My problem is that I’m not mentally fit to work anymore. I’m depressed, suffer from post-covid brain fog, and I’m really stressed and tired. But at the same time I can’t live with my parents because at their home is where my mental health deteriorates the most. I’m not rich to just leave my work and live on my own.
I’m considering either becoming a monk or committing a minor crime just to get in prison and don’t live there anymore. Any suggestion is welcome because my brain is not working as it should.
If you have healthcare, please try to connect with a psychologist or other form of councilor. They can help, though it sometimes can take a few tries to find one you click with.
Mental health is tricky. I can offer ideas, but it’s hard to know what will help you. Throwing various ideas out there:
Exercise helps.
If you’re not getting enough sleep get more. Meds can help in the short term if your mental health is interfering with sleep. You can also look into melatonin (helps for some) if it’s falling asleep (vs staying asleep).
You can try various meditation apps as well as activities that let you get out or at least people watch (nature walk, hanging out at a busier park/cafe, etc.)
Would a more hands on activity or screen free hobby help? Maybe volunteering at an animal shelter, or other similar org.
I’m not sure where you are located or your finances but are there absolutely no other housing options? (Shelter, friend, Airbnb room).
Would a short getaway help? Camping is cheap if that’s your thing.
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As much as we are all clever here on HN, this isn't what we do for a living, and it is 100% what therapists do. They will be able to help.
The darkest times I've had what helped me was procrastinating anything that couldn't be undone, it's always an option later, and just knowing that I didn't have to make that choice today actually really helped.
But in your case if it's home life that's the problem and money that keeps you there, then step 1 is find a better paying job or adding a side hustle. Step 2 is to find a cheap place to live, probably a place that has like 8 roommates in a single house. Then once there pursue a skill-set that will let you significantly upgrade your economics, probably programming. Pursue fitness this whole time, because even if everything else in your life feels out of control you can at least control that one hour a day of working toward something, it will help.
But before any of that, find help, anyone, call someone, call a hot-line, see a shrink, reach out to an old friend or friendly relative.
I've been there before, keep going, it's worth it to keep going.
As others already commented, please ASAP reach out to a professional. I don't know where you live, but I am very sure such a hotline exists pretty close to you.
My friend called such a hotline and he got help and he is better now.
I know this is a huge step to take, but reaching out will help and it is professionals taking care and they know what they do.
Whatever your circumstances are, someone will pick you up again.
Please call; there is no reason to feel embarrassed for whatever.
PS: I've been reading HN for years now and never commented here, but I just signed up now to reach out to you.
You can try to live in a car/van, arrive to work earlier to use the facilities, use some coffeehouse wifi, etc... This is a bit of an adventure. It will also help to show your parents your commitment and level of distress.
Normaly job change helps. Sometimes you are to tied with the work issues it is just best to leave. In a new job there will be lower expectations, because you're starting, so it will feel good. And after it will give you a new perspective in life. And learn something new. Also you can possibly take a month off in between.
You can also try a career change, there are several no experience required, that are very good to take life slower a day at the time.
Also life is messy, with a lot of pressure and unrealistic expectations. And a lot of people, apparently living happy, are in a similar situation or worse. Maybe try to talk more with people around you, to get some more perspective. Even just talking somehow helps to reduce stress of situations.
Maybe you could spend some time camping on a bicycle/hiking/slow-walking trip? Basically being homeless, but in a healthy way. Come by your parents house as needed?
Reading ancient history and ancient primary sources is my most therapeutic-feeling form of mental escapism. Maybe it could help you to project your mind back a few couple years.
Of course, you should get someone to help you. Either friends/family and/or professionals. This is normal human problem stuff you're going through and it's okay to need help.
Read about ACT Therapy if you can - where I first learned this advice - it gets you to internalise this strategy to have a better relationship with feelings: Accept your inner experience (and be in the moment) Choose a course of actions based on things you decided you value Take action
We can't change the way we feel, at least not reliably, which means that its best to "accept" feelings (there's a specific meaning of "accept", and doens't mean you have to "like" your feeling), and we can almost always direct our attention. In almost any situation you have the power to _temporarily_ focus on something, and you can just keep diverting your attention, it's like a super power.
Separate to ACT, I've found mantra's such as the following helpful for dealing with strong episodes of emotion: Let it come. Let it be. Let it go. [Exhale slowly]
A much simpler one for a strong episodes of anxiety/sadness/dysphoria: "There's nothing I need to do about this" [At which point I usually choose something to do or think which is important to me].
In saying all of the above, some of your issues may be situational (or not, could just be an internalized playbook of beliefs), which is where getting professional help comes in, to help you work that out.
Some practical steps you might take once you have a strategy for managing your mental health: Look for an alternative living arrangement, a different (or same) job or pursuit (if not for supporting yourself financially, it will open up opportunities for social interaction and engagement). Figure out what things you value, or have valued in the past if you are too depressed to connect with that; then let these form a compass point for you.
Becoming a monk will probably mean you have to face yourself head on and you won't have conventional support - do not isolate yourself. Whatever you do, choose something that has a good chance of being absorbing and deisolating.
> I’m considering either becoming a monk
Instead of "becoming", you could try to ask the temples, if they need help. I know people who go to temples, and they say, that there is always work to do. You would also get free veggie meals :)
Another option could be volunteer work on a farm, which I did. I attended a program, where you could help out families on farms for a week. They would give you shelter and food, and you would help them on their farm.
It tremendously help me out of my hole, and gave me a new perspective on life. I can expand on that, if you like. Just say so!
Freelancing marketplaces can get you usable leads—there is junk that can be identified with practice, but there also are respectable customers (at least on Upwork, in my experience). Monitoring opportunities, diving into new subject domains and writing proposals is a different activity compared to just creating software, but it’s possible to switch contexts every now and then.
It could help if there’s someone you know whom you can cooperate with, perhaps on flatshare and/or consulting work, but IME the above can be feasible alone.
I can understand the difficulty of living with parents. In my case the nature of gig work (ups and downs, having to hustle plus the necessity to pay rent), change of scenery, distance from the old social circle of family and school acquaintances were factors that somehow correlated with me gaining the will to keep doing things without always feeling like there’s no point to it.
(Please folks, I have a great respect for therapists, as well as other secular forms of help. There are many wonderful aspects to people and organizations even if they are completely opposed to the church. This comment is not to the contrary of any form of help. Nor is it prescribing any beliefs or ethics upon anyone.)
OP - the Eastern Orthodox Church is a mystical religious organization who claims to have preserved the true teachings of Christ. Do not throw the first stone. Do not judge lest you be judged. Love your neighbour. Many people of all faiths aspire to live this way. I would say the Eastern Orthodox Church is a reliable place to find people who take the teachings seriously.
There is a great love for monasticism in orthodoxy. One famous monastery in Arizona St Anthony's. There is an idea "Every home is a monastery". We celebrate monks regularly during services and many people visit monasteries regularly.
I recently joined this church not having been raised in any church. After many attempts of trying to identify what's missing in my life - relationship, school, work, drugs - I reached a point of total desperation, and then after reading lots of spiritual books I found the orthodox church.
I'm very sorry to hear of your struggles. I hope you can find some help or meaning in this horrible time. I normally would not share this info because in 99% cases it makes things worse. You are asking for radical options and mentioned becoming a monk, so this time I'll bite.
If I may attempt to be encouraging for you in this difficult time. It's a sign of strength to be exploring radical options. To me it means you won't settle for a common trope that you know won't help. Not bending to common sense can get you in trouble sometimes, but I believe it's also the only way to the real truth.
California, for instance, has SDI, which is pretty generous in terms of the kinds of conditions it will cover. Depending on how much you make it might not cover 100% of your wages, but it's also not taxable, so it comes out about even. I don't know much about other states, and even less about other countries; that's just an example.
Sorry if it's a bit of an odd recommendation, but in the next few hours/days, while you wait for your appointment or any other changes you're making, I can recommend reading through "Feeling Good" by David D. Burns MD. It's a book on cognitive behavioural therapy and it helped me tremendously to cope with, and eventually recover from severe depression. I recommend it because it offered some immediate short-term relief just from reading through it once. There are copies lying around on archive.org.
I wish for you to recover!
Taking time to relax is critical and we miss it out in all the rush. Just living with content is not expensive and it is a "monkish" lifestyle.
Talking to a therapist will help as other tell you. But if you don't have access or resist to going to one:
-Find the cheapest private room with private bathroom apartment nearby. If you are in a big city in the U.S., they cost anywhere from $600 to $1200.
-Organize your room, organize your daily habits. Easy to say but keeping your room clean and laundry folded makes a huge difference.
-Organize your budget. Even if you are in debt, seeing what can be fixed will help. It is not entirely about your income. You can make $1000 working part time and still survive in the U.S. if you lower your expectations. Cut all the bullshit expense (hulu, netflix, spotify, starbucks etc.) and save every single dollar.
-Learn to calm your brain. Something like this can get you started. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOJTbWC-ULc I also listened to binaural beats for many months while meditating.
-Wake up early. Have organized sleep. Brain chemistry will be affected by your sleep dramatically.
-Do not interact with your negative friends.
-Eliminate loud noises around you. Human or non-human. Quiet environment means a calmer state of mind.
-Stop eating sugar. It is a drug.
-If you are smoking weed or another substance, they are not helping and cause you to think on overdrive with an altered state of mind.
-Finding a hobby helps. If you have a few dollars buy a drone, a 3d printer, a computerized telescope or whatever makes you entertain. Do it more organized than before. Even write about it on a blog or start a youtube channel about it.
-Cook your own food. When you shop, do not buy things because they will make you healthy etc. Buy only the things you eat and improve your eating habits gradually. I had so many lettuce and cabbages in the fridge with molds on them.
-Do no read the news for a while. News are for clicks and attention. World goes on without your news knowledge anyway. It will just frustrate and give you negative thoughts.
-Listen to music, preferably EDM. Don't listen to depressing emo stuff. They don't help your mind.
-Buy comfortable clothing. I am always wearing soft non-restrictive stuff (jogging pants, comfy shoes, tshirt + hoodie is a good style IMHO).
There are many more but I just looked around me to remember the things helped me and still helping.
- exercise can improve your mood and self confidence. Be sure to not compare yourself to those already fit
- medication can be helpful. It really depends so you should consult a doctor.
- counseling is helpful. It might take a few tries to find someone who clicks though
I think it’s important not to compare yourself to others. Focus on yourself and celebrate small wins.
The brain fog will lift. It'll take awhile. Working at a minimum-wage job is surprisingly fun compared to software. Of if you can't do that, there's disability. You'll be able to come back once the fog lifts.
Life is a series of experiences, you may wake up one day and look back, saying "thank you" to yourself for not ending it then. It's important to know how to "travel through time" and realize that life is combination of good and bad. We need both good and bad in order to be able to perceive good. Also, there is some truth to saying "suicide is a crime against future self".
Prison is a stupid idea, will ruin possibilities in the future, you never want your past to drag you down. But traveling or becoming a monk is definitely a better solution, more interesting than being stuck in one place with a bunch of dudes (I'm assuming you're male). The kind of people who end up in jail is usually naturally not high IQ. If you're using HN, it's very likely you are not going to fit in there, feel even more lonely at very least.
Life is an adventure, it always ends for everybody no matter if you want that or not. Paradoxically, it's one of the reasons to enjoy it.
Being depressed is a symptom, not a cause. I always view it as a good thing. When I get depressed I start changing things in my life, big time. Depression is a result of one's life being a nightmare, and I rather be aware of that than not. Do you know of those people who don't feel any pain? It sounds cool at first, but they burn themselves all the time and cannot feel symptoms of developing diseases (e.g. abdominal pains). So it's good to be depressed, that way you know your life sucks.
I remember when I wanted my life to end, I had no money to eat food, nobody to talk to, no prospects in life. Instead of looking for help and losing the rest of respect I had for myself or going to a shelter, I ended up being homeless. I can tell you that I never felt happier and freer in my life than during that time. Quickly I managed to find a job and slept in the office for 7 months. While being homeless I showered at the gym; that made me work out every morning, sometimes twice a day. I truly felt alive, my life was my own. I looked back at my life a year ago and it really occurred to me how unhappy "normal" lifestyle is, and how shitty people generally are. I promised to build my life around what makes me happpy, not around other people or what's considered "normal" or "good".
Watch Into the Wild, the story of that person inspired me a lot.
Will leave you with two quotes:
"Through every dark night, there's a bright day after that."
"Before you diagnose yourself with depression or low self-esteem, first make sure that you are not, in fact, just surrounded by assholes."
(That second one I always assumed to be corny and stupid, until learned how much negative impact idiots can make on you in life if you don't cut them off quickly).