Getting back to exercise

February 21, 2010

Since I began my short term disability from my job nearly six weeks ago, I feel that the time I had carved out as my own (usually used for exercise like yoga or water aerobics) has been taken away.  I’m sure if I had insisted on continuing these activities no one would have argued with me, but I think I was just plain too depressed to even get myself there—much less be active on arrival.

So now I sit after a day spent mostly napping, and am thinking about how difficult it was to walk to the park with my son yesterday and again today.  My legs felt like they were moving through molasses and a half mile jaunt felt like ten by the time I got home and collapsed.  I know I need to get my endurance back up slowly; I just wish it weren’t so much easier to get back into bed and take a nap!

As far as the depression goes, I’ve come a long way on the new drug I’ve been given (Abilify) and have even lost 6 pounds doing nothing different (except exercising LESS!).  Even my new diet plans have been shrugged aside for the most part.  It’s like the depression came to a raging head, saying, “Look at me!  I’m a force strong enough to tear your life apart if you don’t take notice of me now!”  And so, it knocked me down for a good six weeks and I’m still crawling out of the black hole it dropped me into.  My brother-in-law said the bags under my eyes a few weeks ago were more like luggage racks!  My daughter took a picture of me yesterday without my knowing it, and I was sad to see that even though inwardly I’m feeling a little more normal, outwardly I still look like hell.

I’m going to have to create a schedule for myself in order to really get done the things I want to accomplish in a day or a week.  If I can write down and check items off a list I think I’ll feel more productive and quit kicking myself everyday for letting a day pass without doing some kind of exercise or meditation.  Okay, so for this coming week I’m going to start by going to yoga once and walk at least a mile three days of the week.  I feel better already!

Categories: Depression, Energy, Exercise, Fibromyalgia.

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Acceptance of Doing Nothing

February 14, 2010

The other day I was sharing with a friend of mine some new thing I’d heard about that I thought might bring me some peace of mind.  He said that he thought I should stop listening to all the ideas people presented to me and stop taking everyone up on trying them out.  He said, “Just stop, stop, stop.  STOP!”

Well, not taking his advice to stop listening to advice, I took him up on his advice!  It has been liberating to let people tell me what they think I should do and know that I will probably not do it, because I don’t have to if it’s not what I feel is right for me.  Somehow, I always feel I must be striving to be productive, to make myself a better person, to contribute to society in special ways and be a good example.

His other advice was this: when there’s nothing to do, just do nothing.  Sit and watch a sunset.  Just be with yourself and be happy with that alone.  I’m usually knitting if I’m just sitting alone with nothing else to do, because of my deep seated belief that I must always be productive.  Lately I’ve had a hard time being happy, so if there’s nothing to do I will usually find myself crawling into bed to take a nap.  I’m always tired, you see.

But the other day I turned on some of my favorite classical piano music and sat and drank a whole cup of tea without doing anything else.  It wasn’t a super long time or anything, but it felt good to just do nothing (although technically I guess you could say I was listening to music and drinking tea!).  Well, I’m getting closer to the idea.  It will take some time before I’m really able to just sit and be with myself, happily.

Categories: Depression, Fibromyalgia, Finding Balance.

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Cold Hands, Anyone?

February 11, 2010

We’ve had some really cold temperatures for our moderate climate in the Piedmont of North Carolina lately.  So much so that we even cleared half of our garage in order to get one of our cars parked inside.  That took some doing, too!  My husband took someone’s advice and closed off all the air vents on the ceilings upstairs because it was very warm up there and super cold downstairs.  It worked, but now it’s pretty chilly upstairs and I have been sleeping under a sheet, blanket, bedspread, and another blanket folded in half on top of me.  Plus I’ve been wearing sweat pants, socks, a long sleeved pullover sweater, AND a zip up sweater to bed!

Needless to say, I’m ready for some warmer temperatures.  I have found that in the spring and summer months I am generally a happier, more pain-free person. I’m downstairs now, fairly warm with the fireplace going and drinking some Persian tea, but my fingers are still cold! Makes typing a bit harder than usual and I keep making typos.

Are there any good remedies for cold hands, besides wearing gloves in the house?  Any ointments or lotions that produce the effects of heat that anyone knows of?  I suppose I could get some of those fingerless gloves that bike riders wear.

I hope wherever you are living that you don’t have tons of snow right now!  We were fortunate to miss the big storm that hit Washington, DC, Virginia, and parts of Maryland.  All we got was cold rain!  I’m not complaining!

Categories: Fibromyalgia.

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Cold Hands, Anyone?

February 11, 2010

We’ve had some really cold temperatures for our moderate climate in the Piedmont of North Carolina lately.  So much so that we even cleared half of our garage in order to get one of our cars parked inside.  That took some doing, too!  My husband too someone’s advice and closed off all the air vents on the ceilings upstairs because it was very warm up there and super cold downstairs.  It worked, but now it’s pretty chilly upstairs and I have been sleeping under a sheet, blanket, bedspread, and another blanket folded in half on top of me.  Plus I’ve been wearing sweat pants, socks, a long sleeved pullover sweater, AND a zip up sweater to bed!

Needless to say, I’m ready for some warmer temperatures.  I have found that in the spring and summer months I am generally a happier, more pain-free person. I’m downstairs now, fairly warm with the fireplace going and drinking some Persian tea, but my fingers are still cold! Makes typing a bit harder than usual and I keep making typos.

Are there any good remedies for cold hands, besides wearing gloves in the house?  Any ointments or lotions that produce the effects of heat that anyone knows of?  I suppose I could get some of those fingerless gloves that bike riders wear.

I hope wherever you are living that you don’t have tons of snow right now!  We were fortunate to miss the big storm that his Washington, DC, Virginia, and parts of Maryland.  All we got was cold rain!  I’m not complaining!

Categories: Fibromyalgia.

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Still Depressed

February 3, 2010

I had a dream last night that I couldn’t smile.  I had to smile for a picture and I just couldn’t get the sides of my mouth to go up.  That was kind of weird.

My depression is not lifting as I’d hoped it would.  My psychiatrist told me that it would be okay for me to take the whole 5 mg dose of Abilify instead of just half a tablet at night.  I’m hoping that will help.  My sister is also going to pick my son up from preschool at 1:00 on Wednesdays and Thursdays so I can stay home and relax a bit.  I drop him off at 9:00 and then 1:00 seems to come quickly.  Today is a Wednesday so I was able to stay home and clean up my house downstairs, go to the grocery to pick up some items I needed to make chili for supper, and take a nap.  It was really nice!

I’m seeing a marriage and family therapist with my husband.  We went last night for the first time and it went well.  She recommended I start reading five affirmations that I make up, five times a day for a total of 25 times.  She also loaned me a book by David D. Burns called Feeling Good. There was a quiz to take on page 20 and after I totaled my answers it said I have extreme depression.  Anything 40 and over equaled extreme, and I had a 47.

From the book, it says:

The simple, effective mood-control techniques of cognitive therapy provide:

1. Rapid Symptomatic Improvement:  In milder depressions, relief from your symptoms can often be observed in as short a time as twelve weeks.
2. Understanding:  A clear explanation of why you get moody and what you can do to change your moods.  You will learn what causes your powerful feelings; how to distinguish “normal” from “abnormal” emotions; and how to diagnose and assess the severity of your upsets.
3. Self-control:  You will learn how to apply safe and effective coping strategies that will make you feel better whenever you are upset.  I will guide you as you develop a practical, realistic, step-by-step self-help plan.  As you apply it, your moods can come under greater voluntary control.
4. Prevention and Personal Growth:  Genuine and long-lasting prophylaxis (prevention) of future mood swings can effectively be based on a reassessment of some basic values and attitudes which lie at the core of your tendency toward painful depressions.  I will show you how to challenge and reevaluate certain assumptions about the basis for human worth.

I will try to write more posts as I read more of this book and let you know if it’s helping!

Categories: Depression, Fibromyalgia.

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