Julia

Julia, age 25, first noticed depression symptoms at age 14 and was diagnosed in college. She has experienced neglect, toxic relationships and eating disorders. Medication and therapy, pets, and the support of her boyfriend and friends are helpful.

Julia’s story starts with a very lonely childhood, as a single child whose parents divorced when she was age 14, and a mother who was working or out on dates. My friends would complain that their parents make them have milk with dinner and I would be like, my mom’s never made me dinner. Her transition into adolescence was just kind of depressing. Freshman year, Julia was really anxious and struggling in a couple of my classes, but ‚ I never felt like she really cared how I was doing in my classes. For the rest of high school Julia was really rebellious‚ and very apathetic about school. Julia was hanging out with a bad crowd, drinking and smoking cigarettes and pot. I had this kind of fuck it’ mentality. You know, like what’s the point? No one cares. Following her mother’s example, Julia had an eating disorder. I couldn’t control whether my mom was going to be home or not and I couldn’t control feeling, like I had someone to go home to, ‚ but I could control things like what I put in my mouth. This led to obsessing over food and working out excessively; my anxiety and depression was just like through the roof.

After graduating high school Julia attended a community college, which she says was probably the best decision of my life, as university would have been a total failure. Her first psychology class was pivotal. She bombed the first test even through she knew the answers, but the professor let her take the test orally and accepted the A grade. It was amazing that she would take like almost an hour after class and literally go through every question. I mean she really believed that I knew the material, and I did. Julia decided to give herself a second chance and in the next year became very perfectionistic and pulled herself together academically. She then attended a university and stopped drinking and smoking. She says the way that I coped in undergrad was still not productive because I was busting my ass. She took rigorous courses, worked on several research projects, had an internship and volunteered. I was never home and I kept myself busy and I think that perpetuated my eating disorder. Julia says, I like testing myself to see what I can handle. She also says having no concept of my own boundaries and her high need external validation fed these behaviors.

While studying psychology as an undergrad and grad student, Julia continued her pattern of dating people who treat me like shit‚Rationally, I know that I deserve better but I don’t believe that I do. This boyfriend was alcoholic, had depression, put her in role of total caregiver, and threatened suicide when she tried to break up. They finally broke up when he went into residential treatment for substance abuse. All this occurred while she was dredging up her family relationships for a master’s seminar. I was just working out compulsively and not really eating a lot. ‚ I felt really out of control‚ I had a really bad breakdown. ‚ I was pretty suicidal for about like two months. She was so depressed that her supervisors offered her a chance to pause graduate program, I said no because then I would feel like a failure.

Julia finally entered therapy, realizing that how she was living was not sustainable.
I knew I was depressed, but I never like said that word. ‚ I always felt like shit. And I thought that was my normal. She was diagnosed with anxiety, major depressive disorder and then Eating Disorders Not Otherwise Specified. She found a really good therapist. She’s very hard on me but there’s so much compassion behind it. ‚ It’s not coming from a judgmental place, it’s coming from, you know, she values me as a person. She values our relationship. Julia has a few valued friends and is dating an amazing man. Recently graduated, she is now a therapist. I think having my own experiences with not feeling safe and feeling unheard and feeling, you know, like at the end of my rope, I think that makes me a better therapist. … I want to be a safe space for people.

Julia describes how her mother’s not being there for her contributed to her depression and to her risky behaviors in adolescence.

Age at interview 22

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 16

When Julia failed her first psychology exam, her professor gave her a second chance. This motivated Julia to give herself a second chance too.

Age at interview 22

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 16

Julia says it’s validating that her pets love her unconditionally. At the same time, her desire to be with them sometimes exacerbates her tendency to isolate herself from other people.

Age at interview 22

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 16

For Julia, getting past blame is an essential part of healing.

Age at interview 22

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 16

Julia feels she will never be as good as other people. This, in turn, feeds into her depression.

Age at interview 22

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 16

Julia describes how the group of friends she gravitated to when depressed reinforced her substance use.

Age at interview 22

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 16

Julia experienced a relapse with drinking during a difficult class that required writing about her family history.

Age at interview 22

Gender Female

Age at diagnosis 16