Thursday, November 5, 2015

Sometimes there's no stopping the hurricane

I have bipolar II. But the thing about bipolar disorder in general is that the recommendations for management via medication are very strong, because of the nature of the illness. It's easy to be considered dangerous to yourself or to others and at the end of the day, the medication is the best tool we have in our toolkit. I've never wanted to be on psychotropic medication though. The side effects scare me, the fact that it really should be viewed as a permanent lifestyle change scares me, the thought of flattening my affect scares me, it all scares me and I don't think in a particularly unreasonable way. I've always said no to discussions about trying medication, so in the long run verifying the diagnosis was never a priority whenever I did seek professional help. The thing is though, managing bipolar without medication is a pretty Herculean task. It's something I don't think I would have been able to do alone and I'm really grateful that I don't deal with it alone. Henry actually takes the vast majority of the responsibility on that one. He's the person who keeps me safe from myself.

Here's the thing. My entire life is a bit of an unsafe situation for me. It's filled with the type of stress that's great at setting off depressive swings. It's also filled with the type of constant activity that's great at masking manic swings. I've been doing this for over a decade now. I know enough about me and about what's going on to have some sense of where my mental status is at. But I'm not as objective about it as Henry, and I really count on him to know better. Today has been an interesting exercise in rediscovering that sometimes we can do everything in our power to try to stop the worst of the days, but they will still come. It's a strange experience. It makes you feel unsafe in your own home, in your own skin.

Some of the worst days for me come in the busy weeks when I fall short of one goal or another or maybe even many. Perhaps this down swing started that way, but I was making an effort to not fall into that trap. I was trying to be accepting, I was trying to be loving, I hope that came across in the things I've been writing this week. But the logic doesn't always get it's way. Somehow you can still find yourself lying in bed too tired to sleep or look at the ceiling or breathe. There was a point in the day where I was lying in bed and I could feel my heart beating slowly, so slowly, and I told Henry it felt like my heart was just waiting to give up and I asked him if you could die from being sad.

The slow days are the worst days. When my brain is too tired to form words even in my thoughts or do anything more than shift my body a little bit when it gets achy from being in the same position for too long. I've been actively suicidal before and even that is better way to feel. On suicidal days I feel backed into a corner with no realistic choice but to die. On slow days I wouldn't even have the strength to conjure up that thought. I just wonder if my heart will stop from how much weight I feel on my chest and I think maybe if my house caught fire I would just stay in bed and it would be a blessing. It's a different brand of suffering. It doesn't come often but when it does it always catches me off guard.

I'm coming back out of it I think, I wouldn't be writing now if I weren't, I wouldn't have enough words. I don't want to even hope that it's passed because it'll be crushing if it comes back. I've known enough of these days to know that you're never really safe. It's hard to ever really be safe. And just now I was thinking about being young, about feeling these things silently for the weeks and months that they swept me and walking through life anyways because so long as you go on living, you have to go on living. I wish I could go back and hold that child because no child should ever have to feel this way.

This is my long winded explanation for why I didn't go to the pool today. It's my long winded explanation for why things get put on hold in my life sometimes. Sometimes it feels like an excuse but Henry tells me I can't look at it that way because mental illness isn't something I can just push my way through with grit or determination or whatever. It doesn't change how much it feels like an excuse. I have work to do, but we're at 13/16 (81.2%). Accountability really doesn't care for circumstance now does it?

Much love,
Jess

PS - This song sums up what it feels like pretty well. Don't get hung up on the words, just listen.


Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Slow and steady wins the race

Today I am working on being patient with myself and not forcing progress when it's not yet meant to be. I tackled the workout that I didn't see through last Wednesday and once again I didn't see it through. I got further today though and it felt like a better effort all in all, but it was still not what I wanted it to be. I think there are a combination of things at play. I think my body has the ability to crank out this workout but my brain hasn't wrapped itself around it yet. It's still daunting and scary and it feels harder than it probably is. But much the same way as how you can't force physical progress, sometimes you can't force mental progress either. It takes time for brains to adjust to the harder sessions and if I beat myself up for every day where my mental muscle wasn't where I wanted it to be, I would be a really unhappy person. (And honestly, there are times when I do get really harsh with myself about workouts like today's, but I'm trying to be a little easier on myself about it right now.) So here's the summary.

Today's Workout: AM treadmill run and short dryland finisher
Summary:
  • WU: 10-15 mins @ 6-6.5 mph
  • Main Set: 400-800-1200-800-400 pyramid @ 8.0 mph w/ 50% recovery intervals between @ 6.0 mph
  • WD: 10 mins easy @ 6-6.5 mph
  • Treadmill numbers: 6.05 mi, 53:45
  • Garmin numbers: 5.54 mi, 53:18, 9:37 pace
  • Dryland: 3.5 x
    • Bodyweight squats w/ band: 10 wide stance 10 narrow stance
    • Push ups: 10 narrow/elbows tucked, 10 wide, split as necessary
    • ~ 10-15 mins
Hit Rate: 13/15 (86.6%)

The goal had obviously been to build the pyramid up to 1600 m and come back down, but that evidently did not happen. It's a step in the right direction though and we'll come back to this one sometime in the next two weeks and try again. I'm willing to grind to get to where I want to be, I'll just keep pushing at this workout until I crack it. It'll happen. I believe. And in the meantime, I'll accept that there's still work to be done and that today just wasn't the day yet. 

Much love,
Jess

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Sleeping in

I've now slept in two days in a row. Amazingly enough, I don't actually regret doing it on either day. I had been up late Sunday night with some wedding planning and family related drama and I don't regret the conversation that kept me up at all. It was the kind of late night talk that I think really brings me and Henry closer together, so if I lose a workout for it, I lose a workout for it. I don't even remember what my plans strictly were at this point, but I did end up getting a workout in anyways by just sort of shoving it in my evening. I didn't have any time to do work yesterday though, which was the real bummer. In any case, here was yesterday's sort of haphazardly thrown in workout.

Yesterday's Workout: PM trainer ride, strength intervals
Summary:

  • WU: 10 mins easy spin
  • Spin ups: 5 x 30 up/30 recovery
  • Main Set: all big gear (60-65 rpm, +10 or more on pick up minutes), easy spin recoveries
    • 16 mins as 7/1/7/1
    • 3 mins easy spin
    • 12 mins as 5/1/5/1
    • 3 mins easy spin
    • 8 mins as 3/1/3/1, popped into standing quite a few times to try and keep rpms up.
  • WD: 10 mins easy
  • Total: 16.27 mi, 1:07:28, 14.5 mph
Hit Rate: 12/13 (92.3%)

The set was harder than I thought it was going to be by far. Things got real rough in that last 8 minute set but I got through it. Eventually I want to work my way up to starting with a 20 minute interval. Can't work on my climbing strength outside because there's not much terrain here, so I gotta work on it inside. We'll get there. 

As for today, I had planned on going to lift in the morning but seeing as I slept in and I have an 8:30 am - 9:00 pm day scheduled, it looks like today's going to be a day off. Oh well, life happens, the rest was much needed and today will be easier on a well-rested body and brain. We'll try and get right back at it tomorrow with a morning treadmill run. Planning on re-attempting those treadmill intervals I couldn't get through last time. Hopefully the extra recovery and maybe a little extra fitness (please?) will help get me through. 

Hit Rate: 12/14 (85.7%)

Much love,
Jess

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Just do it!

I think I have a mental road block against running race pace during regular workouts. Sure, I can do it during strict intervals like mile repeats, and I know there was at least one tempo run in the summer where I did a good job running race pace, but otherwise I just have this huge sense that I can't run race pace during training...I think it's really just mental and not physical. Everything seems totally impossible to me until I've actually done it, then it seems easy. So I've decided that one of the things I'm really going to try to work on is pushing back against this sense that I can't be fast day to day. Of course, I need to balance the fast days with the easier days, but the idea is that I'm trying to teach myself that these mental limits I put on myself don't actually exist. Today was the first step towards breaking those barriers that I've set for myself.

Today's Workout: AM long run
Summary:

  • The set was a 2 mile warm up at 9:30-10:00, 3 x (1.5 mi @ 8:00-8:30, 1.0 mi recovery @ 9:30-10:00), variable distance warm down for a total of 10 miles.
  • Total: 10.13 mi, 1:32:56, 9:11 pace
  • Splits by interval:
    • WU: 9:43
    • Repeat 1: 8:28/9:40
    • Repeat 2: 8:20/9:57
    • Repeat 3: 8:24/9:52
    • WD: 9:52
Hit Rate: 11/12 (91.6%)

I was really happy with how I did, especially because I chose not to try and go around more difficult terrain or adjust pace based on terrain. In the end I figured it would all balance out and it did and I'm really proud of the effort. It was hard, but actually not as hard as I thought it was going to be. I definitely felt like I couldn't push my legs to do much more by the last repeat, but I got there, and that's what's important. 

I had been really scared of this workout at the beginning of the day. Even during the warm up and during the first recovery interval, I had been thinking to myself that there was no way I could pull this off. But I did, so I guess it just goes to show that having a "just do it!" attitude really does work. And now I know that I'm capable of running a workout like this, which is really amazing to me! Another random amazing thing is how casual a 10 mile workout feels nowadays. I remember when I used to get really worked up for every 10 miler I ran but it's becoming more and more of just a comfortable workout distance for me. 12 mi is still intimidating, but 10 I can do. That is also something I'm really proud of.

I was surprisingly blown out after this workout though. I felt like a zombie most of the day, just tired to the core. I took a nap in the afternoon which helped a bit but honestly I don't feel like I really rebounded from it until after dinner. I'm feeling much better now, but there's only a tiny bit of time left in my day before I need to hit the sack. Planning an early morning so I can get a good quality lift in before the day starts. Got to try to get some studying done now. 

Much love,
Jess