MariaG

6 days ago

Adult
Depression

After the Storm

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I never imagined I’d be the kind of person who struggled with mental health. I was the strong one — the one who kept everyone else together. At least, that’s how it looked from the outside.

I was 39 when the storm hit me full force. My kids were getting older and starting to need me less. My marriage was unraveling in ways I didn’t want to admit. I had spent so many years pouring into everyone else that I didn’t realize how empty I’d become. I told myself it was just exhaustion. A rough patch. A phase I could push through like I always had.

But this time was different.

I would drop the kids off at school and sit in my car in the parking lot for an hour, unable to move. Sometimes I’d cry, sometimes I’d stare blankly out the windshield. I didn’t recognize the woman I was becoming — distant, numb, barely functioning. I still did all the things I was supposed to do. I made dinner. I smiled at the neighbors. I answered emails. But inside, I was disappearing.

There were nights when I’d lie awake, my heart racing, mind spiraling with thoughts I couldn’t silence. Thoughts that scared me. Thoughts that whispered, “Maybe they’d be better off without you.” I didn’t want to die. But I also didn’t know how to keep living like that.

One night, I stood in the bathroom staring at the bottle of sleeping pills in the medicine cabinet. I wasn’t sure what I was doing. I wasn’t even fully present. I just knew I wanted the pain to stop.

And then something happened that I will never forget.

My youngest daughter, who was nine at the time, knocked on the door and came in holding her stuffed animal. She looked at me and said, “Mom, are you okay? You don’t laugh anymore.”

That question — so simple, so pure — broke me wide open.

I didn’t take the pills. I held her and cried harder than I had in years. That moment didn’t solve everything, but it gave me enough reason to take a first step. The next morning, I made an appointment with my doctor. It was the first time I had said the word “depression” out loud in reference to myself.

From there, I was referred to a therapist. At first, I felt guilty — like I was being selfish for focusing on myself. But over time, I realized I wasn’t just doing this for me. I was doing it for my kids. For the woman I used to be. For the woman I still wanted to become.

Therapy helped me unpack years of silence, resentment, and self-neglect. I started to understand how deeply I had internalized the message that moms are supposed to be everything for everyone. That we’re supposed to smile through the pain, carry the burdens, and never fall apart. But we’re human. And we can’t pour from an empty cup.

One day in a session, my therapist gave me a small printed card with a semicolon on it. She asked if I knew what it meant. I didn’t. So she told me about Project Semicolon — how it was created to support people struggling with mental health and suicide, and how the semicolon symbol represents a pause — not an ending. That really stuck with me.

Later that night, I went to the Project Semicolon website. I didn’t know what I was looking for — maybe a sign that I wasn’t alone. What I found was more than that. I found stories. Honest, raw, beautiful stories from people who had felt the same darkness I was feeling — and who had chosen to stay.

I stayed up reading them until nearly 3 a.m. I cried. Not from sadness, but from the relief of being understood. I realized I wasn’t weak for struggling. I wasn’t broken for needing help. I was human — and I was still here. That night, I wrote my own story for the first time in a journal. And at the top of the page, I drew a semicolon.

It became a symbol for me — not just of survival, but of reclaiming my voice. I began to speak up more. I shared my story with a few other moms in my community. To my surprise, many of them were quietly dealing with the same battles. We started meeting for coffee, just to talk. To be real. To be messy. To be ourselves without the performance.

Today, I’m 46. My life isn’t perfect — but it’s mine. I laugh with my kids again. I still see my therapist, and I’ve started volunteering with a local support group for women navigating depression and grief. And yes — I got the semicolon tattoo. Small, simple, placed near my wrist. Some people don’t even notice it. But I do. Every single day.

It’s a reminder of the night I almost gave up… and the night I chose to stay.

If you’re a mom reading this — or a woman who feels like she’s disappearing beneath the weight of everything — I want you to know: you’re not invisible. You’re not alone. And asking for help is not weakness. It’s the beginning of healing.

You don’t have to end your story here. Pause. Breathe. Keep writing.

I did. And I’m still here.

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