nebtheslayer95 said:
I know this is a somewhat-older thread, but I wanted to weigh in just a bit.
Firstly, your friend. You say yourself that she was depressed before, too. Knowing and sharing that apparently helped you a little bit... but what about her? Sometimes, hanging around with someone who is suffering from something that you've overcome (or at least made progress against) pulls you
backwards. It's not you specifically, it's being around the "old ways" and "old problems" in general.
She may be staying clear because she doesn't want to fall back into it. And, if we're honest, hanging around with someone struggling with the same thing doesn't always help us get better -- with many problems, depression and self-harm among them, it actually
enables the behavior because it allows us to feel it is more acceptable. (Not to make too broad a comparison, but it's similar to why drug users tend to want to hang out with other users.)
Additionally, regarding your friend. I doubt you do so intentionally, but when you come to depend on a person to keep you from feeling suicidal... well, that puts a
lot of pressure on them. She may not be able to handle that pressure anymore, especially not if the dependency has been getting worse. No one wants to feel like they are the only thing standing between someone and their self-destruction -- to the other person, it can feel like the dependent friend is "holding himself/herself hostage."
Basically, I don't think she's backing away from you because of
you. She's doing it because it's currently the best choice for
herself. Don't let yourself internalize that, because it does you both a disservice.
Further, regarding your own feelings and challenges. Don't seek help from your peers. Don't avoid them either. Hang out, do stuff, but don't always lean on them for emotional support. Find help from people who are qualified and prepared to bear that burden with you. Pills aren't meant to "cure" depression -- they are meant to help get some of the physical symptoms out of the way so that you can
also talk through the underlying causes. That's the real treatment.
Think of it like a crutch. The crutch does not heal your broken leg. It just takes some of the weight off while the leg is healing. If you don't put it in a cast and take proper care of it, the leg isn't going to heal right just because you have the crutch.
Above all, be honest with yourself. To a large degree, over time, you've incorporated this feeling of depression and this habit of self-harm into your own identity. You see it as a part of "who you are." As a result, you've got some fears that if you let it go, you're losing something of yourself. The only cure for that is to go out and do stuff, find out who you
really are, apart from this particular issue.
The other hazard, which I'm sure you've run into now, is that when we get into places like this, we tend not to want
just any solution. There is a particular solution we want. (For instance, if we're pining after a particular love interest, we don't want to be told the solution is to "move on," we want to be told how to "get them to love us.") As a result, we ignore a lot of the help and advice being offered to us, because we already have it fixed in our minds what the "correct" answer should be.
When we feel like we're swimming against the current, sometimes we really want to believe someone, usually someone very specific, is going to swim out and rescue us. It's easy to forget that, if they did so, they could risk getting stuck out there, too. Sometimes, we have to recognize that the best they can do is stand on the shore and encourage us, let us know there are people that care whether or not we make it, but we have to do the swimming for ourselves.