Kate

Kate, age 21, grew up with a father who had untreated depression, and an unloving stepmother. When young, she realized she was gay and engaged briefly in self-harming. After some brief counseling Kate has used journaling to heal her depression.

Depression was always part of Kate’s life, as her dad, her only consistent parent, had untreated depression. When her stepmother and stepsisters entered the picture, things got worse and she started to experience a lot of self-loathing. I was never the favorite (except with my dad, of course, always dad’s favorite. Kate tried to run away from home not because I was trying to escape my abusive parents or anything, but because I didnt think I was good enough of a daughter for the. By 8th grade, her self-loathing led to self harmin. Kate says she stopped when she saw that my dad blamed himself for it. I thought I was the only one that I was hurting. But it was hurting hi. Kate has used writing to get it out in a more constructive manne and gain control of my feeling.

At school Kate was quite an outsider. I dressed funny and talked too loud and had weird ideas. Close friends were few and far betwee. Kate was further isolated from her parents when they found out that she was bi-sexua. Kate has had a few therapists. She stopped her seeing the first in middle school after a couple of sessions when he learned that her stepmother went through all the email she had exchanged with the therapist. Kate then managed her depression by figuring out the words to use for what was wrong with me and how to understand it and then control i.

After graduating from high school she moved out of her toxi environment to a different state. Kate had several therapy sessions to figure out what parts to unlearn or [to see] if that toxicity was still ther. But when the therapist said she was pretty normal, Kate thought, Maybe I havent been telling you everything or maybe you havent been listening. But that’s not the goal here. I don’t want to be told that normal, I want to figure out more of me, I want to figure out, you know, why I do stuf. Kate then studied psychology and was able to label her experience as depression, as a kind of a self-diagnosi. She has applied what she was studying and incorporated the things that I saw therapists doin into her self-management. But she says, I still don’t have a lot of words for things that I know affect me. Theyre simply the feelings that I have and the way I react to them In addition to her writing, Kate also draws and engages her emotions deeply in her acting career.

Kate recently relocated to a different city to become an artist. She is trying to work as an entire human being, an adult person responsible for hersel. She has been consistent with her journaling, writing about her feelings and then reflecting on them later to process them in a more objective wa. She says journaling is a way for me to communicate with myself in the past or the future through reflecting on what I would think of myself if I were 12, and what I would ask, what I would say to myself if I were 20 years older. Kate says depression is no longer something she is trying to get rid of. I simply view it as an aspect of myself that I need to be aware of and work wit. Compared to her younger self, she is a bit more whole when she approaches people, The mask that I have is a bit closer to who I actually a. But she still keeps a lot of her perceived weaknesses very close to my ches.

Kate accepts that depression will sometimes make it harder to live her life.

Age at interview 21

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 12

Kate is learning to be more open about who she is, but she is still not ready to reveal anything about her depression or anxiety at work.

Age at interview 21

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 12

Kate says depression has made her understanding towards others because she knows what it’s like to be fragile.

Age at interview 21

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 12

Kate discusses how therapy wasn’t helpful because they approached her problems as something to be solved.

Age at interview 21

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 12

Kate says that depression drives her creative energy, enriches her understanding and capacity to help others, which completes, as she describes, a self-feeding cycle that helps her feel more valuable.

Age at interview 21

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 12

For Kate, meeting daily obligations is a valuable measure of functionality. It is not easy to do, but the rewards are significant.

Age at interview 21

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 12

Kate describes the difficulty of separating her feelings of depression and anxiety.

Age at interview 21

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 12

Kate says she still keeps a lot in, but feels better being more honest with others.

Age at interview 21

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 12

Kate befriends people with depression, but finds these relationships somewhat fragile.

Age at interview 21

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 12