I Lead Inspirational Retreats… And I'm Struggling With Depression
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I’m tired. I just spent a week leading a retreat with 22 women, and although I mostly love what I do, I found myself this week understanding, for the first time really, what it means to be emotionally exhausted. I’m awake and filled with gratitude, but I’m drained. How long can one person wear so many hats? Yoga teacher, retreat and workshop leader, writer, and lastly, a depressive.
I’ve been off my anti-depressants since last summer. I originally went off because I thought I might want to get pregnant. Also, I wanted to see if I could “make it” without them. My life is different now. But back then, six years ago when I made the decision to go on anti-depressants, I was desperate and depressed. Like crawling on the floor and eating food in your sleep desperate. I’d suffered from anorexia, severe depression and anxiety for a long time, and, was also miserable at my waitressing job (at a restaurant in LA where I stayed for 12 years).
I’ve come a long way since then, which included days when I would read instant messages (they were still so novel back then) all day from my ex-boyfriend that said things like: You just gotta get your shit together. U gotta get out of the restaurant. U gotta make moves. You’ve gotta decide what u want to do with ur life! As if I didn’t know that I was drowning at the restaurant. As if staring in the mirror and picking my face until it bled was what I wanted for myself.
By this time last year, the circumstances of my life had changed dramatically, and I thought it was time to see if my depression was “circumstantial” or “chemical” by trying life without the meds.
About a year after I had gone on anti-depressants, I quit the restaurant. I started leading inspirational workshops, which quickly turned into sold-out workshops and retreats all over the world. I developed this huge online following. It all happened very quickly — I went from career waitress to traveling around the world and being on Good Morning America and featured in New York Magazine. And all this success came while I was on meds.
I felt like a fraud. I felt like I should be able to use the tools I was teaching in my workshops and not have to be on anti-depressants. So I went off last summer, and about five minutes later got pregnant.
The hormones from being pregnant combined with the emotions and brain freak-outs from going off medication made me feel crazy (literally) and scared. The pregnancy ended up being ectopic and yet, through it all, the night of hemorrhaging at Canyon Ranch in Lenox, Massachusetts, where I was the guest speaker, to the day of leading workshops in New York City and teaching classes in Seattle, I kept going. Because people were depending on me. I had to push through. I had to put on a happy face.
I’m not sure I can pinpoint the exact moment in time that I first earned the reputation for being “positive” or “inspirational,” but I can tell you that the joke isn’t lost on me — earlier in my life, if I had a dime for every time someone told me to “smile” or that I seemed depressed or that I seemed miserable or too serious, I would be very, very rich.
I think the perception may have something to do with my willingness to be honest, to talk about what lies in the bottom of the closet or masturbation or sex or how I drink too much wine and yet I’m a yoga teacher. I’ve written about depression before. Apparently enough that two girls on my last retreat said that every time they Googled “articles on depression” my name came up again and again.
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