Healthy Living

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Lady, Drop the Cheese Puffs and Walk Away: Enter the Insanity Cycle

OctoMom has 14 kids. I have three. Yet those three—plus the demands of life, work and marriage—may be making me just as crazy. Not insane enough to have another brood of babies, mind you. (Although once you have three, what’s another 11 more?) But crazy enough to:

  1. Seriously consider jumping out of a moving car when my husband engages me in yet another financial discussion.
  2. Completely forget the dates and times of crucial engagements—like my son’s playoff baseball game.
  3. Let a faulty cordless phone lead me to yelled profanities and an innocent appliance smashed on the floor.

Now, obviously the demands of the aforementioned kids, life, work and marriage do take their toll. But it seems to me that as I move later into my 30s, my patience for said demands becomes especially thin during one particular time of the month.

Oh yes, you know where this is going.

Let me preface this post by saying that I’ve always thought PMS was a load of hogwash. Cramps suck, I know, but I’m of the buck-up, bootstrap mentality—publically I sympathized, but privately I scoffed at those who drowned their sorrows in a bag of cheese puffs.

Ladies, I now feel your pain.

Not that I feel any more literal pain than I always have. Save one morning at age 11 when I just about passed out in the nurse’s office, my menstrual cramps have always been pretty consistent. Painful, but not debilitating—as long as I have an ample supply of ibuprofen on hand.

No, my pain is more of the psychological variety. As I said to my husband just the other day, “I actually think I’m kind of insane for about two days before my period and three days in.”

“Really,” was his deadpan response. Apparently this is a well-known fact in the Sarnoff household.

But it scares me, the depth of the rage that I feel when I’m on the rag. I’m quick to yell at my kids and slow to apologize to my husband. I can’t sleep at night and won’t wake up in the morning. I walk into the house in a perfectly fine mood until the sight of unwashed dishes in the sink makes me fire-spitting furious. I spend hours organizing drawers and closets, only to lose my s--- when they get messed up again.

In a nutshell? Insane.

So, like any (thankfully insured) red-blooded American, I went to see my doctor. Who thought I might want to consider Prozac.

An antidepressant 30 days a month to combat five days of strife? That’s like putting a cast on your leg when you need a bandaid on your ankle.

Whose take are these doctors on, anyway?

Instead, I took a good, hard look at the patterns of my month. And realized that before and during my period, I slack off on exercise. I take in more carbohydrates.  I check my email obsessively and make Important Lists of things that are decidedly unimportant. In short, I stop doing the things that make me feel calm, and start doing the things that make me feel frenetic.

This month, I’m tracking. I’m doing yoga, whether I want to or not. Waiting until after breakfast to check email. Deep breathing when I walk into a messy room, and making sure the family calendar has me on red alert for soccer games.

But I might just grab a few bags of snacks, the next time I’m at the market.

Hey, whatever works, right?

What works for you? For those of you late-30s moms, are you finding a difference in how your time of the month goes down? For those of you 50-somethings, how the hell long does this last? Let me know what worked for you, and what didn’t. Thanks!

Syndication:

From the Community…

Comments 1-3 of 3
  • rebecca's Avatar
    Posted by rebecca Thu Sep 10, 2009 10:52am PDT

    i just turned 30 and also a mother of three i don't think it had much to do with age. i have felt that way for about the past 10 years.

    i am slo quick to anger with my kids,

    i have noticed when i slow down on my caffine intake rite before that special lovely tim of the month things seem to go a little bit better. i usually drink 5 cups of coffee in the morning and cut don to three.

    it does help. i thought it was a bunch of b.s. when my doc. suggested it but hey it works for me

    Report Abuse
  • Elizabeth's Avatar
    Posted by Elizabeth Tue Sep 15, 2009 7:38am PDT

    I am in my late 20's and I am already feeling this way...and I don't even have kids or a husband to push my buttons! I do have a boyfriend that I tend to snap at around that lovely time. I tend to snap at anyone who is in my path, my mom, a co-worker, friends. The crazy part is I don't even realize how bit**y I am until after the time has past, then I feel bad and apologizes to whomever I have victimized and vow to not be that way next month...but it always happens and I never realize it till it is too late!! So sad this evil cycle that I let come over me. And as evil, vicious and bit**y I might be, I would never consider anti depressants to get me through those five days, I think the people around me have come to ignore my actions that week and love me anyway!! But it is stressful on myself....the comment made about being in a good mood and then walk into the kitchen to see a sink full of dirty dishes and how it can change your mood in a flash. That is exactly the type of thing that sets me off and I obsess over things that I normally would not. Maybe I will try the breathing technique and lay off the refined sugar binges during that week!!!

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  • Taylor's Avatar
    Posted by Taylor Tue Sep 15, 2009 3:03pm PDT

    This could not have come at a better time! (*ahem* so to speak)

    One thing that seems to help me is Evening Primrose Oil (or EPO), which was recommended to me a few years ago, and I've used it on and off. You can usually find it in the vitamin aisle of a grocery store or pharmacy. It has a subtle effect, but noticeable. The thing about this is that your body can get accustomed to it and the effects wear off. And don't take more than the recommended dosage to compensate. I'm not sure exactly how it works, but interestingly enough, you can't take it if you are on any kind of anti-depressant or mood-stabilizing drug.

    Exercise and/or yoga are both really helpful.

    Sadly, while these things are good for help with managing, I find they don't really stop it altogether.

    For my next trick, I plan to try acupuncture...

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