
As family and close friends learned about my personal circumstance and struggles in relation to my husband's depression, I was and continue to be asked about how I kept myself well, how I maintain my own happiness, how could I possibly have been cheerful during my husband's darkest days (weeks, months...).
Here are some things that helped me:
FIND YOURSELF AN INDIVIDUAL THERAPIST
Hopefully, your spouse is being treated for his/her depression. (Talk therapy in combination with care from a psychiatrist.) Here is the next most important thing - get yourself a talk therapist! I can't stress this enough. I went once a week during the toughest times and then tapered off to once a month. During these sessions, the focus was on ways for me to cope properly. My therapist offered views into my situation that I just couldn't see for myself. People ask me all the time whether they need a psychiatrist, psychologist or a masters level therapist (ie: licensed marriage and family therapist, licensed clinical social worker or a licensed mental health counselor). All of these people are trained in talk therapy to one degree or another. Psychiatrists are medical doctors who prescribe medication. Psychologists are PhDs who do talk therapy (some) and also do a variety of testing. Masters level therapists are trained solely to do talk therapy. If you use a masters level clinician, PLEASE make sure they are licensed by your state's Department of Health. A reputable online search tool for locating a therapist near you is http://therapists.psychologytoday.com/ (If you do not find a therapist in your town or if you are in a rural area, look into licensed therapists who perform tele-counseling or web-cam counseling. Do not let anything stop you from getting help for yourself.)
STRIVE TO BE CHEERFUL
I really do live by the following quote by the late soprano Beverly Sills - "I may not always be happy but I am always cheerful." It isn't hard for me to be cheerful as I am innately optimistic and come from a long line of strong, positive women. My default mode is upbeat, forward thinking, not in a pollyanna sense but in a more realistic way - think of "The Secret" - and this works for me and always has. This is not to say that I do not have dark moments or days where I have felt like I could crawl under the sheets for 24 hours straight.
SURROUND YOURSELF WITH POSITIVE PEOPLE
I make an effort to be surrounded by people who keep me bouyant, who view the world in a positive way, who are not cynical or distrustful of the blessings of life. Negative people can easily sap one of great energy and these are the people whom I have little patience for. The most positive influences for me during the worst times of my husband's depression are those friends and family members who were empathetic and shared my pain but who could also keep it light. Most of my time, after all, is spent with the two most joyous individuals in this entire world - my two little girls! Time spent playing and talking with children (if you don't have any, go hang around a friend's!) is by far the most positive time in the world. Try it.
EAT WELL AND TAKE VITAMINS
Eliminate white flour, simple sugars, sugar substitutes, excessive caffeine or alcohol as much as you can. I hated hearing this from my individual therapist but it worked! Eat more protein, leafy greens, complex carbs, lots of water, green tea. These are things that I did to keep myself healthy and free from those sugar and caffeine crashes...don't get me wrong, I strayed at least once a week and indulged in a dessert or something like that but for the most part, my diet was improved and so was my mental health - kept me strong so that I could "be there" for my husband. If you can afford it, consult a nutritionist or do your own research on an intense vitamin/herb regime to begin....I swear by my vitamins. Make sure you are taking a fish oil supplement, B complex and gingko....again, do your own research or consult a nutritionist.
GET INTO A GOOD BOOK - NOT SELF-HELP
Self-helps are good but take advantage of whatever down-time you may have and pick up a book totally unrelated to your real life! Find out what is on Oprah's book club list, check out the book reviews in Vogue, People or Oprah's magazine (love this mag!) and read!!! This took me away for an hour a day (usually right before I'd fall asleep) and I'd forget about our struggles, forget that my husband was in the darkest depths of depression for a brief moment in time. You must free your mind a little in order to keep it from shutting down...
GET OUT OF THE HOUSE
With two young children, I was constantly on the go - to the park, to playdates, school functions, bike rides, etc... The way that I could have improved upon this important aspect of taking care of oneself is to have gone out without my kids more often. This is something that proved to be hard for me. The catch here is that when I would run into friends/acquaintances who did not know my husband's situation, I would be caught in small-talk that just got my blood boiling. This was a weak spot of mine. I had a difficult time chit-chatting about the latest girly topics while I knew my home life was hanging by a thread and that at any moment, my husband would possibly want to end it all and have to be hospitalized. I found myself not attending committee meetings, dinner clubs, parenting classes or general membership meetings for the women's organizations I belong to. The inevitable, "How are you?" would make me cringe b/c I would have to say, "Great!" and then proceed to share something unrelated to my poor, suffering husband. This is where my innate positivity would come into play.
Guess what? When I did push myself to attend a women's meeting or go somewhere out of my safety net of those friends and family members who knew, it would often propel me into a type of fantasy world (kind of like reading a book) that would make me forget my/our troubles. I would get in the car after a meeting, and would realize that I had such a good time and the focus was not on my husband or kids - it was on me and my interactions as a woman. This was good for me and I wish I had pushed myself out more often.
EXERCISE
Get those endorphins going...run, walk fast or ride your bike for 30 minutes a day!!!! It is such an anti-depressant. Helped me tremendously.
GET OUTSIDE - PLAY WITH YOUR KIDS (or someone else's)
I am lucky that I live in a tropical climate and can go outside almost all year and enjoy beautiful weather. Get a chair and plop it in your grass, breathe fresh air and enjoy the sounds of nature, look at the birds or watch your kids and/or pets romp around the yard. Play with your kids! Get a hard puzzle going together, get lost in playdough with them, go to the library and check out 30 books that you've never read together and get lost in them, make collages, find joy in what they like to do - this helped me so much and continues to serve as such a source of pleasure for me.
TAP INTO YOUR SPIRITUAL SIDE
Attend your church/synagogue services at least once a month - if anything - it is an hour of nice music, an interesting (hopefully) sermon/talk and time to reflect....I wish I had done this more as well. Thankfully, dear friends of mine were the catalysts for me to get my children and myself dressed as they would wait for us on the church steps before going in for the service....it takes a village!