Since my grandmother died on January 1 of this year, not much has changed in terms of how I've been feeling. I think I started to experience burnout before she died. Many of the activities I once enjoyed no longer piqued my attention. Being consistent lately has been quite difficult. There are times when I'd want to do nothing except stay in bed all day. I was fortunate to land a fantastic job in February, but these days it seems hard to go.
There is much more but I just wanted to know if anyone was experiencing something similar.
(a little note I was my grandmother's personal caregiver for 3 years. I started at the age of 20. I'm now 24)
It is great that you have found a good job! Do what you can to keep it. Have you gotten any grief counseling, that might help. Hospice organization offer free group therapy and most it doesn't matter whether you used their hospice services or not.
We all need help sometimes when life gets hard. I myself did in 2000 and I waited too long to call my doctor, causing myself too much pain and anguish unnecessarily. Once I was prescribed an antidepressant, it was as if a switch was flipped inside me and the dark cloud started to lift rather quickly, thank God. I was able to wean off of the meds eventually too, so that was good, and everything worked out well. Medications serve a useful purpose for us when they're used as prescribed.
Wishing you the best of luck.
You are young and presumably healthy. But you've been feeling badly for a long time now. Please make an appointment to see your doctor and get a thorough checkup with blood work. Make sure that there isn't something physically amiss.
Ask for a referral to a psychiatrist for an equally thorough evaluation of your mental health. Be open to the idea that anti-depressants may do the trick in lifting your depression and getting you started down the road to recovering your joy in life.
You say in another post that you work because you need to help your parents. Don't get trapped into living ONLY to be of service to other. You also need to identify your own life goals and needs.
I've been feeling stuck. I will take your advice though to schedule an appointment. I haven't been consistent in checking in on my health.
Thank you again
Complicated grief is when emotions are so long lasting and severe that you have trouble recovering from the loss and resuming your own life. This could be 3 to 5 years after your loss. If that happens, and even before if you choose, grief counseling by a professional can help.
I'm sorry for your loss.
Once you have a checkup with you doctor and have grief therapy, this is a good time to reunight with some. You are very young with an entire life ahead of you, but take your time.
You are young to be caring for a grandparent. Was there no one your mother or father's age who could do this? At your age your job is to launch yourself into your own life apart from your parents, yet you still feel tied to help at home. Is your mother unwell? Does she essentially need to be cared for? All this is too much for you.
Please fill us in a bit more about why you feel stuck and about your your mother/parents.
Getting a physical exam to check up on your health is good, and counselling can help you with your grief and also to identify your needs that are not being met. (((((((hugs))))))
There are several things that it sounds like you are most likely experiencing:
1. " Caregiver exhaustion"
2. Grief
3. " Spiritual distress" ( reduced or loss of meaning, purpose, hope and direction)
4. ??? some level of depression
I urge you to begin with obtaining professional grief support either 1:1 or a grief support group facilitated by an appropriately trained professional.
Also be sure that you are seeing your personal PCP ( primary care physician) for assessment of potential physical or other emotional needs that may be impacting your life.
If you practice a faith, reach out to the professional faith leaders of your choice for spiritual support.
If you do not practice a faith, consider reaching out to a community based or hospital based chaplain for support and referrals.
You need 1:1 and potentially group support NOW, to begin healing and recovery.
Also be sure to get some form of physical exercise each day, stay hydrated with water, go outdoors in nature , and begin journaling your feelings,thoughts if you have not already done so.
Call 911 immediately if you find yourself in crisis.
Also remember that this " holiday" time of the year exacerbated and intensely affects and increases grief and other emotional needs.
You can find a therapist through your insurance, call them via the number on the back of your card and they probably have a website that lists providers. I also found my therapist on Psychology Today and all of the sessions are done remotely.
I would also look up books by David Kessler and Elisabeth Kubler Ross - they have a wonderful body of work on death and dying and grief.
Not sure the details of supporting your Mom, but I think this is something you could talk to your therapist about. I’m concerned that you’ve been such a support to others in your young life that your hopes and dreams have been placed on the back burner. Through my caregiving, I have been learning how little people will value your service and how little they will care about your life when they’re getting their needs met through you. It’s a hard, lonely and disappointing lesson.
Life has its ups and downs. But the 20s should be all about you!
I am sending heaps of love and support! All you need to do is pick up the phone and schedule that PCP appointment and the ball will be rolling.
xoxo
Anyway thank you for reaching out. it shows you care about yourself and that’s good that you’re not so numb as not to care. Your acknowledgment that something isn’t right is healthy. It’s love you have for yourself, like you would have for a friend if you saw them in this way. Good for you. Now step out some more. Keep reaching out and little by little it will get better. please. Big hugs.
Yes, the way you feel sounds more like depression. That's normal, but needs to be addressed. My psych doc found out mom had passed and he had me come in a little early for my 6 month checkup. He spent over an hour with me and I felt better after talking with him than I thought I would.
Grief will linger and it's always hardest around the holidays. I look forward to a new year of 'new hope' and taking care of myself.
You are young yet--please get some help. A year is too long to experience raw grief. There's phases of grieving and it's important that we go through each one, and not get stuck in any one of them.
((Hugs to you))
(copy and paste)
https://grief.com/the-five-stages-of-grief/
* Get into a grief group if possible.
* Get support wherever you feel / find it (church, Meet Up group(s) a professional therapist.
* Realize grief takes time.
* If you need to be in bed all day and you can do that, do it ... try to get little breaks in-between - perhaps giving yourself 5-20 minutes - an hour - to clean up, wash dishes - any distraction that will serve some purpose or get yourself outside for a little while - looking at nature - trees, flowers, birds. Anything to re-focus.
* Allow yourself to feel. This is a time to allow feelings to flow through you. Do not push them away - as they get stuck and these stuck feelings stay there - often year after year - until you allow them to naturally process through you.
* This is a rough time for you. It is for any one of us although you being so young, it seems like it would be more challenging ... although I don't want to sound like I'm patronizing you. I am not. Often life experience teaches us how to handle situations that pop up again. So many of us have more life experience here (we are OLDer).
We care. I appreciate you reaching out to us here. Here's a hug.
Gena / Touch Matters
I did manage to keep up with appointments, but I got tired of the runaround from these staffing agencies. Some days I don't even bother about getting out of bed. It's all burnout, grief and depression, not only from losing people I love but also from this ongoing pandemic.
So I have decided I need to see my old therapist. IDK if she can take me back, but I need her cool, calm advice.
Things were 'ok' between mom and myself when she died. I was secondary CG and didn't do a lot, but definitely much, much more than any of the other sibs.
I think that for me, accepting that I am now and 'orphan' and watching my family fracture into pieces--which I knew it would--I am grieving the loss of the one last person who kind of kept us all 'together'.
It is what it is. I have to accept, change and move on. Tears will flow at the strangest times and that's weird b/c I really am not a crier. Somedays I just feel crummy. The weather here has been phenomenally snowy, but that's GOOD, since we're almost always in a drought. But the ice and snow keep me stuck in the house.
I am doing better, so slowly. I am taking on some projects and I know that giving service will help me heal.
I wish you the best. This is hard and there's no actual timeline to follow.
((HUGS))