Bread
Avoid if allergic to gluten
- Dec 1, 2018
- 80
People have told me this platitude my whole life as if it pertains to everything. First it was my exclusion by classmates as a child, then my depression, and most recently my chronic illness. The last one is the most annoying. It's called a chronic illness for a reason; it's not just going to go away.
Anyways, despite what pro-lifers would like me to believe, none of these problems ever went away. The whole "it gets better" spiel is a concept based on entirely false promises. No one can see the future; there's no way to know that things with definitely get better. Especially when you've already been suffering for years, I think in many cases the trend is only going to continue. It's been nearly ten years since I first wanted to die and things only get more horrible with each passing year.
Recently my parents got me to see another therapist. I've hated pretty much every therapist I've ever seen because "It gets better" seems to be their favorite toy. This therapist was the worst one yet; right away she was blabbering on about how my other therapists had failed me, that everyone can change, and that she's going to make me better. One...I sincerely doubt that, and two, what exactly is "better"? I don't even remember what it is to be happy. I have no idea what kind of person I would be without depression. In cases such as mine, is "better" really going to be enough? At this point I've kind of accepted how my life has turned out. I know I'm going to kill myself eventually and that's ok. I've largely made peace with these things and I don't need some naively optimistic therapist digging around in my business and trying to change my thoughts. Just leave me alone and please stop telling me "it gets better".
Anyways, despite what pro-lifers would like me to believe, none of these problems ever went away. The whole "it gets better" spiel is a concept based on entirely false promises. No one can see the future; there's no way to know that things with definitely get better. Especially when you've already been suffering for years, I think in many cases the trend is only going to continue. It's been nearly ten years since I first wanted to die and things only get more horrible with each passing year.
Recently my parents got me to see another therapist. I've hated pretty much every therapist I've ever seen because "It gets better" seems to be their favorite toy. This therapist was the worst one yet; right away she was blabbering on about how my other therapists had failed me, that everyone can change, and that she's going to make me better. One...I sincerely doubt that, and two, what exactly is "better"? I don't even remember what it is to be happy. I have no idea what kind of person I would be without depression. In cases such as mine, is "better" really going to be enough? At this point I've kind of accepted how my life has turned out. I know I'm going to kill myself eventually and that's ok. I've largely made peace with these things and I don't need some naively optimistic therapist digging around in my business and trying to change my thoughts. Just leave me alone and please stop telling me "it gets better".