
“You don’t have to see the whole staircase, just take the first step.” – Martin Luther King, Jr.
May was mental health month. In the past ten years or so, I have recognized it as a month that includes me as a member. Yet, this is the first year I truly, truly felt it resonate so deeply. I wanted to write so badly. The irony, I just mentally was not in the space to do so. I have struggled since my reconstruction surgery six weeks ago. I have been tired, and my anxiety has been difficult to keep under control. It is hard to pinpoint the why, but that is the thing with anxiety; there often is no specific reason, or it is difficult to identify the root cause with the constant flutter of thoughts and fears.
Those constant thoughts, along with unwavering worry, were my first step into a diagnosis of anxiety. While I now realize those symptoms of anxiety have always been present in my life, it took a trip to the doctor with chest pains not long after having my third son to formally receive the diagnosis. I considered myself in the category of the coined term “high functioning” anxiety. I was doing life: working, raising a family, being a leader and being present for others, volunteering, always saying yes. Underneath that surface, however, my drive for perfectionism, my fears of failing, my lack of self confidence and my endless worrying were churning below the surface. My already poor sleeping turned much worse, and my body’s physical manifestation of all the anxiety was chest pains. This time in my life was a big step in recognizing that my body was telling me something, and I needed to take the advice I so often gave to others – it was okay to not be okay; it was okay to say the chemicals in my brain were not balanced, and I needed help, and it was okay to say yes to medication to help heal. Looking back at my then self, I have realized that while I felt so weak in that moment, it was by far one of my strongest.
As is the case for most of us, life continued, and the busy continued. And while I had learned baby steps in understanding my anxiety, I pushed taking care of myself fully to the side. It is not in my nature to put myself first. Deeply rooted in my being is also a very intuitive empathy for others, a constant pull for me – truly a blessing and at times a curse. The putting off my health, stretching myself way too thin, along with a pandemic, and then cancer forced my full cup to spill over this past year. While I am not ready to completely share my lows, as I am still working through that piece, I can honestly say that my eyes have been opened to understanding the very real hold anxiety can take on one’s being. The silver lining is those gripping times of panic led me to finally make the check up appointments I had put off, accept the incredible offerings of the cancer center like therapy, to take help when it was offered as hard as that is, and talk. Talk, not in the surface level way most of us are groomed to portray. But talk, in an honest and real way. This is so important in therapy, but it is also so true for me in my daily life interactions. I believe that our truths are what actually connect us all in authentic ways. And while it is so hard to admit and share my lows, I feel a very strong pull that part of my gift out of all of this is to do my part to help break the stigma around mental health.
There are so many layers to my anxiety, it is often overwhelming to think of how to compartmentalize it all to share through my writing. Writing is one of my passions, my degree from college actually, but it is where my perfectionism gets in my way as well. In addition, I struggle immensely with removing that perception that I have it all together, that somehow people will think less of me. I also know I am so incredibly blessed in my life, on so many levels, which holds me back sometimes from speaking out. But my truth is that while I know I am so strong and fortunate in so many ways, I also have anxiety, and anxiety does not care about all those facts. Today I finally decided to share a small glimpse into my mind in the hopes that maybe it touches one person. I could not do it in May, but I also realized that for those of us that share in mental health struggles, it is not just one month. It is every day.
I am learning to build on my strong foundation, to work to be the best version of myself, to find and accept what makes me happy, to always remember the power of therapy. I hope that in my vulnerability, others can perhaps give themselves permission to do so also. For those of you who walk this path as well, I see you, I feel you, and I am always here.
Kerry
