I turned 25 about two weeks ago, but inside I feel like I’m three or four times as old. Â Once again, I have spiraled into the throes of major depression, and I want out. Â The last time this happened, it hit me so hard that I holed myself up in my dorm room for a month, skipped my classes and exams, and flunked out of college a semester away from graduating. Â In that sense I’m better off today; I managed to complete my undergraduate degree this past spring, so at least I have that going for me. Â But the underlying causes of my unhappiness are the same now as they were in the fall of 2009.
Inside me there is a void. Â Where purpose, ambition, passion, and meaning should reside, there is nothing. Â I first became aware of this emptiness in college, which led to my first bout of depression. Â Now I feel that void gnawing at me more and more acutely as each day passes. Â In the three years since I failed out of my first school, I have ultimately done nothing to sate its appetite.
God knows I’ve tried. Â I’ve studied so many different things: writing, foreign languages, chemistry, economics, international politics, journalism, teaching… but nothing touches me. Â Of course, when this happens, when I realize that whatever it is I’m attempting to get into is trivial to me, I cease to exert any effort. Â That is now the pattern of my life in general. Â I coast by, risking nothing and gaining equally. Â I can’t even remember the last time I did something that made me want to pursue it at a deeper level. Â The other day I tried to recall what dreams and ambitions I had as a child for my future. Â I drew a blank.
Since graduation I’ve moved back home and enrolled in a teacher certification program. Â My first semester there is also my last, because I now realize that I have zero interest in becoming a teacher and embarking on a career that sees me stuck in a classroom day in and day out. Â I’m unemployed. Â I’m reaching the end of my rope. Â I feel like I’ve hit a level of profound physical and spiritual exhaustion that comes from always running into dead ends.
It’s not all bad; I have a tight-knit family that is very supportive and willing to do anything to help me. Â I have many good friends who are very loyal to me, as I am to them. Â They tend to be creative and intellectual types, people with sparks. Â I think I draw these sorts to me because I can sense in them what I lack. Â Even my love life isn’t terrible, though I’m currently single. Â This is actually not a bad thing. Â There’s no way I have my shit together enough to be in a functional relationship.
There are days, at my lowest points, when I think that I’d trade everything good in my life to have purpose. Â I desperately want something to do or create that will fulfill me and make me feel whole, something that could make me risk complete and spectacular failure just so I could hold my head up and say, “At least I tried.” Â Maybe I’d even find happiness. Â But this passion continues to elude me. Â People tell me that I have so much potential, as if this is supposed to make me feel better. Â It doesn’t. Â In fact, it has the opposite effect of making me feel shittier, since I’m made even more aware of how much I’m wasting what abilities I have. Â I’ve learned the hard way that potential is only as good as your ability to capitalize on it.
Every day I toy with the idea of suicide. Â I don’t think I could go through with it. Â Dying scares me, and I know how my actions would affect those closest to me. Â I want to live, dammit! Â What I’m currently doing though couldn’t be called “living.” Â “Existing,” maybe, but not “living.” Â I know I can’t go through life like this, but I don’t know how to change and I’m too afraid to end it. Â So I keep on. Â I can’t even tell if my refusal to give up is a result of genuine optimism for the future or sheer stubbornness that’s part of my personality. Â I hope it’s the former.
1 comment
I feel the same way about suicide – well, most days.
I’ll try to think of ways to help you find that passion.