What a Moment of Laughter Taught Me About My Bipolar Depression
There’s nothing funny about bipolar disorder. In fact, one of the ways that I know I’m having a spell of bipolar depression is that my sense of humor flies out the window. Nothing brings a smile or a laugh — not my husband’s awful jokes. Not my friend Tom’s silly songs. Not a funny movie like “Arsenic” and “Old Lace.”
• What is Bipolar disorder?
I have been in a spell of depression for a little while now. As I mentioned recently, part of it may be reactive depression. But here’s the thing. Reactive depression feels the same as bipolar depression. You have the same sense of misery, loneliness, helplessness, hopelessness, anomie. But you know what caused it and that it will end pretty soon, relatively, unless you tip over into a true depressive episode, which can last a lot longer than that.
But yesterday, I laughed, and that was a good thing. It didn’t pull me completely out of my depression, but it let me know that escape was possible, and maybe even starting.
It happened like this:
My husband and I were sitting on the couch, watching TV. I was not enjoying it. Then a commercial came on about “man-boosting” pills that increase testosterone. It promised everything: strength, leanness, stamina and outstanding performance in the bedroom.
Dan turned to me and said, “Hey, honey. Maybe I should try some of that. Improve my performance in bed-woo-woo-woo!”
I turned and looked him straight in the eyes. I said, in a solemn, deadpan voice, without a trace of a snicker: Woo. Woo. I never got to the third “woo” because we both dissolved in giggles. And it felt good — not only that I could laugh, but that I could make him laugh. Just thinking about it made us laugh all over again.
Today I am back to feeling overwhelmed, if a little less miserable, but still functioning on some kind of level. I don’t think my depression is over with. But for just a moment, I saw a ray of hope. Yes, it was over something silly. Yes, I delivered the line with a flat affect. No, I didn’t know it was going to be that funny. I even thought Dan might be offended that I was making fun of him. But the important thing is that we both laughed.
What I’m saying is that laughter, by itself, is not a cure for depression, however much the memes and the positive thinkers tell you that it is. But if laughter happens to you, it at least reminds you that the depression will end sometime — maybe quicker than you think. The giggles are building blocks that will help you climb up out of your hole, or at least see that there is a way out.
That’s a lot of philosophizing about two words (or syllables, really), and I’m not sure the magic would happen again if either one of us said “woo.” But I am taking the memory of that moment with me, for whatever strength it can give me and whatever amusement will stay with me when this depression ends.
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