunday Dec 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 35 Comments

Tags

ADHD, dementia, Depression

emmjay desk

Story and photo by Emmjay

I caught myself today.  Caught myself self-sabotaging.

It went like this:

  • Woke up at 4:40.  Head full of ideas about how to write a killer application for a job I really want to win.
  • Lie there thinking because my get up time is 5:00.
  • Check cats, let in George, who’s not interested in food and just wants a hello pat.
  • Put on kettle for a green tea. Brew.
  • Take medications.
  • Decide to put off exercise for half an hour.
  • Tidy up kitchen bench while tea is brewing.
  • Notice motorcycle magazine – open it and read interesting stuff.
  • Realise that I’m off track.

Put down mag – remembering to enter Barry Sheen race day in phone – March next year.

Take tea to office, intending to complete the killer job application.

Desk is a mess and my new daily routine note is in there somewhere.  I need it so I go looking for that paper.  An identical one has a few notes I made to help FM out with a proposal for a project.

I reckon it’s a really good piece of thinking – re-usable, but I want to throw it out as part of cleaning up the messy desk.  I decide to type it into my computer and use it as a template.

I turn on the computer.  It opens up Email – major distraction – I notice new Email from FM forwarding the picture of the first snow from Linda and Steve in Scotland.  Under that’s a picture Email from Eastern Markets of Elena Dawson’s new collection – a favourite.

I realise that I’m off track again and decide to return to clean up the desk – and want to shut down the PC but I’ve also bought a new CD from the kitchen bench clean up, which is a calming and gentle piece of guitar and violin music-perfect for desk cleaning, so I can’t shut down the PC just yet and anyway, I’ll need it in a minute or two to complete the killer job application.

Then I realise just how random my morning has been so far and it’s only 5:30, so I decide to write all this mess down.

It’s 5:50 now and I’m hoping that the medications cut in soon, because I’ve started to yawn and I’m uncertain about what to do next.  I think I’ll put the CD on quietly to avoid waking FM, and return to the desk clean up to find my schedule, but I think I heard the cats meowing and that means that I need to feed them to get them to shut up.  So I might as well feed the dog and the fish and the tadpoles at the same time.

Then I remember that the fish food is running out and make a mental note to pick some up on the way to the poetry bash at the Basement this afternoon.  Malcolm Turnbull is supposed to do a reading.  That should be interesting.  Then I recall my conversation with FM about whether all this sweetness and light around Turnbull is publicity for a forthcoming Liberal Party leadership spill.

It’s 6:00 now – I’d better feed the animals.  The first flight of the day rips past the front of the house.

I feed the animals, and as I’m in the kitchen and there’s a fair bit of ironing, I decide to do some to keep the pile under control and Tim the Cabin Boy is coming home early today. So less clutter is good and then I’m reminded that we have to rescue his school clothes from his wardrobe in case the renovations have gotten dust in there.

While ironing, I start to fee a bit hungry, so I decide to make some toast.  But the chopping board needs a clean and while I do that I’d better hand wash the cut glass tumblers.

I do that, put the bread in the toaster and think that I’d like some juice too and I go to the fridge.  While I’m doing that, I get out the vitamins.  The toast is ready and I pour a drink quickly because I don’t want the toast to get cold – or the juice to get warm.

Right.  Ready for breakfast.  I might as well read yesterday’s paper on the iPad while I eat.  I become engrossed in the paper and I notice that an hour and a half have gone by.  It’s time to get FM a cup of tea.  I wonder whether she might want a piece of toast or whether the big bread hit might make her feel uncomfortable.  Maybe she might prefer muesli- in which case I need to cut up some fruit.  While doing that I should cut some for the birds and feed them too.

But maybe FM might prefer some eggs.  I decide to just do tea and ask her.  But since I have the fruit out, I decide to try and fit in a bird feed while the jug boils for the tea.  By this time I think a cup of coffee for me is in order and I put on the espresso machine to warm up, make FM’s tea and take it upstairs.

I hope she’s had a good night and is feeling OK.  She IS!  And she’s keen to go to the beach for a swim.

I start to change into my swimmers and pack the towels and other stuff.

Exercise is good for me too and she really wants me to come with her.  But the beach trip is a 2 hour event minimum, or more if we have coffee in a favourite cafe after the exercise.  So there’s a conflict in my mind.  I need the exercise, but I have so much more to do.  And there’s a complication.  The weather has started to turn and it looks like it might rain.  We’re not sure whether we should go.

Maybe we should just walk the dog instead.  So we change back into not beach clothes.  FM notices that the dog has a problem with her ears.  This is not uncommon.  Maybe a bit of ear mite.  FM gets out the treatment and notices that the rinse and bug killer is pretty old.  So I phone the vet, who’s surgery is on the way of the planned walk but the vet is not yet open, so FM treats the dog’s ears anyway.  We’ll call again later.

Figuring that the dog should probably take it easy today, we decide to not take her for a walk.

I want to visit my Mom in the nursing home and I usually buy her some flowers on the way and also get some for FM.  We decide to go our separate ways.  I have lots of time and FM will go and see the sale at Paddington and I will head off out west to Hammondville.

But FM hasn’t had breakfast and I haven’t had coffee so we decide to drop into our friends’ cafe – Silverbean in Enmore.  We enjoy a muffin and coffee and FM drops me at home.

She reminds me that Tim the Cabin Boy is coming home tomorrow and we need to vacuum the builder’s dust so Tim won’t walk it through the whole house.  I also need to tidy up the front bedroom so he has somewhere to sleep while the ceiling is out of his room.

I have lots of time and I get stuck into this work and make serious progress.  FM who has returned from Paddington interrupts me.  Two hours have passed by, but the job’s done.  She’s impressed.

Shower, change, collect Mom’s perfume (I always try to remember to take it and put a little on her wrists each time I visit).  She used to love French perfume, but when I left it in her room, it disappeared – twice, so it has to live at our place.

I drive to the start of the M5, but there’s a long line of traffic at the entrance, so I cut out and go through Bardwell Park and get back onto the motorway after the tunnel.  There’s a lot of traffic, but it’s moving well.  I pull into the small village shops at Hammondville to buy Mom’s flowers and order some for FM to pick up on the way home.  It’s stinking hot and humid and flowers wouldn’t survive waiting in a hot car while I see Mom.

When I get to the nursing home, Mom’s sleeping in her reclining chair and although the carers say that I should wake her, because she gets a huge amount of sleep anyway and I’ve come so far, I hate to do that, mainly because I struggle with the reality that it’s nearly impossible to communicate with her.  She has a few words, and seems to hear me, but she speaks so softly and in such tiny fragments that I often cannot understand – then she drifts off, motionless and stares into the middle distance.

I decide to wait and take a break.  I go across the road to the local cafe and have my second cup of coffee and a slice of banana bread by way of lunch.  I go back to the nursing home and decide to just put a little perfume on Mom’s neck while she sleeps, but she wakes up and takes some time to figure out what’s going on.  She still recognises me, I think, but she doesn’t speak.

I stroke her hair and hold her hand.  She can’t move much – part of the dementia is that her brain cannot control the muscles and they tend to contract, so she adopts a pose that reminds me of the foetal position.  Ironic, isn’t it.  That’s how we start and that’s how we finish – folded up like origami.

About an hour of idle chat – me putting my ear close to her mouth to catch her standard questions about whether she’s well, whether I’m well, where she is, what’s she doing here, when can she go home… and around and around and around.

I always make some lame excuse that it’s time to leave to do the shopping for the week or whatever.

I discover that I do not have the car keys in my pocket.  Have I dropped them in the nursing home ? Maybe they’re in the car ignition still.  No.  Well, that leaves the cafe.  It’s afternoon now and they shut early.  Rush over.  “Are these your keys, mate ?” Thankfully they are.

I always phone FM as I’m leaving the nursing home.  I check the phone and she’s tried to call me a couple of times, but I missed the calls.   I usually feel pretty sad after visiting Mom and FM is a great support.  She doesn’t answer.  It goes to voicemail.

I drive home on Canterbury road because the motorway was a parking lot going into the city.  If anything Canterbury road is even more depressing than Parramatta road.

When I get home, FM is excited about the new Paris fashions in the Paddington sale.

It’s still incredibly hot and humid.  She suggests a cool shower and a change.

And she gives me a cuddle.

We go off to Leichhardt, and enjoy a lovely light meal and a glass of wine at Tuscany.  The waiters know us and are always funny and kind.

We do the grocery shopping, drop off at Gelatissimo on the way home, unload the car and unpack the groceries, watch a little TV and crash out.

The next morning it starts all over.  The front end of the day looks like Ground Hog Day again.

Now it’s 7:15 and I’m back at my cluttered desk.  The green tea has run out.  I haven’t put the music CD on yet and I still haven’t found my written down schedule that’s supposed to help me put some structure into my day.

I edit this piece again.

… and around and around and around ….. And now it’s 8:15.  Up for three hours and nothing’s done …

This story is about adult AD/HD.  It is a very real mental condition that makes day-to-day life a lot more difficult than it is for neurotypical (normal) people.  AD/HD can be a schooling nightmare,  a career wrecker,  a personal finance destroyer, a marriage wrecker and often has strong links to depression.

AD/HD can often be eased with the right treatment (usually counselling therapy, behavioural modification  – especially developing practices like making and using lists –  and sometimes medication can help). 

The support of an understanding and loving partner is invaluable.

If this story looks a lot like your day and if that worries you, see your GP and get checked out.

Fat and Happy

28 Wednesday Nov 2012

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 50 Comments

Tags

Beyond Blue, Depression, fat, FTO gene, genes, happy, Obesity

The Pig’s Arms Mascot, Mr Fat and Happy

Visual Mischief and Editing by Warrigal Mirriyuula

Fat And Happy

Genetic Challenge to the Common Perception of A Link Between Depression and Obesity

Ever wondered why some of your friends are happier than others? Ever wondered whether there might be a genetic basis for their happiness? Got any fat friends? Do they seem happier than your thin friends?

These and similar questions occurred to researchers at McMaster University in Canada. They’ve discovered genetic evidence relating to why some people are happier than others, and they found it in an unusual place; the fat mass and obesity-associated protein also known as alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase, or the FTO gene

This gene, which substantially controls and contributes to obesity, has the serendipitous effect of also contributing to an eight percent reduction in the risk of serious depression. So this “fat” gene is also a “happy” gene.

The research appears in a study recently published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry. The paper was produced by senior author David Meyre, associate professor in clinical epidemiology and biostatistics at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine and a Canada Research Chair in genetic epidemiology; first author Dr. Zena Samaan, assistant professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, and members of the Population Health Research Institute of McMaster University and Hamilton Health Sciences.

“The difference of eight per cent is modest and it won’t make a big difference in the day-to-day care of patients,” Meyre said. “But, we have discovered a novel molecular basis for depression.”

Previous studies have shown a statistical correlation suggesting a forty percent genetic component to depression but so far there has been little success in actually identifying the genes involved. Researchers have been “surprisingly unsuccessful” in this search and produced no convincing evidence so far, Samaan said.

The McMaster discovery challenges the common perception of a reciprocal link between depression and obesity: That obese people become depressed because of their appearance and social and economic discrimination; depressed individuals may lead less active lifestyles and change eating habits to cope with depression that causes them to become obese.

“We set out to follow a different path, starting from the hypothesis that both depression and obesity deal with brain activity. We hypothesized that obesity genes may be linked to depression,” Meyre said.

The McMaster researchers investigated the genetic and psychiatric status of patients enrolled in the EpiDREAM study led by the Population Health Research Institute, which analysed 17,200 DNA samples from participants in 21 countries.

In these patients, they found the previously identified obesity predisposing genetic variant in FTO was associated with an eight per cent reduction in the risk of depression. They confirmed this finding by analysing the genetic status of patients in three additional large international studies.

Meyre said the fact the obesity gene’s same protective trend on depression was found in four different studies supports their conclusion. It is the “first evidence” that an FTO obesity gene is associated with protection against major depression, independent of its effect on body mass index, he said.

Now a word of caution from your correspondent; this discovery and its implications do not, I repeat DO NOT mean that if you’re unhappy it makes sense to get on the blower and order up ten family buckets of KFC. That will just make you fat.

Happy is a different state of mind altogether.

For help with depression contact “Beyondblue”:

 http://www.beyondblue.org.au/index.aspx?

Story Source: The above story is edited from materials provided by McMaster University

Journal Reference:

1. Z Samaan, S Anand, X Zhang, D Desai, M Rivera, G Pare, L Thabane, C Xie, H Gerstein, J C Engert, I Craig, S Cohen-Woods, V Mohan, R Diaz, X Wang, L Liu, T Corre, M Preisig, Z Kutalik, S Bergmann, P Vollenweider, G Waeber, S Yusuf, D Meyre. The protective effect of the obesity-associated rs9939609 A variant in fat mass- and obesity-associated gene on depression. Molecular Psychiatry, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/mp.2012.160

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here are opinion only.

Keywords: McMaster University, D Meyre, Z Samaan, FTO gene, obesity and depression, happy gene

Hung from the Heart

23 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by Mark in Mark

≈ 31 Comments

Tags

Depression, male nurse

This pub looks familiar – I think I’ll have a Trotters Ale

 

Hung From The Heart by Hung One On

 

Hey, a heart is a powerful thing

It keeps us alive beating non stop

From birth to death

If  I speak from the heart

I may offend or discriminate

But that ain’t what I will want to do

To speak the truth takes courage

However the truth is different to different eyes

Me, I don’t care where you came from

The colour of your skin

To me it’s you, that’s what makes me like you

You may be smart, you may be dumb

If you are genuine then that’s okay

Racism and bigots I don’t like

But if you have a view

Put it up for discussion, lets hear it

Nothing wrong with that but don’t expect me to agree

Again, nothing wrong with that

Me, I get my most pleasure from others

My wife and kids, my patients

I love seeing them be happy

Last night a lady resident with dysphagia

Was crying and upset

I held her hand and asked her all the usual dumb questions

“Are you in pain?”

“Do you want fries with that?”

She tried to tell me what was wrong.

She squeezed my hand hard. She was down.

In the end she said “Don’t worry. I’ll be alright”

As clear as day, dysphagia?

I see a lot of depression

It takes one to know one

Doing something for them is so hard for some

But easy for me

I go to work, sometimes tired, not enough sleep,

“Hey Hung, can I have some Panadol?”

Sure, how easy is that

Most of friends are gone now

Thanks to the Black Dog

The crew at The Arms are my friends now

I talk from the heart

I wear it on my sleeve

I pay a price, I pay my dues

The Black Dog

01 Monday Nov 2010

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon

≈ 27 Comments

Tags

Black Dog, Depression, Movember

The Pig’s Arms welcomes Algernon.

50th birthdays

I’m in the middle of a second wave of 50th birthdays for family and friends. Last week a family member rang to say that the police needed to be called to the 50th of one of their friends. Their 18 year old son had become violent due to a psychotic episode – related to taking drugs. The lad has been suffering with mental illness similar to Bi-polar disorder. His drug-taking started with smoking dope, I suspect, to ease the pressure of having to perform at top levels in sport and attending a school where none of his friends went. In the end, he was dealing at school. His parents have been doing their best to help him cope with his mental health issues, in silence for a number of years and they have only recently been aware of the dealing.

October was Mental Health month.

I bring this to you as I also have a child with mental health issues although illicit drugs are not the issue.  This child was first diagnosed with depression at the age of nine.  With good therapy they managed to excel for a few years. Recently after starting high school the wheels slowly started to fall off again. Off to the psychologist we went again and made improvements but not as quick as the first time. By last Christmas holidays there seemed to be much improvement.  As the year progressed they slowly went downhill again. Around July anti-depressants were prescribed reluctantly, given the age of the child, however they seemed necessary. One day in August the child had a breakdown at school and was taken home. A parent was speaking on the phone, the child tells them that they loved them and went upstairs. The parent realizing the risk, immediately ends the call and follows after the child who by the time they got to them was attempting suicide.

We live in an area with some of the best mental health facilities in the country; however they seem to be overwhelmed by the high levels of mental health issues that affect the community. I can say that we’ve built a good support network around the child and they are now making good progress.

The hardest thing about dealing with this is watching the wheels slowly fall off, seeing them withdraw from the activities that they love and watch them just hang onto the small things that mean the most to them. As a family, life just seems to come to a standstill.  Generally the family suffers in silence.

Even though people are more enlightened than in years gone by the stigma still remains.  Given how prolific mental health issues are, one wonders why. You also are careful who you do and don’t confide in. Some of those you do will judge, most I’ve found are very supportive. Above all talking with others who are supporting gives an outlet to express yourself and how you’re coping.

We know that one day the child will improve and after recently changing friends who are encouraging to them for what they are has seen the mood change for the better.

Pic borrowed from http://asitoughttobe.wordpress.com/2009/12/06/sunday-poetry-series-presents-robert-archambeau/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mike Does Movember

28 Thursday Oct 2010

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 50 Comments

Tags

Beyondblue, Depression, Movember, Prostate

Hi, Friends of the Pig’s Arms

This Movember I’ve decided to donate my face to raising awareness about men’s health.  I’m hoping they don’t want to send it back.

My  commitment is to return to my roots and allow the re-appearance of a luxurious white cloud (with hints of thunder) under my nose for the entire month of Movember, which I know will generate conversation, controversy and laughter  – or extensive indifference.

I am doing this because close to 3,300 men die of prostate cancer in Australia each year and one in eight men will experience depression in their lifetime.  Even the thought of a prostate check brings tears to my eyes.

As many people are aware the current first line of detection for prostate cancer, the PSA blood test has an unacceptably high rate of missed positives and false positives – leading to a great deal of misery – not the least of which can be damage to the party tackle caused by an unnecessary biopsy.  And the second line of detection ?  Well, how much can you tell about what’s going on in the bedroom by peeping in the back door ?

These are causes that I feel strongly about and I’m asking you to support my efforts by making a donation (tax deductible over $2) – to be shared by Beyond Blue and Prostate Cancer Research. I promise  that all I get out of the deal is a few days off the Gillette, some smug self-satisfaction and the opportunity to sling-off at all the girly boys who don’t participate at work.  I also will receive no congratulatory beers, unless that’s your special wish and you find me relaxing (but remarkably dry) at the Pig’s Arms.

To help, you can either:

–    Click this link http://au.movember.com/mospace/682486/ and donate online using your credit card or PayPal account.  These dudes do the receipt and you won’t feel a thing.
–    Write a cheque payable to Movember Foundation, referencing my registration number 682486 and mailing it to: Movember Foundation, PO Box 292, Prahran, VIC, 3181

Through the Movember Foundation and its men’s health partners, PCFA and beyondblue: the national depression initiative, Movember is funding world class research, educational and support programs which would otherwise not be possible.

For more details on the impact Movember is having please visit: http://au.movemberfoundation.com/research-and-programs.

Thank you in advance for helping me to support men’s health.

Mike Jones

Warrigal at Movember Week 1

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