Ryan

Ryan’s depression began when he was 8 and entered the foster care system. He was diagnosed with manic depressive disorder and severe anxiety. Therapy, medication, supportive relationships, and expressing himself through writing and music have all been helpful.

When Ryan entered foster care at age eight, there was a terrible turning point in his mental health: he dates his depression as well as anxiety and mania back to that time. When he was young, he would write down his feelings in a journal and this helped. He was finally diagnosed with manic depressive disorder and anxiety when he was twelve or thirteen. At that age he also began therapy for the first time — an experience that was really hard and also relieving at the same time. One thing he learned immediately is that his struggles are not as common place as he had thought, and that it is possible to not always feel depressed and anxious.

Ryan moved out of foster care and was adopted into a new home, which was a great place to live for a number of years. However, when he was about 18 he hit a new low, with drug use, hopelessness, depression, and self-destructive patterns. Eventually his parents asked him to leave, so he has been staying with his girlfriend and her family. He works as a janitor, and regards his job as a productive distraction from thinking about how he is feeling.

Ryan’s girlfriend is really supportive, someone he learned over time to trust and who he can now tell whatever. He finds medication helpful for his anxiety, but does not feel it addresses the root turmoil of his depression. He also thinks his depression is caused by real feelings and circumstances rather than by a chemical imbalance, so he no longer takes depression medication. Instead he lets his feelings naturally occur and ventilates naturally with his therapist because for him talking to somebody is a healthier way of dealing with depression. Ryan’s guitar playing, rap, and poetry are also all helpful, as long as his investment in these creative pursuits does not cross the border into obsessive.

In the future, Ryan and his girlfriend plan to get a place of their own. He wants other young adults with depression to realize it takes time to get better, but you are the first step, you’re the only person who can actually seek treatment, seek medication, anything that’s gonna help you as an individual… each case is individual, so you have to find out what works for you. It’s also critical to realize that depression is not your fault because it just really opens doors when you realize that.

Ryan says he has experienced cycles of depression his entire life.

Age at interview 19

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 13

It’s critical, Ryan notes, to find a way to stop blaming yourself for depression.

Age at interview 19

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 13

Ryan says it’s essential to have someone who can understand and support without judging.

Age at interview 19

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 13

Ryan describes how his use of other drugs led him to not be prescribed a medication that would have been useful for panic attacks.

Age at interview 19

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 13

Ryan was placed in foster care when he was eight years old, and continued to struggle with family issues even after being adopted.

Age at interview 19

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 13

For Ryan, talking with a professional for the first time was a relief, but also hard because it brought up things he had never told anyone before.

Age at interview 19

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 13

Ryan says it’s essential to have someone who can support without judging.

Age at interview 19

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 13

Ryan’s perfectionism makes it hard for him to counter depression with any sense of satisfaction about his accomplishments.

Age at interview 19

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 13