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Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person by Anna Mehler Paperny
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“Sometimes because, as hideous as this sounds to say, being loved is a necessary prerequisite for wanting to live but it is not sufficient on its own.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“No one wants this crap illness that masquerades as personal failing. I had no desire to plumb its depths. The struggle to function leaves me little capacity to do so. But in the end I had no choice. I approached this enemy I barely believed in the only way I knew how: as a reporter. I took a topic about which I knew nothing and sought somehow to know everything. I talked to people in search of answers and mostly found more questions.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“I’ve never been subject to anything awful enough to warrant this mind-swallowing badness. I have a supportive, loving family, had a happy childhood. I’m a very fortunate person. Only problem is, I hate myself and want to die.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“Suicidality and curiosity are anathema to each other: You can’t want to know things if you want to die. As long as I had questions I had reason to live, and when I was overwhelmed by a desire for death I could not begin to do the curious work that made life worth living.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“In other words, the earlier your depression starts, the longer it lasts and the longer you wait to start treatment, the longer it will take for treatment to work and the more treatment combinations you’ll need to try before something works. The longer your depression lasts and the more steps it takes for you to find something that works, the more likely it is you’ll relapse in a year and end up right back where you started. The longer and deeper and more frequent your depressive episodes, the more likely they are to keep coming back as your habit-loving brain starts to think this is normal.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“Chronic illness changes the way you see yourself—it outlasts jobs, homes, relationships. Even the flimsiest reification has power.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“One of the first things mental health practitioners tell you after you try to die is that your recent attempt is not selfish, not a misery you’ve inflicted on those you love most, but a fatal final symptom of a disease that’s destroying you. Which, sure. Fine. But seeing my younger brother’s face in that psych ward after he’d flown in from his first weeks of law school convinced me I deserved to die in the most torturous way imaginable. Loving people so much it hurts doesn’t necessarily negate the need to die; it just makes you hate yourself more for all the pain you cause, makes you feel your death would be a gift.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“For millennia, we’ve recognized the difference between “normal” sadness and crippling despair. But we’ve never been good at delineating between the two. So the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) defines depression by a list of symptoms rather than how it’s caused.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“I couldn’t believe my problem was extrinsic. I wanted to die because I was an idiot and could never improve, never move forward or do better—not because I was sick and therefore locked in a skewed perception of the world and myself within it. It’s not just me. Again and again, people I’ve spoken to bring up their sense of isolation, that theirs is a personal flaw unique to themselves, not something faced by others, certainly not something fixable. Debilitation—that inability to get out of bed, to interact with people—fuels self-revulsion. I loathed myself for the endless stasis, projects unrealized and opportunities ungrasped. I felt I was expending all my energy on the most basic level of functioning and had nothing to show for it—just years of going through the motions. And the worse I felt, the less motivated I was to pursue treatments that felt ineffectual.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“She writes with a stunning fluency.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“And, above all, to my parents, Audrey Mehler and David Paperny, who support me when I need it most and want it least, who teach me resilience through unconditional love and appropriate jokes.
Thank you.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“To José Silveira, who teaches me to make life worth living and who, let's face it, puts up with a lot.
To Omar El Akkad, the human being I want to be.
To Brendan Kennedy, who keeps saving my life.
To Richard Warnica, who makes me keep chasing.
To Allison Martell, who inspires me.
To Leslie Young, who keeps me grounded.
To Amran Abocar, who makes a day job possible.
To Jennifer Griffiths, a visual wizard.
To Heather Cromarty, a true ally.
And to Liana Willis and Hana El Niwairi, who helped make this a reality.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“You were among the first to believe in this thing.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“I owe an incalculable debt of gratitude to Louise Dennys, the brilliant powerhouse who brought this beast into being.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“Thank you. You give me reasons to wake up in the morning.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“So let's fix this, goddammit, and move on to bitching about something else.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“There is no happy ending. It's an uncomfortably personal exploration of a sickeningly common illness no one likes talking about, one that remains undertreated and poorly treated and grossly inequitably treated in part because of our own squeamishness in confronting it or our own denial of its existence as an illness and the destruction it wreaks when left to its own devices.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“I couldn't tell you if I'm any better off than I was the September of my first suicide attempt. I know I've gone through periods, some quite recent, where I was worse. But work on this project gave me something to cling to and build on. It was validating. Almost every interview I did reinforced that this shit sandwich of an illness is genuine and genuinely awful and affects many, many more people than me. Those were days that made it seem worth plugging away.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“Most days I work, and it feels good—like I'm building ground beneath my feet even as I struggle to keep from plummeting.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“I give them advice within the limits of my ability to give advice...I don't want anyone who feels abandoned by and disconnected from the world to get another experience of abandonment from me. So even when they're people who don't particularly stir my sympathies, I always try to deal with them as kindly as I can and to say as much as I can about helping them.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“And I think that, a lot of the time, people who are depressed devote so much energy to secrecy that could be better devoted to getting better.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“I think there's a kind of social responsibility to being open and public insofar as you are able to be, and different people are able to be to different degrees. I live in a city, occupy a context and work in a field where I wasn't going to lose a lot of credit because I had been depressed. So I felt like I had less to lose than other people would. If I weren't going to talk about it, then who would?”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“And that's the greatest fear, right? That disclosure will turn against you. That my literary exercise could be responsible, even indirectly, for the anguish or, god forbid, suicide deaths of other human beings.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“Spent years teaching English in Korea, backpacking across Southeast Asia." I was trying to get away from my problems but I just brought my problems with me. Kind of like wherever you go, there you are.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“All I have to," Patrick told himself over the course of decades, "is solve this endless list of things and then everything will be better. You very much tend to blame yourself for all these symptoms. You feel you're worthless. Yeah, it kind of sucked. But it was just my daily life. I still managed to do things, but I didn't do very well. I didn't really talk to anyone, didn't do well socially, didn't date. Just trying to get through the day. It was a slog, basically. It was a huge slog.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“Chronic mental illnesses mess with both the way you perceive your world and your ability to recall it later.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“He became lethargic, lost energy. Fixated on a growing list of his own shortcomings, things he needed to fix within himself to make everything better. Learned to cope with a subsuming sense of worthlessness by retreating into mental haze.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“Depression is a genuine and genuinely awful condition; we just don't understand it. Drugs, psychotherapy, electroconvulsive therapy, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, exercise, all work on some people to some degree. Depression's treatment toolbox remains inadequate. Coercing people into getting care is crappy no matter how necessary it is (and people will always disagree as to what justifies that suspension of basic liberty; this is why recourse is important). What this means is that failing to address psychiatry's credibility problem means people will go untreated or undertreated or die.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“But people don't seek treatment they don't trust.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person
“One thing I've heard (and seen) over and over is how much deeper an understanding people have of mental illness once they've gone through it themselves (directly or indirectly via someone they love). Any experience cuts closer when you know it firsthand. It follows that health practitioners care better for depressed and suicidal people if they've been there. But imagine if the only competent oncologists were ones in remission for cancer; if the only decent obstetricians were ones who'd given birth; if only the superannuated could be geriatricians and a neurosurgery prerequisite was having had someone slice into their own brain. Surely the very starting point for trained clinicians in a "caring profession" is basic human empathy—and learning! And putting learning into practice!—to be able to provide adequate, evidence-based mental health care and not be insensitive assholes about it.”
Anna Mehler Paperny, Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me: Depression in the First Person

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