Ghost World

I remember being at a party in Grade Eight and sneaking outside to be alone. I sat on the swing-set in the dark and composed a story of a girl who felt so invisible that she died. The girl, as a ghost, found that she couldn’t go to Heaven until she learned to make friends, friends she could trust enough to reveal her ghost self. Then both as a punishment and a reward she would have to say good-bye to those friends and go to Heaven.

What did that story mean? It was both a metaphor for my feelings and a wish to be accepted. I knew that having real friends who I could be honest with would be heavenly, yet I still feared that friendships like that might come at a cost.

And now, thirteen years later, I still feel like a ghost. I feel separated from the world by my depression, but I also keep the world at arm’s length largely by choice. I work from home because it feels too much for me to go into a workplace for set hours every day. I don’t date because that too is far, far outside of my comfort zone. Am I being realistic about what I can handle considering my mental health, or am I keeping myself at the sidelines of life? I guess it’s a bit of both.

Real relationships would help me feel fully human and less like a ghost, but the only relationship I’ve been able to dedicate myself to is that with my therapist. That sounds extremely depressing but at least I have that relationship with her. If I can trust one person than maybe I can trust two and then three and then four, if I’m lucky.

When I say trust, I mean trust with the full reality of my life and my history. Almost all of my friends know that I have Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, but very few people know what my biggest traumas actually are. I’m scared to burden them with my dark history. I wish I didn’t have the history that I do, so why inflict those images on other people?

Yet, I know that if one of my friends came to me when they were upset, I would want them to feel like they could tell me everything. I know I could handle it because I love them and together we’d make it through. So shouldn’t I be able to reverse that and trust that my friends would do the same for me? It’s so hard to trust that it would work; it feels so much safer to be alone. Old habits die hard.

I did manage to take a baby step in that direction a week ago, however. I’d been bawling my eyes out, partly because I didn’t feel brave enough to call even a crisis line for help. I wasn’t in danger of hurting myself but I did need support. I started catastrophizing, thinking that this fall is going to be a very hard time for me, and how on Earth am I gonna get through it without reaching out for help?

Just as I hit the height of my hysteria, I heard a knock on the door. Since the downstairs buzzer wasn’t pressed I knew it was one of my neighbours from my building, all of whom I really like and consider to be my friends. If I was looking for a sign that I have people around me who care, that knock was it. So instead of hiding like I normally would I wiped my eyes and timidly opened the door.

It was more than obvious that I’d been crying and I could see that fact register on my friend’s face as she spoke. “Are you okay?” I assured her that I was fine, repeating it over and over. I smiled and changed the subject and found that pretending to be okay actually helped me feel a little better.

My friend knew I wasn’t miraculously okay just because I was pretending to be but she took care of me in her own way. After inviting me into her apartment she lent me some movies and gave me some baking.

Later when I returned to my apartment I felt like that experiment had gone all right. I wasn’t able to be honest with my friend about my feelings, but I didn’t shy away from her care. I did feel a lot better after just being with her for that short amount of time.

Maybe opening up to someone can be a gradual thing, like getting in a swimming pool in the shallow end and then making your way into the deep end when you’re ready. You don’t have to jump right in.

So I’m working on feeling a little less like a ghost. Maybe you can work alongside me. Worst case scenario, we’ll have our Halloween costumes figured out. A whole bunch of ghosts hanging out together might feel a little less scary than being on our own. What do you think?

5 Comments (+add yours?)

  1. Kinnery
    Sep 24, 2012 @ 18:54:41

    This post really hit home for me! I’ve found that the ghost theme has been consistently popping up in my writing for years.
    I’ve had a pretty awful month, but I haven’t told many of my friends what happened or how I feel or anything like that. I’m scared of burdening them. But you’re right, I know if a friend (like you!) came to me and told me their problems, I wouldn’t feel burdened at all. I would feel loved and trusted and I would be happy to be there for my friend. (Yes this is a hint that you can feel free to talk to me any time, and be 100% honest! But you also don’t have to if you’re not comfortable with that. Our friendship can be anything you want and need it to be.) When you asked me how I was today when we were out for coffee, I briefly thought of saying, “Actually, I’ve had a rough month and I want to talk to you because I need a friend who knows what I’m going through and won’t judge me.” But instead, I smiled and said I was fine and I asked how you were and you said you were fine and that was it. I had a really fun time with you, of course, but I wonder what would have happened if I had been honest. Maybe I’ll do an “experiment” of my own next time we hang out, and be honest with you.

    Sorry for the personal novel I just wrote for a comment, haha. Feel good that your blog posts inspire this much thought and openness!

    Reply

  2. Anonymous
    Sep 24, 2012 @ 19:12:10

    Hi Erin, I just wanted to tell you how much I enjoy the courage with which you write. I subscribed to your blog quite some time ago, and just like when we were 13, I really enjoy reading your posts. I hope you can keep moving toward the deep end and find those people that you can trust and share with. :)

    Reply

  3. S.
    Sep 25, 2012 @ 06:45:31

    This is all stuff I’ve been thinking about lately, too. Unfortunately I feel like the attempts I have made to reach out have been ignored, or when I have been brave enough to confide in people, they just don’t want to know or get annoyed. I know that the people who do react that way aren’t truly friends in the first place and I’m probably better off without them anyway, and that my few real friends would be there through anything, but it’s hard when you are trying to be less of a ghost and centre yourself more in the real world and your efforts are wasted. I guess we just have to keep trying though.

    I also feel like a ghost because I feel like I’m always on the edge of something or caught in-between. Being very depressed for a long time has made me feel not quite real, like I’m between places. When you’ve been to such dark places it’s hard to ever really come back, and I wonder if I ever can, or if what’s been experienced can ever be left behind completely? I feel separated from everyone else, from ‘normal’ people living ‘normal’ lives, like they’re out of reach and different and I can’t integrate myself back into that way of living, as much as I try. I guess we do have to keep trying, because it’s all we can do.

    Reply

    • daisiesandbruises
      Sep 26, 2012 @ 23:04:34

      “When you’ve been to such dark places it’s hard to ever really come back, and I wonder if I ever can, or if what’s been experienced can ever be left behind completely? I feel separated from everyone else, from ‘normal’ people living ‘normal’ lives, like they’re out of reach and different and I can’t integrate myself back into that way of living, as much as I try.”

      I can really relate to that paragraph. I’ve found that over time, I’ve found more people who sort of feel on the periphery of life too, so in that way I feel less alone. If there’s all these people who feel like a ghost then that helps. But then again, I wish to feel real, too. Like really real (lol), to the point where I wouldn’t have to be questioning it all the time and second guessing what I think is true.

      You’re right about how trying is all we can do. I think we can cut ourselves some slack, too, and allow ourselves to feel shitty about where we are sometimes and how bad it can feel.

      *hugs* thanks for your comment. <3

      Reply

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