When one spouse is depressed, a marriage is depressed. This illness
erodes emotional and sexual intimacy and suffuses a relationship with
pessimism and resentment, anger and isolation. Even the sunniest, most
capable partner can be pulled into depression’s strong undertow: You may
be overwhelmed by extra household chores that your partner is too
lethargic to finish, resentful because your spouse won’t just snap out
of it, or feel that you’re somehow to blame for the illness itself. You
may feel alone yet unwilling to tell anyone there’s depression in your
household, or you may simply wonder when the sparkle and joy, the humor
and fun seeped out of your relationship.
If there’s depression in your marriage, it’s time to act—for your
partner and yourself. Waiting increases the chances that your
relationship won’t last; depressed couples are nine times more likely to
divorce. And trying to fight or make peace with this often
misunderstood illness on your own raises risks for both of you. The
longer a nondepressed spouse lives with a depressed partner, the higher
his or her own risks for depression. The deeper a depressed spouse
sinks, the tougher it may be to finally treat the depression—and the
greater the risk for alcoholism, drug abuse, violence, and even suicide.
The stakes are high, but the odds are that things will improve.
Remember, you’re not alone. An estimated 19 million Americans are currently going through depression. In the Reader’s Digest Marriage in America Survey,
42 percent of respondents named depression as a major challenge in
their relationships. It’s not surprising that most said this insidious
illness had a negative effect on them. But there was an unexpected ray
of hope: One in four said depression had a positive outcome for their
marriages. “Getting diagnosed and treated makes all the difference,”
says Emily Scott-Lowe, Ph.D., an assistant visiting professor of social
work at Pepperdine University, who leads workshops across the country
about depression and marriage with her husband, Dennis Lowe, Ph.D., a
psychologist and director of Pepperdine’s Center for the Family. “Just
33 percent of people with depression seek and get help. But when you do,
your chances for significant improvement are 80 to 90 percent. Almost
everyone gets some relief.”
Depression isn’t a choice or a little case of the blues. It’s a
physical illness as serious and life-altering as diabetes, heart
disease, or arthritis. A depressed spouse can’t just “snap out of it” or
“get on with life.” The reason: Depression is marked by dramatic shifts
in brain chemistry that alter mood, thoughts, sleep, appetite, and
energy levels. Genetics usually make many of us susceptible to
depression; any number of factors can trigger the slide, including
prolonged or severe stress, financial problems, a big loss or change in
your life, the birth of a child, parenthood, and even some health
conditions and prescription drugs. Marriage itself even raises your
risk: Up to 1 in 10 brides experience “postnuptial depression” in the
months after the wedding. And up to half of all women and men in unhappy
marriages may be depressed, perhaps due to marriage problems (though
some experts suspect that undiagnosed depression is behind the
problems).
If you think your partner may be depressed, your first step is to pay
attention to the clues—and help him or her get a diagnosis and
treatment. These steps can help.
Be alert to small changes. Depression can come on
slowly, almost imperceptibly. “You look for all types of other
explanations—we just had a new baby, it’s a tough time at work, it’s a
phase,” Emily Scott-Lowe notes. “It can take a while to see the pattern
or to be ready to accept that depression might be the cause.”
Often it’s up to the nondepressed spouse to take the lead: The
illness itself often prevents depressed people from recognizing that
something’s wrong or seeking help. They may feel too lethargic or
withdrawn or may think they can fix it alone.
If you notice that your spouse isn’t acting, feeling, or thinking as
he or she normally does, ask yourself if it could be depression, but
don’t stop there. Depression may be the reason your spouse is working
extremely long hours, drinking too much, using recreational drugs, or
looking for thrills in risky activities. It can also look different in
men and women.
Don’t wait for your spouse to hit bottom. Letting a
depressed person sink low before offering help is an old-school approach
borrowed from the early days of alcohol- and drug-addiction treatment.
But the reasoning behind it is flawed and dangerous. Long-term
depression is harder on your marriage, tougher to treat, and more likely
to recur, and it leaves its victim in despair. The most chilling risk:
It leaves open the very real possibility of suicide. About 60 percent of
people who attempt suicide have major or minor depression or another
mood disorder—and depressed men are four times more likely than
depressed women to take their own lives.
Break the ice gently yet firmly. If you suspect your
partner is depressed, don’t blurt out a layperson’s diagnosis: “You’re
depressed!” or announce: “You better get help!” In order to begin the
process of healing, approach your spouse with concern and with an action
plan. You might say, “I’m concerned about how feeling tired and losing
your appetite are affecting you. You deserve to feel better. Our doctor
may be able to help you, and I’d like to arrange a time when we can meet
with him. Next week, I can go on Wednesday or Friday. What’s good for
you?”
Get a diagnosis—together. Dozens of health
conditions—including heart disease, diabetes, lupus, viral infections,
and chronic pain—can trigger the same symptoms as depression. So can
scores of prescription medications, including some birth-control pills
and drugs that treat acne, herpes, high blood pressure, high
cholesterol, and cancer. Your family doctor can rule out underlying
causes and decide whether or not it’s really depression.
Ask your spouse if it’s okay for you to attend this evaluation. “When
you’re down that low, you may not be able to express what’s going on or
even realize what all your symptoms are,” Emily Scott-Lowe notes. “And
you may not be able to concentrate on the treatment recommendations your
doctor is making. You need an ally in the room.”
Know that the odds are in your favor. As we noted,
the success rate of depression treatment is as high as 90 percent.
Usually the road back is relatively simple: antidepressants, counseling,
or a combination of the two. That said, recovery may take time and
patience. There may be an initial trial-and-error period while you try
various antidepressants or see whether various therapy techniques, such
as cognitive behavioral therapy and interpersonal counseling, are
helpful. The results are worth it.
Find a mental-health counselor for the two of you.
Depression affects both of you—and your whole family. The Lowes suggest
finding a therapist or counselor who has worked with depression in
couples. “You may have issues to deal with individually as the depressed
person, and the two of you may have issues to deal with that stem from
coping with depression,” Dennis Lowe says. “We found it very helpful to
have a counselor we could see together at times and separately at other
times.”
Keep on learning about depression. Read books, check
out websites, ask your doctor about advances in treatment and
understanding of this illness. The more you know, the better you can
cope and fight.
Be alert for relapses. About half of all people who
suffer a bout of major depression will have a relapse; 75 percent of
those will have another relapse; and 90 percent of those will have yet
another. Once a first episode passes, many doctors prescribe a
maintenance dose of antidepressants to prevent a relapse. Both spouses
should also stay alert for signs that the illness is returning.
Caring for a depressed spouse can be lonely, overwhelming, and
emotionally draining. You may blame yourself, feel helpless, grow
pessimistic, lose your sense of humor, and even consider leaving. It’s
easy for the nondepressed spouse to become angry and frustrated with an
irritable, lethargic mate who’s pessimistic and critical, who can’t
unload the dishwasher or get the kids ready for bed anymore—let alone
make love, ask how you’re doing, or acknowledge that you’ve been holding
things together for weeks, months, or years.
“This starts a cycle that burns you out and doesn’t help your partner
at all,” Emily Scott-Lowe notes. “I did this with Dennis—I would become
extremely angry with him. Then I would feel really guilty and try to
make up for it by taking on more and more around the house. Then I would
get angry all over again. This wasn’t helping Dennis, of course, and it
was wearing me out emotionally and physically.”
These steps can help the nondepressed spouse stay well—and protect
your marriage and your family while helping a depressed partner.
Admit that you cannot cure your partner’s depression.
Your spouse needs your love, support, and concern. But these important
qualities can’t reverse depression any more than they can control blood
sugar, ease arthritis pain, or clear out clogged arteries. Just as you
wouldn’t rely on love alone to cure a medical condition—or withdraw love
because it didn’t—don’t expect that your feelings or attention will be
able to alter your spouse’s off-kilter brain chemistry. Use your love to
get help and to remind your partner of his or her intrinsic worth
during this challenging time.
See depression as an intruder in your marriage. Like
any other illness, depression is an outside force—an unwelcome visitor
wreaking havoc with your spouse’s health, your marriage, and your home
life. Seeing it this way can allow both of you to talk about its effects
without blame or shame. “Once we started talking about it as a third
party—as ‘the depression’—we could express our frustrations
constructively,” Emily Scott-Lowe says. “If Dennis was really doubting
his worth, I could say, ‘That’s just the depression talking. It’s not
you. When you’re not depressed, you don’t think this way. It’s feeding
you lies.'”
This shift in thinking can clear the air. “It was a relief for me,”
Dennis Lowe says. “I felt Emily was walking on eggshells sometimes, not
wanting to tell me how she was feeling. Depression was the elephant in
the room that no one wanted to talk about, and I felt even guiltier.
Seeing it as the intruder was an accurate perspective. It helped me see
why I felt the way I did and let me accept reassurance because it
acknowledges what’s going on instead of denying it.”
Find support. Admitting there’s depression in your
marriage can be tough. So can accepting help. Choose a trusted friend to
confide in—preferably someone who’s experienced depression in their own
life or within their family. And if you’re overwhelmed by extra
household duties because your spouse can’t do his or her share, say yes
when others offer assistance. “At one point, I was crying at church,
when my friend shook me and said, ‘Emily, people here at church are
lined up waiting to help you.’ I kept saying we didn’t need help until
she shook me into reality. We had people bringing us dinner several
nights a week. One neighbor took our sons to spend the night, and it was
so nice to know they were having fun. Depression can suck the energy
right out of a household.”
Monitor your own moods and thinking. Enduring
barrages of negative comments, holding the household and family
together, and losing the sweetest, most supportive aspects of your
marriage isn’t easy. Over months and years, the nondepressed spouse may
give in to confusion, self-blame, demoralization, and resentment, notes
Anne Sheffield, author of Depression Fallout: The Impact of Depression on Couples and What You Can Do to Preserve the Bond.
You may conclude that you must leave to save yourself. If this sounds
familiar, get help for yourself—and insist that your mate do the same.
“Depression separates couples with surgical skill and is a major
home-breaker,” Sheffield notes in her book.
Conquer depression before you try to work on your marriage. Depression
can wreak major havoc in your marriage. You may be tempted to fix what
seem like smaller issues before tackling the illness head-on (it may be
easier to ask your partner to communicate more effectively than it is to
say “It’s time to get help,” for example). It’s reasonable to ask your
spouse to help all he or she can around the house, to be responsible and
treat you well. But looking for major changes while your spouse is
under the influence of depression may simply create more frustration.
Focus on lifting depression first.
Respect your own needs. If your spouse has
depression, you still deserve everyday niceties—a neat house, regular
meals, a calm family environment—as well as friendships, a social life,
and time to pursue meaningful interests. As much as possible, pursue
these things. It’s easy to spend your time dealing with your spouse’s
needs and issues. But don’t sacrifice your own joys and goals
needlessly. As we noted, you are susceptible to depression too. Pursuing
your personal pleasures will not only help prevent that but also better
prepare you for aiding your spouse.
Source:http://www.rd.com/health/wellness/how-to-cope-with-a-depressed-spouse/4/
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