Gransnet forums

Chat

Christmas blues.....? Am I the only one?

(67 Posts)
jinglbellrocks Sun 15-Dec-13 10:36:59

"the good old fluox..." should have said.

jinglbellrocks Sun 15-Dec-13 10:35:44

Christmas definitely brings its own kind of anxiety.

For the last few weeks I have been waking up with "butterflies", not only in my stomach, but right down to my toes! I have realised, however, that as soon as I get out of bed and get on with stuff, like wrapping and Xmas cooking, the anxiety immediately goes, and my usual love for the run up to Xmas returns. I think that's the good thing about this time of the year. It keeps you busy and occupied.

I too have some worries about one of my children, and I know that black pit is always there, ready to suck me in. Thank God for the old fluoxetine.

Hope you feel better soon. x

Anniebach Sun 15-Dec-13 10:21:16

Rowantree, please be kind to yourself, I struggle with similar feelings, my younger daughter has been longing for a baby for twenty years , come the new year she is going to try IVF for the fourteenth time , aged forty three she now accepts this will be their last attempt , well this is what she says now.

We are a large extended family so I have had to tell her many times of the birth of a child to one of her cousins , three this year and I have just had the good news of another birth in the spring. Every time she is thrilled with the news but I do detect that tremor in her voice and I ache for her. I have lost count of how many Godchildren she has. And now her eldest cousin who has four daughters is to be a grandfather

It is natural to want joy for our children

Tegan Sat 14-Dec-13 20:03:21

Not at all; if you were REALLY nasty you wouldn't worry about the fact that you think you are; proper nasty people a] don't even realise they're nasty and b] wouldn't worry about it if they did!!

Rowantree Sat 14-Dec-13 19:57:12

Yes, true - I do worry about that clock and I had a fairly early menopause so I'm concerned it might make things harder for her if she inherits that tendency. Not thoughts I would communicate to her though: she doesn't need to know her mum is worrying about her relationship status! Good to know my feelings about my friend's daughter aren't too abnormal - I feel really nasty and bitchy for secretly wishing her new relationship doesn't work out! Sometimes I think that when genes were dished out I got the lion's share of the Nasty Twister Old Cow ones.....:/

Tegan Sat 14-Dec-13 19:48:35

Rowantree; that's how Ifelt when my son was on his own for a while. And, please don't worry about how you felt about your friends daughter; I would have been exactly the same blush. Early thirties is still quite young when it comes to settling down and having a family; we tend to think of how things were when we were that age. I agree though that, being women we always have a clock ticking in our head with regards to having a family.

Rowantree Sat 14-Dec-13 19:23:41

I am still worrying about my daughter though....all her friends seem to be in relationships, married and/or have children. She's such a lovely person (I know all mothers say that about their children, but she truly is - gentle, caring, generous, understanding, thoughtful and supportive....) and I really want her to find someone who is as lovely to share her life with. Yet I can't make it happen for her - and I have to accept that it might not. I know she'd love a family (it was the main reason she and her partner broke up last Christmas - he was younger and didn't want children so they decided to call it a day)... it must be very hard for her to be the auntie/babysitter all the time and not be a mum herself. Secretly (and I feel ashamed to admit this) I felt a profound sense of relief that the daughter of a friend of mine was also single (and she's a bit older than my daughter) but my friend's daughter has stunning good looks and seems to have met someone in the last day or so - and here I am, wishing like hell that she hadn't, as if it affects my own daughter's relationship status! Ridiculous, I know.....but I know it will make my daughter feel even more alone when she knows. Life is never fair, and no-one ever said it would be....but now I feel worse about that and have to find ways of dealing with those uncomfortable feelings. I would add that I'd never communicate my anxiety about DD's single status to her, because that wouldn't help at all - it's just something I struggle with. I wish I was a nicer person and could feel happy for the happiness of others more, instead of wishing it away resentfully.

Stansgran Sat 14-Dec-13 19:20:42

I do think the homely things help. There is another thread about thissmilebut a crochet hook and a ball of thread and a pattern makes you concentrate on something outside yourself. Knitting is more complicated. So is patchwork but they all produce something creative and take you away from dark thoughts. It is a difficult talent to be happy with your own company. And we all can suffer from the sound of laughter in the next room.

rockgran Sat 14-Dec-13 19:01:09

I think Gransnet is great for helping you get things in proportion. A great way of unloading those toxic thoughts. Feel better. smile

Rowantree Sat 14-Dec-13 18:41:05

Oh wow - I really appreciate and value all the replies, thoughts and suggestions everyone's made here, so thank you all very much! I'd LOVE to stay with my single daughter, but she's busy with work she has to catch up on before she comes down to us, and our daughter with the baby we visited last Wednesday to help out (which was really lovely and I enjoyed and relished the time we had with her and the baby) but she and her partner want time together as a little family, before Christmas, as they will be visiting family much of the time (and I can totally understand that). I will definitely think about visiting my single daughter by myself sometime, though usually I do that together with my OH. I know she'd love to visit a spa though and she really deserves some TLC, so I'd love to treat her to that sometime (if there is one accessible by train!) Excellent idea.
Yes, my feelings are 'totally unreasonable yet very real', rockgran - but often, as you note, it's very hard to feel motivated when depression hits. I have often had to push VERY hard through that barrier and just DO something anyway and often the motivation returns when I do - but not always. I think I am very frightened of ending up in that horrible black hole that engulfs me and that I've been trying to struggle out of for a long while now, despite various therapies (been there, chewed up the T-shirt)

I am feeling a bit better after cleaning out a cupboard or two and baking some flapjacks and a cake and giving myself a talking-to. Actually, venting on here was a huge, huge help, and though I felt so bad for feeling the way I do in the first place, it is reassuring and comforting that I am understood and not judged. That means more than I can say. So bless you all! Long live Gransnet and the lovely people on it smile

rosesarered Sat 14-Dec-13 18:30:33

As Rockgran says toxic thoughts can be destroying. I don't have them by day but at night.......... they all arrive with their suitcases for a prolonged stay!I was told to imagine putting all these thoughts into a black plastic binbag and then dumping them in a wheelie bin and crashing down the lid. Curiously , sometimes it works, but not others.So my sympathies to you Rowantree [lovely name] everything does seem worse near Christmas , when all the ads show sparkly people having festive fun, when you are not.Knowing that you aren't in a bad position all round doesn't really help with depression sadly.I don't feel terribly sparkly I must admit, so know a bit what you mean.I don't have low self-esteem or depression though, so if you add those into the mix, I can see you are having a hard time.Christmas will soon be over, and a New Year emerging for you. Good luck and hope you feel better soon.sunshine

Natsnan Sat 14-Dec-13 18:26:00

Rowantree, definately you're not alone, I could have written that myself. Then I feel guilty when I realise how lucky I am compared to lots of people. Agree with Rockgran, I try to keep busy, busy as that definately helps. I have learnt over the years to tell myself "this will pass" and yes, it does but waiting for it to pass is awful. Hugs to you ((((()))))))

rockgran Sat 14-Dec-13 17:48:15

I know that feeling - totally unreasonable yet very real. "Toxic thoughts" I call them. I usually try to find something practical to do that engages my mind elsewhere- luckily I have plenty of hobbies - but sometimes it is hard to get motivated. You may find that having written it down make you feel better. I have no magic solution but you're not alone. flowers

glammanana Sat 14-Dec-13 17:39:50

Rowantree and ((hugs)) from me also and I so agree with the suggestion of taking yourself out somewhere on speck,they are usually the best outing when they have been arranged quickly and without any thought to them.
I now do tend to be totally the opposite as I relish my time at home after a busy working life and active social life,I find my socialising now is taken up with my business a couple of nights a week and that is enough for me now.
Can you go and stay with your single daugher and maybe have a week-end together my DD and I do this every so often & visit a local spa or similar for the day when they have offers on,hoping you feel brighter soon.flowers

Ariadne Sat 14-Dec-13 17:37:05

Have a look at some of the threads on here, Rowantree! You are not alone, I promise. It is hard when you're struggling with depression anyway, never mind when things go wrong, because the one person you blame is yourself. Try not to.

I send ((hugs)) too.

Soutra Sat 14-Dec-13 17:30:08

Oh Rowantree - first of all flowers flowers
Next - you have clearly got issues regarding anxiety and depression but there is absolutely no reason to add guilt into that package. Depression is a bit of an alleycat - it isn't fussy who it lands on so just because you have no material worries to speak of does not mean you are in any way at fault because you feel the way you do.
I can hear how fragile you are feeling and how the late cancellation of this weekend's plans has made you feel worse. Trust me everybody else is not out socialising and despite the media, Christmas is not a period of non-stop glittery dresses and Fererro Rocher choccies with the ambassador. (Well if it is, it ain't for me)
Being with other people can help lift you out of depressive thoughts and you are recognising this when you say you dread being alone with your thoughts.
Could you go to a film? (Not Philomena - that will have you sobbing all the way home) but something light perhaps? Maybe a meal out? You say your DD lives too far away for you to offer to babysit - or does she? Perhaps you could stay over, or offer to take the other DD out for a girly lunch?
I am great at giving other people suggestions but not so good at following them myself and I find weekends hardest when we do nothing and I feel everybody else is out having fun. But trust me - they are usually NOT. So feel free to tell me I have got it all wrong, but just wanted to send a {{hug}} and my very best wishes that this cloud will soon lift for you.

Rowantree Sat 14-Dec-13 16:54:13

Hey all,
I know I have much to be thankful for: a husband who loves me, a home, two lovely daughters leading independent lives, enough to eat and no real money worries. Which makes me feel even more guilty for feeling low and depressed at the moment. I do struggle with anxiety and depression as part of a mental health condition (being treated) and was beginning to feel a bit happier since my meds dose was raised. Then Christmas looms and with it, all my old anxieties of feeling left out, rejected, unwanted. I tend to compare myself and my life endlessly with that of others and feel everyone else has a handle on theirs and knows how to be happy (my head knows that's not true but my 'heart' doesn't!) And there are two weekends left before Christmas. I am looking forward to seeing our daughters over Christmas itself, but our plans for tomorrow have had to be cancelled which means I have a weekend with no social plans at all and no other opportunity for any. Likewise next weekend. I realise that to some people that sounds like bliss - time to yourself, time to chill....get organised....but in my case, my negative self-talk screams 'Loser! So -and- so is out partying/socialising, and you are just Staying In doing housework and watching TV!' For me, time in the house means time with my depressive thoughts - which quickly spiral downwards, so I try to plan ahead to ensure we do things with family or friends (not that we have a large number of those). It doesn't always work out, though, and I really find it hard to deal with my feelings of isolation (perceived) and low mood, especially at this time of year when others seem to be in a social whirl. I am also acutely aware of my lovely elder daughter whose relationship broke up just under a year ago and she is feeling very sad right now. Her younder sister is in a settled relationship and has her first baby whilst she is still single and in her early 30s and feeling time is running out. I worry a lot about her, but she doesn't live near us so we can't see her often.
I'd love to hear from anyone who is experiencing any similar feelings, either about Christmas socialising or worries about single children. Christmas seems to be a very painful time for many, and I'm well aware that lots of people have nobody to spend time with at all. There, but for the grace of...whoever, go all of us.