When Your Partner is Depressed: 5 Truths
By James Hughes
You Have to Put The Oxygen Mask on Yourself, First.
Loving your partner with depression cannot mean that you stop loving and respecting yourself. If you give yourself away by decreasing time with friends, taking less time for yourself, denying your own needs on top of assuming more responsibility, you’re going to run out of air. It’s hard to be loving and nurturing when you’re depleted.Treating Depression is Marathon, Not a Race.
When someone is depressed, they often seem so immobilized and frozen. It makes partners want to jump all in and give 110%. It’s hard to ignore that impulse to rescue. It can feel impossible to bear witness to a loved one’s pain, sadness, and suffering. It makes sense that you want to leap in to save your partner from this melancholy. In that moment, witnessing that pain, you’re willing to do anything to bring relief.
Real, clinical depression is rarely just a brief episode. Rather, it can last for a month or more. Approaching caregiving like a race by giving everything all at once will quickly leave you with little left to give.
Boundaries are Loving Limits
When learning about depression, spouses will undoubtedly read a lot about “being supportive” and “present” for their spouses. It’s important to be clear about what support is and what it isn’t. Caregivers will often walk away with the message that they have to take whatever treatment they are being given by their depressed spouses. After all, they “can’t help it” or “don’t really mean it”.
People treat us by what we are willing to tolerate. If your spouse can unleash their negative energy on you and you don’t say anything, you are giving yourself permission to be treated that way and you are teaching your partner that he/she can manage their depression by making you the scapegoat.When someone is depressed, they may be unreliable at times. They may not always be able to stick to commitments. That doesn’t mean that they don’t have a responsibility for communicating with you about these things so you can plan accordingly.♦◊♦Depression does not come with a get out of jail free card for bad behavior but many people, caregivers and sufferers alike, think that it does. Nothing erodes a relationship faster that a foundation that is cracked by disrespect.When supporting a partner who is depressed, it is reasonable to expect respect. You may not get long, sensitive diatribes but a sentence or two that acknowledges you as a person is reasonable. If you’re not getting that, it’s important to set boundaries about what you are and are not willing to tolerate.If you lose respect for yourself by allowing disrespectful and inconsiderate behavior, it will quickly become impossible for you to be present for your struggling partner in any way that is sensitive or authentic.
It Takes a Village
Depression is an isolating disease. It’s tough to talk about. Sufferers struggle with asking for help and caregivers strive to maintain privacy and often don’t tell family or friends what is going on. As a result, it can feel like you’re on an island.You Can’t Make it Better, Only Easier
One of the most dangerous assumptions that caregivers can make is that if they do everything, support in every way imaginable, and faithfully remain present and connected, their partner will be less depressed.
Love alone cannot cure depression.You can give all of the love in the world and your partner will still feel pain.It’s important to remember this so as to not have unrealistic expectations. If you tell yourself a story that doing all of this will ease the depression and it doesn’t work, that is a huge set-up for failure. You can ease the suffering that depression can cause but you alone cannot remove it.♦◊♦Depression isn’t easy but it doesn’t have to be a cancer to your relationship. Caregiving must include self-preservation. It’s not selfish to put the oxygen mask on yourself first. You’re not being controlling when you hold firm to what you will or will not tolerate. You are, in fact, giving yourself the necessary strength to be in it and present for the long haul, until your partner feels better and strong enough to love you back in the way that you deserve.Credit: The Good men Project
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