Warning: This post deals with mental illness and could be triggering for some readers.
Scrolling through Instagram, you’d be forgiven for thinking women with anxiety and women with depression have nothing in common.
In real life, we know both mental illnesses are equally debilitating, and more often than not, come as a package deal. But from the outside looking in, society and social media paint a different picture.
For example: If the traditional stereotype of anxiety was a person, she’d be a busy young woman wearing an on-trend leopard slip skirt with a coffee in hand. A true perfectionist, she’s fast-moving and full of energy, and cares deeply about the things and people in her life. So much so, she might even stay up wide awake every night just thinking about them. Flaws aside, she’s cool.
Depression, on the other hand, would be an underachiever. She’s slow on the uptake and unreliable. She calls in sick and doesn’t care enough to get out of bed. She’s a downer. Lazy, even. But definitely not cool.
I know the latter well because I am her, and honestly, I do use these words (and worse) to describe myself at times. In the past when a down period would hit me out of the blue, I’d tell my boss I had the flu or a migraine rather than admit I was sad for no reason at all. Then, I’d spend the day criticising myself for being a slob and not just getting on with it. For not being capable of putting on clothing and showing up.
Top Comments
The comparison game is a slippery slope in any aspect of life, but nowhere more so than when people compare one mental illness with another. It's tempting to base opinions on how you interpret social media or the way people look and sound, but we have no idea what someone else is going through.
It is also all relative. As someone who has experienced symptoms of severe catatonic depression, mania, psychosis, and panic attacks as part of Bipolar 1 Disorder, to me it can feel as though if mental health were a popularity contest depression would be equal if not a close second to anxiety, but psychosis and the mental illnesses featuring it would not even be admitted to the contest.
Comparison will make you miserable. But remembering you are not alone is important. And other people are writing and talking about what depression feels like. You may like to check out this article I wrote for Mamamia a while back: https://www.mamamia.com.au/...
Don’t appreciate how anxiety was made out to be “easy” to deal with vs. depression. Anxiety also stops you from getting out of bed and living your life. And no, not everyone wants to “write their story or go on tv” to share what they are going through - anxiety or depression - applies to both. The piece is biased, selfish and dismissive coming from a person who is not an expert on anxiety or other mental disorders.