A Peek Inside My Mind (I'm So Sorry)

 There is a terrible, terrible stage in my depression (unsure about others) where I have attained a very precarious balance and I am mostly okay, or would be if I kept my eyes on my own plate, so to speak, because I am most dreadfully prone to the most heinous kind of jealousy if not (this entire post will NOT be in the writing manner of an eighteenth century spinster's diary, I promise. I hope).

With every book or blog post or Facebook status I read, I feel like everyone I know has navigated their life better, like every decision I made has been disastrous, like HOW did I not know that was how I should have done it all? All the sports I didn't learn, all the trips I didn't take, all the languages I didn't speak, all the children I didn't have, all the avocados I let go mushy. It's not that it really gets dug in anymore, because I know what's happening, but it is frightfully unpleasant (what is wrong with me) in the moment.

This morning I woke up naturally (day off - part time job I love, so lucky). I was up late reading a couple of really good books (love of reading, access to so many books, incredibly fortunate). Eve texted that she had a cold which was a drag, but she was dragging herself to the library because she has an exam in two days, and she was wearing a cardigan and cute camisole over a pair of Angus's old pajama pants which basically looked like pants (my children are so hilarious and enjoyable, a gift beyond measure). Then I picked up my phone and opened Facebook.

My sister in law had posted about going skiing with her husband and son and posted beautiful wintry family pics. How lovely. They are an active, wholesome, socially conscious, beautiful, admirable family and I love them.

And oh, my soul was consumed with bitterness and ill feeling. Why am I not on a ski slope, inhaling the bracing winter air? (Well, I live in Ontario and the snow is gone and I went downhill skiing once and I was terrified, went down the last hill at breakneck speed backwards and vowed never to return). And from there - why didn't I take my children to Paris? (Angus played competitive baseball from the age of 12, which somewhat hampered our travel, and led to him going to the Little League World Series, having a really cool college experience and getting basically his dream job, do I regret that? Probably not). Why didn't I get a high-powered job that used my intelligence to its full extent? (Because my husband had a job with international travel that meant we both couldn't work full time and I got to stay home with the kids. Do I think that was the wrong thing? Not remotely). Why didn't we go live in a foreign country for a year and let our kids soak in another language and culture? (I don't know, this is just getting stupid, nobody does everything).

Did I let my kids watch too much tv? Yes, but I also read to them from our multitudinous collection of picture books many, many times. We never took them skiing - wait, we took them tubing! Sarah, did you take your kids tubing? (If so, awesome, I assumed so, if not, IN YOUR FACE, just kidding, I'm having a moment, sorry). We took them skating and put them in skating lessons until finally, watching Eve inch her laborious way across a balance beam that was four inches off the ground, we had to acknowledge that she has her mother's lack of balance and give up on that. And biking. She's a decent basketball player. Yes, I've lost the plot entirely. I didn't just sit in the house with my kids watching tv for twenty years is the point I'm trying to make, I think. 

I let myself stew for a few minutes then texted a friend to talk me down by saying things I already knew but somehow they are more believable when someone else says them. She said it often looks like people have better lives from the outside (true). She said many people think my life looks great (probably true). she said many people post selected pictures to make people envy their lives (plausible, but definitely not my sister in law). I said why don't we live somewhere pretty and mountainy? She said we literally live a half hour drive from Gatineau Park. 

I have vastly underused our proximity to Gatineau Park, and this is a real, tangible, regrettable error. We took the kids for easy trail walks a few times. We drove through with my parents to see the pretty fall leaves. I went on a really nice hike with a friend who does hiking  once. But we should have been out there at every available opportunity. But you know, life gets busy, inertia, and I'm terrible with directions and could never quite figure out how to get myself there and go on a hike without never being seen again.

But shit happens. And I still have legs.

I asked my friend if she would go on a hike with me in Gatineau Park. She said "so we can post pics that will make other people jealous?" I said "YES, OBVIOUSLY, I mean no, to revel in the beauty of nature."

I did some yoga and dragged my dumb ass out for a walk. It wasn't the most appealing of circumstances. It's gray, and the snow is gone but nothing is green yet, and it was windy. I still think it managed to blow some perspective into my head, along with the dirt it blew into my eye.

This is not, to be clear, a real attempt to justify my life, or fishing for people to reassure me about it. I did some things right. I did many things wrong. Most things I just did, because you just do, don't you? I am drowning in privilege and maybe I could have leveraged it better, but there's no point in revisiting all that now. This was just a way to trace the scorching trail of this line of brooding that would be fascinating if it was happening to somebody else. And as usual, after writing it out, I feel better. 

Clearly I did something right, anyway.

Comments

Swistle said…
I know, if not this exact feeling, a close relative of this feeling. Sometimes my psyche takes it one twist down the spiral with "Why didn't WE do this thing?" ---> "Because [finding mean/judgey reason why it's better NOT to do that thing]." It does not feel good.

Sometimes I can soothe it in myself by thinking "On my death bed, do I think I will wish I had done more [the thing]?"---and almost always I think OH HELL NO. I don't LIKE skiing, I don't WANT to ski, I think it's DANGEROUS, etc. But it's hard to fight the Instagram Ideal, even when we don't even WANT it.
Anonymous said…
Yes, to all of this. It’s such an unpleasant sensation, feeling petty and jealous, and I hate it, especially when - as you so aptly point out - there is So Much Good in my own life. I feel such relief and recognition in reading this post.

And also the 1700s spinster diary bit made me giggle.

(This is Suzanne.)
Lynn said…
I loved this post so much. It's so very human and also so very Social Media in 2025. Honestly, it's giving Prairie Woman Diary from 1845 in terms of capturing the zeitgeist, which explains the language, I'm thinking.

I've also been having some regrets lately about all the things I didn't do, but also, I'm trying to lean in hard on the years I have left. There is still time! While I am still able to walk (I mean, with plenty of huffing and whining, but the legs still move) I'm thinking about what's on my bucket list, and what I can make happen. Not stuff I do for performative reasons or stuff I do because everyone else is, but stuff that honestly brings me joy.

If that's travel, great, if that's eating cake for dinner every night, great, if that's volunteering for something meaningful, great. If that's doom scrolling on Facebook, that's less great but it's also okay because it does feed the revenge-drive to do a thing.

Anyway, all that is to say that if you want to tour the world with me, you're always welcome to come with :).
Sarah said…
I know this EXACT feeling. And! Your friend is right-- your life looks warm and fun and decidedly enviable.
Elisabeth said…
Yup. Totally get all of this.
I read a book about happiness not that long ago - it was forgettable for the most part - but the take-home message was relationships. It's not stuff, or experiences, or talents. It's people. If we have people to love who love us, our life is pretty amazing. It's so easy to get caught up in the lure of Instagram and comparison and "the grass is greener over in her Botoxed lawn" (wait, that sounds weirdly sexual now...), but it's the people. And you have a lot of GREAT people who love you and who you get to love.
StephLove said…
I feel that way sometimes, comparing my life to others' representations of their lives online. But then I have to remind myself I am comparing my actual, lived experience to a representation. And while I like to think I'm honest online, it's always a partial view. There's stuff I just don't want to share and that's okay and I have to assume everyone else is doing the same thing.

p.s. Your job seems fun and well suited to you and your kids rock.
the queen said…
Just here to say don’t beat yourself up over the avocados.
maya said…
Thank you for this... I worry about all the missed opportunities with my now-grown kids... but that's life, I suppose. And I agree there's a certain "sprezzatura" about online life that suggests that things just fell into place without disappointment or drudgery.

I laughed at this line: "All the sports I didn't learn, all the trips I didn't take, all the languages I didn't speak, all the children I didn't have, all the avocados I let go mushy." And when I came back to it, it was reassurance that all would be ok.
All love, M
NGS said…
Comparison is the thief of joy. I tell myself that when I see people with their joyful dogs who greet them with wagging tails and they bounce around playfully. Meanwhile, I have this solemn dog who doesn't move from her bed when we get home and has to be convinced that walks are a good idea.

I tell myself that when the alarm goes off at 5:30 every morning and I drag myself out of it. I don't work from home. I have a full-time job. Why can't I have a part-time job where I stayed home? Well, then I wouldn't have the job I love.

We are all living the lives we have and while it's hard not to make the comparisons, I hope it doesn't let you think less of who you are and how important you are to so many people!
Nicole said…
Everyone's life looks amazing on FB and IG, but we all struggle and we all have our sadnesses. Like, people don't photograph the brown avocado.
Pat said…
I know that you struggle but I am one that thinks you have a pretty cool life. You have such a busy social life and great group of friends. And to work with little kids in a library-so cool!! We all have these feelings of inadequacy at times. Not to minimize the internal struggles you seem to have. I think the fact that you reached out to a friend is amazing- I can tell you that I never ever do that. And I have some wonderful friends; I tend to just wallow in it, you should be commended for that!
J said…
Online life is not all of life, which is one thing that always surprises me when someone I only know online is going along fine and making me question my decisions (and how much of our life is decisions, as you so rightly suggested, a lot of it is just going along…) and then suddenly this happily married friend is divorced and madly in love with a new person. Did I miss something? No, they just didn’t talk about the painful stuff with the world. Which I get, but it can be jarring to find out that my online friend’s beautiful vacation was actually half beautiful, half food poisoning and squabbles.

One of my sisters lives this life that looks SO enviable to me. Her kids are out in nature and involved in robotics and the arts and when her youngest wanted to explore the idea of college in Ireland, they made it happen with airline points and cheap hotels and so on. They have a wonderful life. But it’s not a life I would want, they are always on the go, hard to get together with, always busy (though her stress level has gone down since her oldest is away at college and her youngest is driving, so she’s not the taxi anymore) Anyway, I sometimes compare my quiet life with hers, and wonder if we could / should have done more with our daughter. And yeah, my legs still work, and I think we’ve got some tricks up our sleeves yet. I’m glad taking a walk and writing a blog post helped. <3

Popular posts from this blog

Blog Jeopardy

Super Dark Times

Book Review: Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner