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Down in the dumps

Taxman

Member
Has anyone else had issues with depression? I have had great success since surgery, but dealing with my wife who has issues with diabetes. She turns every discussion of what I need to do into how it affects her. This really hits me hard, she's not supposed to eat certain foods, and complains about it to me. She then goes ahead and eats it in front of me but I'm not able to cheat and eat what I want.
This tears me up. Luckily, my son helps me out and I have dear friends who are here for me.

ARRRGH!!!
 
Yeah totally. Your wife doesn't sounds like she really cares about your feelings, and she also sounds like she's hurting herself. You should really talk it out with her, and tell her how what she does makes you feel. She's your wife, after all. She's meant to be your other half.
 
Has anyone else had issues with depression? I have had great success since surgery, but dealing with my wife who has issues with diabetes. She turns every discussion of what I need to do into how it affects her. This really hits me hard, she's not supposed to eat certain foods, and complains about it to me. She then goes ahead and eats it in front of me but I'm not able to cheat and eat what I want.
This tears me up. Luckily, my son helps me out and I have dear friends who are here for me.

ARRRGH!!!
So sorry you're dealing with this, I know you're doing so well otherwise. Do you enjoy reading? There's a great book out there that may help you. It's called Codependent No More by Melody Beattie.

It really helped me a lot. Actually, with the holidays coming I could use a refresher so I'll start reading it again this weekend. :)
 
I have had draw lines, and I go out to run errands and visit friends. Today I am starting to prepare foods for Christmas week. I'm pureeing food so I can enjoy the same thing others are eating (my steak is pureed while theirs will be freshly cooked etc). My wife is going out to eat with our son. It's not a long term solution, but for now it's working.
 
I have had draw lines, and I go out to run errands and visit friends. Today I am starting to prepare foods for Christmas week. I'm pureeing food so I can enjoy the same thing others are eating (my steak is pureed while theirs will be freshly cooked etc). My wife is going out to eat with our son. It's not a long term solution, but for now it's working.
Glad to hear that you've found distractions. And great idea pureeing the same foods that will be on your holiday menu.
 
I'm sorry, I haven't been on line recently. The boundaries have been holding. I have been freed from the liquids and can eat "real" food . That's removed some of the pressure.
The nutritionist and the surgeon both say that I'm doing great. Most days I agree. Some days I feel exhausted and then I get morose. My son understands, and my wife is not sure why I get grumpy. Oh well, I am focusing on the positive things going on in my life.
 
it's just it's just occurred to me that there was something extremely inspirational it happened in my life and I forgot to mention it. It wasn't a book, although I share Brenda's enthusiasm for the book by Melody Beatty, codependent no more.

It was a movie. I saw it on PBS and then as soon as I had the chance I bought it. By the end of the movie, I had my life so well in perspective and I felt like I need a challenges in my life and that his life was so much worse than mine.

Please do not hesitate to rent or buy it. It's worth every penny. There is also a book that preceded the movie, that contains pretty much everything that you see in the movie. By the way the movie is a documentary about this pair of climbers who were trying to set a record and ended with a broken rope between them, sending them in different directions in a place they didn't know. And the please do not hesitate to rent or buy it. It's worth every penny. There is also a book that preceded the movie, that contains pretty much everything that you see in the movie. By the way the movie is a documentary about this pair of climbers who were trying to set a record and ended with a broken rope between them, sending them in different directions in a place they didn't know. And the person at the bottom of the Rope, continue to fall into a deep deep ice cave but he lived. Then over the next several days he dragged himself across the snow and ice and rivers trying to find his hiking buddy.

it's one it's one of those great documentaries that doesn't make you sad because of the reality, but it makes you feel inspired, on fire, invulnerable. Taxman if you don't have it, and can't afford it, I will send you my copy. Message me privately if you want that to happen and give me your address. But do see the movie
Sounds fantastic Diane, what is the title?
 
Has anyone else had issues with depression? I have had great success since surgery, but dealing with my wife who has issues with diabetes. She turns every discussion of what I need to do into how it affects her. This really hits me hard, she's not supposed to eat certain foods, and complains about it to me. She then goes ahead and eats it in front of me but I'm not able to cheat and eat what I want.
This tears me up. Luckily, my son helps me out and I have dear friends who are here for me.

ARRRGH!!!
Don't give up before the Miracles happen!!!
 
Has anyone else had issues with depression? I have had great success since surgery, but dealing with my wife who has issues with diabetes. She turns every discussion of what I need to do into how it affects her. This really hits me hard, she's not supposed to eat certain foods, and complains about it to me. She then goes ahead and eats it in front of me but I'm not able to cheat and eat what I want.
This tears me up. Luckily, my son helps me out and I have dear friends who are here for me.

ARRRGH!!!
I'm in your shoes too. Somehow my surgery has become all about my sister. She's a diabetic who eats everything she's not suppose to. Her pain is worse than anyone else's and her struggle is worse than the one between good and evil. I try to tune her out but I'm dealing with depression even though I've lost 30 pounds in a month. So I guess we have to hang in there and put our health first.
 
I'm in your shoes too. Somehow my surgery has become all about my sister. She's a diabetic who eats everything she's not suppose to. Her pain is worse than anyone else's and her struggle is worse than the one between good and evil. I try to tune her out but I'm dealing with depression even though I've lost 30 pounds in a month. So I guess we have to hang in there and put our health first.
Hi and welcome. Congratulations on your 30 pounds this month, that's amazing!

Some people can't stand it if attention is taken away from them, they'll do anything to get it back, even if it's negative attention. That's her issue, not yours. We're here to celebrate with you even if the others in your life continue to focus on her bad behavior. Come here when you have accomplishments to share, we love joining each other in these celebrations! Even if it's just to report your weekly loss or another non-scale victory. And we're here for support when you struggle too. There will be times when the scale doesn't move, despite doing everything right. It's frustrating but we'll be here to help you through it. That's what this group is for!!!

Do you say affirmations? They're corny, I know but they do help you steer your mind to a positive outlook. I think a good one to remind you how different you are from your sister is: "I have the courage to live my dreams". Don't let anyone steal your victories.

Please keep writing.
 
I have the most obnoxious, ignorant family. But they all enable each other & so they stay tight-knit and enjoy their obesity. They are absolutely toxic to me, which is why I never told any of them I was going to have surgery 12 years ago. They would have done anything they could to make me feel bad about that because MY success threatens their peaceful little world of denial. I cut off contact with most of them after we finished probate issues & the house sale. I'm sure they don't miss me or give a damn what happens to me and actually, I feel the same way about them. Cutting off can be unhealthy, but in my case, it was a lifesaver.

I see a mental health specialist but she mostly helps me manage my daily tasks, like brushing my teeth or paying a bill. She doesn't offer me therapy and honestly, I already have 45 years of talking/listening therapy under my belt, plus a library of self-help books I've consumed. Unfortunately, the damage from my family is deeper than any of that and trying to get over everything is a struggle. It's like trying to throw a hat on a firehose.

Still, I have hope and motivation, and I still have this healthy body and pure joy about eating the food I cook or buy.

I have been having a lot of trouble disconnecting from my mother's voice and her accusations, opinions and chronic abuse. She's been dead for 3 or 4 years now, but she can still get to me. And lately I've really struggled with how much I hate her. It's not fun, but she was a monster. So I obsessively think of her & remember her every minute of every day. That's bad for me because I'm getting more & more angry about it. I know the only cure for this enmeshment is to focus on myself and the thousands of other things I experience, including the bad ones, like the world famine that is destined to happen as the earth dies.

After talking with my case manager about this, she suggested grounding exercises, which I'd never heard of. The goal is to focus on my life and the reality of it. Using my five senses, I look around and connect with objects that are real. Like, I see my bookshelves and say, There are my bookshelves. This is me using sight to ground myself in reality. I repeat this, using my eyes, five or six times. Then I use my hearing sense to notice the traffic noise outside my window, or birds calling or water running. I move through all my senses including touch (how does that velvet jacket feel when I put it on the hanger), smell (I can still smell the fantastic curry I made for dinner last night) and taste (my delicious morning cup of coffee).

When I've done this enough times, I become grounded in reality and Mom goes away. At the same time, I sense an appreciation for what I have and what I've accomplished or experienced with my five senses. I feel totally grounded in reality and it feels really good.

If you've never done this and are troubled by obsessive failure messages, you might want to give it a try. Only so many people can fit in a lifeboat, escaping a sinking ship. In my disaster of a life, my mom doesn't get to be in the boat anymore. She's going down like the Titanic and I'm on my way to salvation. It helps.
It makes since to me that thoughts about your mother have intensified since your recent issue with your son. Because you lived with how miserable a mother can be and your son was so lucky to have been blessed with you as his. Not that you'd say that, but it's true. This situation is bound to conjure up all these old memories and feelings. And it being the holiday season doesn't help old painful scars any.

I think these grounding exercises sound great. Lots in common with what Eckhart Tolle teaches in The Power of Now. Only the present moment is real. Focusing all your senses on what is true, right now, frees you from painful memories of the past and anxieties about the future.
 
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