Kindergarten was rough, but first grade was much better.
Fifth and sixth grades were challenging, but certainly a reprieve from what I experienced in second, third, and fourth.
This has continued up through my adult life, which has meant that I have had many periods -- whether days, weeks, months, or years -- when panic attacks, OCD, and depression have loomed large. But, eventually the tide always goes out, my symptoms lessen (they never fully leave), and I feel more able to manage my disease.
While I can easily recognize where I am in the continual waxing and waning pattern, I know this concept can be foreign to others and can make those around me have difficulty understanding why and how.
Why was she able to work full-time, handle multiple responsibilities, and be so fun-loving just a couple years ago?
How did things change to where now even being home or going to the store by herself is daunting?
Why was she so functional before and now is just trying to survive?
How long will this last?
And especially: How can she be struggling so much when it so clearly seems she has her life together, or at least did not too long ago?
I wrote this poem during a current panic disorder “waxing” period that has lasted for nearly two years now -- the longest and most difficult stretch for several years. I wrote this because I know it must be confusing and frustrating for my family, friends, coworkers, and others to experience such drastically different versions of me, without any obvious reason for the change.
I wrote this because, regardless of what they understood of me before, this is what I need them to understand right now.
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