Posts tagged ‘depression’

February 27, 2013

the next big thing (too?)

by maria polonchek
um...this is the folder a friend put the manuscript in for me after I left it loose-leaf under her windshield wiper.

um…this is the folder a friend put the manuscript in for me after I left it loose-leaf under her windshield wiper.

Katie tagged me last week to answer some questions about the manuscript I’m currently not-trying-very-hard to get published. I mean, I tried for a while. I sent a query letter to a dozen big agents in NYC and heard back from one, replied promptly and enthusiastically, and then…nothing. Then, this good friend I have who wrote a manuscript when I did, got published in a big way with the help of the first agent she contacted, and because I relentlessly compare myself to other people I got jealous, got over it, and gave up anyway. The good news is that one agent read an essay published in Brain Child and has kept in touch about my progress.

So, while I don’t really feel like The Next Big Thing, but rather The Next Big Nothing, Katie will ride my ass until I answer these questions:

What is the title of the book?

Parts We Didn’t Know We Had: A Mother’s Search under the Surface

Where did the idea come from for the book?

About eight years ago, I experienced an unplanned pregnancy, had twins, and suffered terribly from depression. I’m not sure which part was most difficult, but the cultural taboos against speaking about any of the experiences candidly caused me to feel so much isolation and grief. I found solace in the few essays and books I read written by women who experienced similar hardships. I wanted to join the conversation. I found that writing about obscure body parts helped me explore themes that aren’t so tangible. Merging the concrete with the philosophical.

What genre does your book fall under?

Personal essays. I wrote fiction and poetry as an undergrad, but had no real motivation to create anything worthy of public consumption until I went through those most difficult times.  When I took a creative nonfiction class after I had the twins, I discovered a genre that felt perfect for the issues I wanted to explore.  Emily Dickinson wrote, “Tell all the Truth but tell it slant,” which is what any form of art does. But in the cases of tacking especially ambiguous themes, telling the truth in an artful way helps both the writer create and the reader absorb.

What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?

Hmmm…a movie based on personal essays. I just don’t see it happening. But…I guess the actor I love to dislike, Gwyneth Paltrow. She’s one classy broad, despite having the  soul of one who’s suffered. And she hangs with Jay-Z. I try not to implicate everyone else in my life too often in my writing, so the rest of the cast could be play by non-union extras.

What is the one sentence synopsis of your book?

This collection of personal stories—sometimes funny, sometimes poignant, but always honest—explores the complexities of having children.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?

Five years.

Who or what inspired you to write this book?

The placenta. The first essay I ever wrote was about this fascinating, mis-understood organ. It began as a research-driven essay, but morphed into a more personal cultural criticism about pregnancy and grief.

When I realized where I was going with my writing, after that first essay,  my children became the inspiration. As more parents produce personal writing out there, critics claim (among many things) that it will be difficult for their children to deal with in the future. But I view this project as a dedication to them: I hope to walk a fine line between telling my stories and leaving room for them to know their own. After coming out of the tunnel of post-partum depression, I believe the twins and I share a special relationship: in one essay I compare it to that of survivors.

What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?

Let’s see…unplanned pregnancy, having twins, and depression.  Either you’re into it, or you’re not.

Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

Represented by an agency, if I ever regain the drive to get it out there.

October 10, 2012

rain for your parade

by maria polonchek

credit: holidayinsights.com

Hmmm…we had a keg at the twins’ first birthday party and no other children were present, so I think that means we fall into the “Thank-God-We-Made-It” category. This can’t be uncommon for parents of twins. And for Sola, baby #3, I honestly can’t remember if we celebrated her first birthday or not. I could go through the 11,191 photos on our computer to jog my memory but, well…I’ve got to get some other things done today.

I’ve told you in the past that, because of the difficulty I had my first few years as a mom, sometimes when you describe your ride into parenting, I have a strange surge of emotions run through me. It’s some sort of combo of envy, anger, and sadness. Uplifting tribute to your celebration, no?

I used to keep this stuff to myself but I say it now because I’ve recently learned that even after women recover from PPD (Post-Partum Depression) as I have, they still experience PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder). (I take my role seriously as a walking embodiment of the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders).) And, after sharing some experiences with other MOTs (mothers of twins), I have also learned that, even if they didn’t experience PPD, the nature of the experience leaves them feeling a bit robbed, as well.

What I’m saying is that I couldn’t really identify with your last post and it makes me sad. So many people say things like “Enjoy every moment!” or “You’re going to miss this when it’s gone!” without realizing the enormous pressure those words put on someone who is already feeling crushed under enormous pressure. What I remember of those first two years being a parent isn’t so much a mix of sweet and sour; it’s mostly just sour. I remember crying a lot, being constantly, irrationally afraid that something was going to go wrong with one of the babies, being kept awake by anxiety, even after the boys were sleeping through the night,  feeling alienated and isolated, and on top of all of it, feeling incredible guilt that this was how I was experiencing motherhood.

I tell myself now, told myself even back then, that when I look back, I can know I did the best I could with what I had. And I had a much more “typical” (if there is such a thing) experience with my third, though I can’t say I felt too sad to see her first birthday come and go, because each year just gets better and better and I know we have lots to look forward to. Most of the time, that works. But sometimes, I hear someone say they are enjoying their newborn so much, or things are going just perfectly, and I grieve for the time I felt was stolen from me by depression.  That first year of becoming a parent is like being born again yourself, into a new way of life, and I’ll never get it back.

I don’t mean to detract from your experience, Katie. This post isn’t so much for you as it is for any parent who has walked in a fog of depression or greif, only to feel further shame or guilt from being told, “The moment is slipping away from you.” (And, really, I think this is probably most everyone, at one point or another…)

To end on a more positive note, however, I ultimately do think I know what you’re saying, though it hit me at a different time, in a different way. I don’t mean to toot my own horn (yes, I do) but one of my essays was published in the summer issue of Brain, Child and deals with this subject. The name of the essay is “The Summer of Why” and recollects the summer I was pregnant with Sola when the boys had just turned four. Those months have been the most bitter-sweet of my parenting years thus far and, for the magazine, I summed up the essay this way:

Of the many things the baby books did not prepare me for, the paradoxical condition of grieving the child you’re losing while simultaneously delighting in the person he is becoming, is one of them. Most days, the emotional ride could be so overwhelming that I willfully ignore it.

For those who want to read the whole thing, I’ll add a page here.

June 28, 2012

it takes the whole damn tri-county area

by maria polonchek

When the twins were born, on Easter Sunday seven years ago, we lived next door to my mom. She lived in a tiny house and we lived in a bigger tiny house. They were both one-bedrooms, but ours had an extra little room that was big enough to be a grow room. We know this because when we moved in, the landlord’s only stipulation (no lease, no deposit, no last month’s rent) was that, if we grow pot, don’t do it in the upstairs room because ”there’s a drainage problem up there.”

Anyway, no pot, but two babies. I would go over to my mom’s house in the middle of the night, after Chris and I had used up all we had of ourselves. (And that was even more than I would’ve ever estimated.) I’d be crying, delirious, and holding bottles of expressed milk. My mom would have already been over several times that day, but I begged her: “Please. Need. Sleep.”

She would grab her robe, slip on sandals, and come over to take a shift. She had recently quit her job, as a beloved teacher’s assistant at a juvenile detention center, in order to go back to grad school and write. She had the summer off that year, thank God, because I don’t know what we would have done otherwise. Chris’s parents lived 6 hours away and they drove up at least one weekend a month, but those middle-of-the-night breastmilk exchanges week after week may be a key reason I have enough mental capacity now to remember and write.

None of our friends had children yet, and though they showed up for us the best they knew how, there’s no way they could have known how desperate we were. We couldn’t afford help. I quit my job because it cost more to have two babies in childcare than I made in a day. Chris increased the hours he worked to pay for medical expenses (hospitals do not give “two for the price of one” discounts) and to save for a bigger place. Neighbors brought food. Family members sent money for diapers, cribs, strollers. A state agency donated car seats. We had love, support, resources. But it was so hard. We were scared and sad and confused because we weren’t supposed to be scared and sad and confused.

(Did I mention this pregnancy wasn’t planned?)

We have a different life now. I survived 18 months of debilitating depression, got help and began to recover. We learned that parenting is a slow, learned experience. We steadily squared away our finances and found a bigger house. I realized I wanted to focus on writing, went back to grad school myself, and after a few years of feeling like a failure as a mother, learned I’m not so bad, after all. Chris and I realized we had partners in one another that were worth fighting for. We had two little boys who blew our minds.

Our family of four healed together. We blossomed. We had another baby without the accompanying lifestyle transition. (I am here to say, going from 2 to 3 is NOTHING like going from 0 to 2.)

But then we moved across the country. Hello!

It’s been about a year since we gave up the luxury of having an established support system. Luckily, we live in a place where many of the families are in the same boat and become families to one another. But my mom just got here for the summer (she is back to teaching and has summers off) and the minute she walked through the door, a deep breath I realized I’d been holding for a year escaped my lungs. My shoulders relaxed by an inch. My stomach let go of knots I didn’t realize were there.

We always hear “it takes a village to raise a child,” but I’m not sure we really understand what that means. Young parents often feel isolated and lonely. This is why my generation writes so much about it: blogs, articles, books. We think the village must only consist of other people in the same stage as us: mothers of young children looking to each other for help and companionship. Young fathers doing the same. We make deals with one another: “I’ll pick up your Johnny from school if you can watch Suzy during my doctor’s appointment.”

But as much as I want to help my friends and siblings with young children and need the help reciprocated, I want to cry out at the constant negotiations. “WE ARE ALL SO TIRED! WE ALL NEED MORE!”

But the rest of the village doesn’t seem to want to hear it. (As an update in response to a comment below: sometimes it’s our own fault they don’t want to hear it…vicious cycles.)

I began a book by John Bowlby on attachment theory. (Not to be confused with William Sears, “attachment parenting,” and having a 3-year-old hanging off of his hot mom’s boob while they stare down the camera.)

In 1980 he said,

I want also to emphasize that, despite voices to the contrary, looking after babies and young children is no job for a single person. If the job is to be well done and the child’s principal caregiver is not to be too exhausted, the caregiver herself (or himself) needs a great deal of assistance…In most societies throughout the world these facts have been, and still are, taken for granted and the society organized accordingly. Paradoxically it has taken the world’s richest societies to ignore these basic facts. Man and woman power devoted to the production of material goods counts a plus in all our economic indices. Man and woman power devoted to the production of happy, healthy, and self-reliant children in their own homes does not count at all. We have created a topsy-turvy world.

I want to thank my village. You are helping our humble little family thrive and fully realize our existence. I am a better mother, as an individual and part of a unit, able to devote myself to the production of happy, healthy, and self-reliant children because of you. I promise to return the favor when I can.

To those of you still looking for your village: find it. Create one for yourselves, if you have to. There’s a chance they won’t come knocking down your door, but my hope for you is that they are out there. You need a great deal of assistance.

With love and compassion,

Maria

May 26, 2012

the women we leave behind

by maria polonchek

(image: internetblog.org)

There’s been a lot of Internet chatter in my virtual neck of the woods lately. Much of it regards people who have vaginas. Women attacking women over lifestyle choices in the name of feminism. Women’s reproductive health limited by the votes of men. Women opening up about (and some probably hiding from) the very real fact of post-partum depression.

I’ve been thinking about what I want to add, if anything, to these discussions. And then last night a headline caught my eye that zipped shut the chatter and debates in my mind and left me full of grief, frustration, and an overwhelming sense of compassion. Forgive me for being slow to learn about this case (I get most of my news from clips of Weekend Update with Seth Meyers—online, no less, so even my Saturday Night Live News isn’t even live…) but I finally read about Bei Bei Shuai.

Bei Bei Shuai is a Chinese immigrant who attempted suicide in Indiana when she was 33 weeks pregnant after her boyfriend confessed that he was married to, and had a family with, another woman. He left Ms. Shuai crying and begging on her knees in a parking lot, throwing money at her as he walked away. She wrote a suicide note and took rat poison, attempting to kill herself and end her pregnancy.

Friends intervened (I’m guessing she wished they hadn’t) and took her to a hospital where she was saved and her daughter, who she named Angel, was delivered via C-section. Angel died a few days later, in Ms. Shuai’s arms. After Ms. Shuai received psychiatric treatment for a month, the state charged her with murder and attempted feticide.

Obviously, this is sticky. Your opinions and beliefs about the ethics in this devastating story hold implications for women’s reproductive rights. But I don’t want to get into all that. There are other people out there doing a better job than me at getting attention for their causes and holding up Bei Bei Shuai as a prop, no matter what side of the debate they fall on.

What I want to do is offer a voice of compassion and understanding and encourage our readers to do the same. I haven’t even discussed much about my own (excruciating) experience transitioning into motherhood seven years ago. (Hoping there will be a book coming out about it!) But I have a feeling that there must be a few people who know me who wonder about my openness and honesty on this blog and in the essays I seek to publish. Some may wonder if I’m trying to get attention. Some may be embarrassed for me, or themselves, depending on how close they are to me. But I write what I do for times like this: when a stranger out there acts in a way that has people outraged and buzzing and referring to her as a “fucking selfish asshole” and a “stupid thoughtless bitch,” two things I read in a comment section before I realized I should not be reading any comment sections.

I share my experiences because if a white, privileged, educated woman who has incredible familial and social support can get as depressed as I did during and following my first pregnancy, then I can’t even imagine the struggle and despair someone experiences when she doesn’t have the resources I have. It’s devastating. It’s inhumane, the lack of support and resources we offer the women who stop being women and become incubators for the babies we celebrate, photograph, honor. We love the babies. We buy them strollers that cost as much as it would to feed families living in poverty; we dedicate rooms to them that could harbor a dozen refugees; we run out and purchase vehicles that are safer and bigger than the safe, big ones we already own.

But where are the women? Who are the women? Who was Bei Bei Shuai before she became pregnant and a burden that her boyfriend couldn’t handle? Who was she when she reached such an unfathomable low, one that most people never see, that she wanted to end her life and her pregnancy? Who was she when she held a dying infant in her arms, the result of an action that most probably was beyond her rational control?

I don’t know who Bei Bei Shuai was. Or is. Neither does the state of Indiana. We only care now, not really who she is, but what she’s done.

I’m sorry, Bei Bei Shuai. I’m so sorry to be part of a culture that is obsessed with pregnancy and birth and acquisition of babies to the detriment of the women who are pregnant, birthing, and caring for those babies. We failed you and we fail countless other women every single day.

Where are the women? Who are the women? Once they become mothers, they’re mothers.

The women, we leave behind.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 663 other followers